ECO401 Short Notes. Ali-1
ECO401 Short Notes. Ali-1
ECO401 Short Notes. Ali-1
What is Economics?
“Economics is the study of how we the people engage ourselves in production, distribution and
consumption of goods and services in a society.”
Normative economics:
Normative economics refers to value judgments, e.g. what “ought” to be the goals, of public policy.
Normative statements cannot be tested.
Positive Economics:
The analysis of facts and behavior in an economy OR “the way things are.”
Services Involve doing something for the customers but not producing goods.
Factors of production:
Factors of production are inputs into the production process. The factors of production are:
o Land includes the land used for agriculture or industrial purposes as well as Natural resources taken
from above or below the soil
o Capital consists of durable producer goods (machines, plants etc.) that are in Turn used for
production of other goods
o Labor consists of the manpower used in the process of production.
o Entrepreneurship includes the managerial abilities that a person brings to the Organization
entrepreneurs can be owners or managers of firms. Scarcity:
Shortage of resources because economic resources are unable to supply all the goods demanded.
Rationing
A process by which we limit the supply or amount of some economic factor which is scarcely available
Economic Systems:
A free market/capitalist economy is a system in which the questions about what to produce, how to produce
and for whom to produce are decided primarily by the demand and supply interactions in the market.
A system in which economic decisions are taken by the dictator which may be an individual or a group of
selected people
Equity in economics:
A situation in which everything is treated fairly or equally, i.e. according to its due share
Microeconomics:
The behavior of individual elements in the economy
Optimum:
Nepotism:
Macroeconomics:
Rational choice:
The choice based on pure reason and without succumbing to one’s emotions or whims.
Barter trade:
Opportunity Cost:
Marginal Cost:
Marginal cost is the increment to total costs of producing an additional unit of some good or service.
Marginal benefit:
The increment to total benefit derived from consuming an additional unit of good or service.
The maximum amount of goods and services which the country can produce in a given time with limited
resources, given a specific state of technology
Economic growth:
Perfect competition:
A situation in which no firm or consumer is big enough to affect the market price.
Shortage:
Shortage is a situation in which demand exceeds supply, i.e. producers are unable to meet market demand for
the product.
Surplus:
Situation of excess supply, in which market demand falls short of the quantity supplied Goods
Market:
Market in which goods are bought and sold for the purpose of consumption
Factors markets:
Markets in which factors of production are bought and sold, for the purpose of production
Normal goods:
Whose quantity demanded goes up as consumer income increases.
Inferior goods:
Whose quantity demanded goes down as consumer income increases.
Giffen goods:
A special case of inferior goods whose quantity demanded increases when the price of the good rises
Price effect:
The sum of income and substitution effects
Income effect:
The effect of a price rise on quantity demanded that works through a decline in the real income (or
purchasing power) of the consumer.
Substitution effect:
The effect of a price rise on quantity demanded that works through the consumer switching to
substitutes goods.
Substitutes:
Goods that compete with one another or can be substituted for one another, like butter and margarine
Compliments:
Cash crops:
The crops which are not used as food but as a raw material in factories e.g. cotton
Demand:
Demand is the quantity of a good buyer wish to purchase at each conceivable price.
Law of demand:
If the price of a certain commodity rises, its quantity demanded will go down, and vice- versa.
Demand function:
Demand curve:
A graph that obtains when price (one of the determinants of demand) is plotted against quantity demanded.
Supply:
Supply is the quantity of a good seller wish to sell at each conceivable price.
The quantity supplied will go up as the price goes up and vice versa.
Supply schedule:
Supply function:
Supply curve:
O Costs of production
Equilibrium:
Equilibrium is a state in which there are no shortages and surpluses; in other words the quantity demanded is
equal to the quantity supplied.
Equilibrium price:
It is the price at which the quantity demanded is equal to the quantity supplied.
Equilibrium quantity:
The quantity at which the quantity demand is equal to the quantity supplied.
Qd = 100 – 10 P
Qs = 40 + 20 P
In equilibrium, Qd = Qs
30P = 60 P = 60/30 P = 2
Putting the value of price in any of demand and supply equation, Q = 100 – 10x2 (or 40 + 20x2)
Q = 100 – 20
Q = 80
The government may intervene in the market and mandate a maximum price (price ceiling) or minimum price
(price floor) for a good or service.
Price ceiling:
The maximum price limit that the government sets to ensure that prices don’t rise above that limit (medicines
for e.g.).
Price floor:
The minimum price that a Government sets to support a desired commodity or service in a society (wages for
e.g.).
Social cost:
The cost of an economic decision, whether private or public, borne by the society as a whole.
ELASTICITIES
Elasticity is a term widely used in economics to denote the “responsiveness of one variable to changes in
another.” Types of Elasticity:
There are four major types of elasticity:
Price elasticity of demand is the percentage change in quantity demanded with respect to the percentage
change in price.
Price elasticity of supply is the percentage change in quantity supplied with respect to the percentage change
in price.
Income elasticity of demand is the percentage change in quantity demanded with respect to the percentage
change in income of the consumer.
Cross price elasticity of demand is the percentage change in quantity demanded of a specific good, with respect
to the percentage change in the price of another related good.
PbЄda = Percentage change in Demand for good a / Percentage change in Price of good b
Point Elasticity:
Point elasticity is used when the change in price is very small, i.e. the two points between The formula for point
elasticity can be illustrated as:
Є= ∆Q x P
∆PQ
Є= dQ x P dP Q
Arc elasticity measures the “average” elasticity between two points on the demand curve. Є = ∆
Q÷∆PQ P
Slope and elasticity of demand have an inverse relationship. When slope is high elasticity of demand is low and
vice versa.
Unit elasticity:
A 1% change in price will result in an exact 1% change in quantity demanded. Thus elasticity will be equal
to one. A unit elastic demand curve plots as a rectangular hyperbola.
Note that a straight line demand curve cannot have unit elasticity as the value of elasticity changes along the
straight line demand curve.
Total revenue (TR) = Price x Quantity; when the demand curve is inelastic, TR increases as the price goes up,
and vice versa; when the demand curve is elastic, TR falls as the price goes up, and vice versa.
o Percentage of income spent on a good - It may be the case that the smaller the proportion of income spent
taken up with purchasing the good or service the more inelastic demand will be.
o Time period under consideration – Demand tends to be more elastic in the long run rather than in the short
run.
o Change the slope of the demand curve – make it more inelastic. This is done by generating brand loyalty;
o Shift the demand curve to the right by tempting the people’s want for that specific product.
Normal Goods:
Inferior Goods:
Short Run:
Short run is a period in which not all factors can adjust fully and therefore adjustment to shocks can only be
partial.
Long run:
A period over which all factors can be changed and full adjustment to shocks can take place.
Rational Choice:
Rational choice consists in evaluating the costs and benefits of different decisions and then choosing the decision
that gives the highest benefit relative to cost.
There is a difference between “ignorance” and “irrationality.” A person operating under uncertainty and thus at
least partial ignorance can still make rational decisions by taking into account all the information she has at her
disposal. Rationality is an ex-ante concept.
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR:
Utility is the usefulness, benefit or satisfaction derived from the consumption of goods and services.
Total utility is the entire satisfaction one derives from consuming a good or service. Marginal utility is the
additional utility derived from the consumption of one or more unit of the good.
The law of diminishing marginal utility states that as you consume more and more of a particular good, the
satisfaction or utility that you derive from each additional unit falls.
The marginal utility curve slopes downwards in a MU-Q graph showing the principle of diminishing marginal
utility.
Consumer surplus is the difference between willingness to pay and what the consumer actually has to pay: i.e.
CS= MU-P.
That point where consumer surplus becomes zero. If marginal utility is greater than price, consumption will
increase causing MU to fall until it equals price, and vice versa.
• Pa Pb PC
The problem of uncertainty is integral to consumption decisions especially in the matter of purchasing
durable goods. Uncertainty means assigning probabilities to the outcomes. A consumer’s response to
uncertainty depends upon her attitude to risk: whether she is:
Risk averse.
Risk-loving.
Risk neutral.
Risk means to take a chance after the probabilities have been assigned.
The odds ratio (OR) is the ratio of the probability of success to the probability of failure. It can be equal to 1,
less than 1 or greater than 1. If it is equal to 1 we call it fair odds, if less then 1 unfavorable odds, and if greater
1 then favorable odds.
A risk neutral person is one who buys a good when OR > 1. He is indifferent when OR = 1 and will not buy
when OR < 1.
A risk averse person will not buy if OR < 1. He will also not buy if OR = 1. He might also not decide to buy if
OR > 1.
A risk loving person will buy if OR > 1 or = 1, but he might also buy when OR is
< 1.The degree of risk aversion increases as your income level falls, due to diminishing marginal utility of income.
Risk hedging: Can be used to reduce the extent to which concerns about uncertainty affect our daily
lives.
An indifference curve:
A line which charts out all the different points on which the consumer is indifferent with respect to the utility
he derives.
Marginal rate of substitution (MRS):
The indifference curve between any two points is given by the change in the quantity of good Y divided by
change in the quantity of good X. This is called the.
A diminishing marginal rate of substitution (MRS) is related to the principle of diminishing marginal utility.
MRS is equal to the ratio of the marginal utility of X to the marginal utility of Y.
dY = MUX =
MRS dX
MUY
The indifference curve for perfect substitutes is a straight line, while it is L-shaped for perfect compliments.
The budget line shows various combinations of 2 goods X & Y that can be purchased.
Where the budget line is tangent (intersect) to the highest possible indifference curve at such a point, the
slopes of the indifference curve and the budget line are equal. In other words:
Just as we can use indifference analysis to show the combination of goods that maximizes utility for a given
budget, so too we can show the least-cost combination of goods that yields a given level of utility.
o One the purchasing power of consumer changes i.e., the budget line shifts (leads to income effect).
o Secondly, the slope of budget line changes due to a change in the relative price ratio (leads to substitution
effect).
The substitution effect of a price rise is always negative, while the income effect of a price rise on the
consumption of a normal good is negative. The income effect for an inferior good is positive. The income effect
of a Giffen good is so positive that it offsets the negative substitution effect, therefore.
Firm:
A firm is any organized form of production, in which someone or a collection of individuals are involved in the
production of goods and services. A firm can be sole proprietorship (one person ownership), partnership (a
limited number of owners) or a limited company (a large number of changing shareholders).
Production Function:
A production function is simply the relationship between inputs & outputs. Mathematically it can be written
as:
Q = f (K, L, N, E, T, P ......... )
Where,
Q = Output = Total product produced K = Capital L = Labor
Technology P = Power
Q = A Kα L1 – α Where:
Q = output
Short run:
Short run is a period of time in which at least one of the factors of production is fixed or Unchangeable
Long run:
Long run is a period of time in which all the factors of production used in the production are flexible. The actual
length of the short run and long-run can vary considerably from industry to industry.
The law of diminishing marginal returns states that as you increase the quantity of a variable factor together
with a fixed factor, the returns (in terms of output) become less and less.
A factor (F) is the latter’s total contribution to output measured in units of output produced. Average physical
product (APP):
Is the TPP per unit of the variable factor?
APP = TPPF/QF
Is the addition to TPP brought by employing an extra unit of the variable factor More generally,
MPPF = ∆TPPF/∆QF
If the marginal physical product equals the average physical product, the average physical product will not
change.
If the marginal physical product is above the average physical product, the average physical product will rise.
If the marginal physical product is below the average physical product the average physical product will fall.
Then diminishing returns set in and therefore average per capita production/consumption can be
expected to fall ceteris paribus(all factor effect demand should remain constant). A firm is confronted
with three more decisions;
Scale of production,
Change in production or increasing, decreasing return if due to the change in scale of production.
The location decision depends upon both the location of raw material suppliers and the location of the market.
The nature of the product, transportation costs, availability of for production, stable power supply and good
communications network, qualified and skilled workers, level of wages, the cost of local services and banking
and financial facilities are among some other important factors.
The size of an industry can lead to external economies and diseconomies of scale.
External economies are benefits accruing to any one firm due to actions or the presence of other firms. For
example, advertising by a rival industry, setting up of credit information bureaus by banks.
The optimum combination of factors will obtain at the point where the marginal physical product of the last
dollar spent on all inputs is equal, i.e.:
MPPK = MPPL PK PL
Isoquant:
An isoquant represents different combinations of factors of production that a firm can employ to produce the
same level of output.
Budget Line:
COST:
Variable Cost:
Costs which vary with the level of activity (or output) are called variable costs.
Fixed Costs:
Costs which do not vary with the level of activity or output are called fixed costs. In long run there are no fixed
costs.
There is an inverse relationship between costs and productivity, i.e. as productivity rises, costs fall and vice
versa.
Total Cost:
Total cost (TC) is the sum of all fixed and variable costs.
Average Cost:
Average cost (AC) is the vertical summation of the AFC & AVC, where AC = AFC +
AVC
AFC = TFC/Q
and AVC = TVC/Q.
Marginal Cost:
Marginal cost is the addition to TC caused by a unit increase in output. More generally:
The long-run average cost (LRAC) curve for a typical firm is U shaped.
As a firm expands, it initially experiences economies of scale (due to productive efficiency, better utilization of
resources etc.); in other words it faces a downward sloping LRAC curve.
After the scale of operation is increased further, however, the firm achieve constant costs i.e., LRAC become
flat.
If the firm further increases its scale of operation, diseconomies of scale set in (due to problems with managing
a very large organization etc.) and the LRAC assumes a positive slope.
In case a firm is enjoying economies of scale, each incremental unit will cost less than the preceding one i.e.,
LRMC will be falling. The opposite will be true for diseconomies of scale. In case of constant costs, each
incremental unit will cost the same, i.e., the LRMC will be constant.
Envelope curve:
The LRAC curve for a firm is actually derived from its SRAC curves. The exact shape of the LRAC is a wave
connecting the least cost parts of the SRAC curves. In practice however, LRAC is shown as a smooth U- shaped
curve drawn tangent to the SRAC. This is also called an envelope curve.
REVENUES
Revenues are the sale proceeds that accrue to a firm when it sells the goods it produces.
Total revenue (TR), average revenue (AR) and marginal revenue (MR) concepts apply in the same way as they
did to TC, AC and MC. TR = P x Q
AR = TR/Q
AR is almost always equal to price unless the firm is engaged in price discrimination.
Price-taker:
MR = ∆TR/∆Q.
A firm that does not have the ability to influence market price is a price-taker.
For a price taker, AR=MR=P. In this case TR is a straight line from the origin. The demand (or AR) curve the firm
faces is a horizontal line.
Price-maker Firm:
A firm that influences the market price by how much it produces can be called a price- maker or price- setter.
Economists say that when firms earn zero accounting profits, they actually earn normal economic profits.
Positive profits are, for this reason, called supernormal profits as they are over and above what the owners
normally require as a return for their entrepreneurship.
If total revenue (TR) and total cost equation are given as follows:
Then we can find out the value of output at which profit is maximized as under: Solution: Profit is
maximized at the point where
MC = MR
As profit is maximized at the point where MR = MC, so by equating values of MC and MR function, we get,
MR =MC
16 + 6Q = 48 – 2Q
6Q + 2Q = 48 – 16
8Q = 32
Q=4
= -4Q2 + 32Q – 12
= -64 + 128 - 12
Tñ = 52
MARKET STRUCTURES
Market structure refers to how an industry (broadly called market) that a firm is operating in is structured or
organized.
o Perfect competition
o Monopoly
o Monopolistic competition
o Oligopoly.
PERFECT COMPETITION
No barriers to entry (also implies free mobility of factors of production). Identical/homogeneous products
Perfect information/knowledge
Perfect competition can be thought of as an extreme form of capitalism, i.e. all the firms are fully subject to the
market forces of demand and supply.
Concentration ratio:
Is used to assess the level of competition in an industry It is simply the percentage of total industry output that
is produced by the 5 largest firms in the industry.
The short run is the period where at least one factor of production is fixed. In perfect competition, it also
means that no new firms can enter the market. In the long run, all the factors of production are variable.
Allocative efficiency: (the point of maximum allocative efficiency) the optimal point of production for any
individual firm is where
MR=MC. The optimal point of production for any society is where price is equal to marginal cost. This is called
the point of maximum allocative efficiency
Productive efficiency:
This is attained when firms produce at the bottom of their AC curves, that is, goods are produced in the most
cost efficient manner. Perfectly competitive firms also achieve this in the long run because they produce at
P=MC
MONOPOLY
PRICE DISCRIMINATION
Price discrimination (PD) happens when a producer charges different prices for the same product to different
customers.
2nd degree (different prices charged to customers who purchase different quantities) and 3rd degree
(different prices to customers in different markets)
MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION
Monopolistic competition is also characterized by a large number of buyers and sellers and absence of entry
barriers.
OLIGOPOLY
Similar to monopoly in the sense that there are a small number of firms (about 2-20) in the market and, as such,
barriers to entry exist.
Collusion:
Collusion occurs when two or more firms decide to cooperate with each other in the setting of prices and/or
quantities.
Cartel:
A cartel is most likely to survive when the number of firms is small, there is openness among firms regarding
their production processes.
Break down of Collusive Oligopoly: A collusive oligopoly (say based on production quotas) is likely to break
down when the incentive to cheat is very high. This can arise, for instance, in a situation where here is a lure
of very high profits so that individual firms cheat on their quota and try to increase output and profits.
A prisoner’s dilemma situation for oligopolistic firms arises when 2 or more firms by attempting independently
to choose the best strategy anticipation of whatever the others are likely to do, all end up in a worse position
than if they had cooperated in the first place.
Maximin:
Maximin strategy is a cautious (pessimistic) approach in which firms try to maximize the worst payoff they can
make.
Maximax strategies:
A maximax strategy involves choosing the strategy which maximizes the maximum payoff (optimistic).
A kinked demand curve explains the “stickiness” of the prices in oligopolistic markets.
Non price competition means competition amongst the firms based on factors other than price, e.g.
advertising expenditures.
IMPORTANT QUESTIONS
Or Qd =Qs