Midterms Reviewer: Economics Analysis

Market Baskets
  • Definition: A list of specific quantities of one or more goods (also called a bundle).
  • Example: A grocery cart with items or monthly quantities of food, clothing, and housing a consumer purchases.
Consumer Preferences
  1. Completeness: Consumers can compare and rank all market baskets.
  2. Transitivity: If a consumer prefers A to B and B to C, they must prefer A to C.
  3. More is better than less: Consumers prefer more goods to fewer, assuming all else is equal.
Indifference Curve
  • Definition: A curve showing combinations of market baskets that give a consumer the same satisfaction.
Indifference Map
  • Definition: A set of indifference curves showing different combinations of market baskets among which the consumer is indifferent.
Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS)
  • Definition: The maximum amount of one good a consumer is willing to give up for an additional unit of another good.
  • Formula:
    $$
    MRS_{xy} = \frac{dy}{dx} = \frac{MU_x}{MU_y}
    $$
Budget Line
  • Definition: Combinations of goods for which the total money spent equals income.
  • Formula:
    $$
    P_F F + P_C C = I
    $$
    Where:
  • ( P_F ) = Price of food, ( F ) = Quantity of food
  • ( P_C ) = Price of clothing, ( C ) = Quantity of clothing
  • ( I ) = Income
Maximizing Consumer Satisfaction
  • Condition: Occurs where the indifference curve and the budget line are tangent.
  • Equilibrium Condition:
    $$
    MRS = \frac{P_F}{P_C}
    $$
Substitution and Income Effects
  • Substitution Effect: Change in consumption due to a change in price, holding utility constant.
  • Income Effect: Change in consumption due to a change in purchasing power, holding relative prices constant.
Consumer Surplus
  • Definition: The difference between what a consumer is willing to pay and what they actually pay.
Network Externalities
  • Definition: When demand depends on other individuals’ purchases.
  • Positive (Bandwagon Effect): More people buying increases demand.
  • Negative (Snob Effect): More people buying decreases demand.
Consumer Preferences Toward Risk
  1. Risk Averse: Prefers a certain income over a risky one with the same expected value.
  2. Risk Loving: Prefers a risky income over a certain one with the same expected value.
  3. Risk Neutral: Indifferent between a certain and risky income with the same expected value.
Reducing Risk
  1. Diversification: Spreading investments to reduce risk.
  2. Insurance: Paying to transfer the risk of uncertain events.
  3. Information: Gaining knowledge to reduce uncertainty.

Here is a concise and extensive cheat sheet based on the key ideas from the provided Theory of the Firm document, with mathematical equations and solutions wrapped with $$…$$.


Firms and Production Decisions:
  1. Production Technology: Describes the methods a firm uses to produce goods.
  2. Cost Constraints: Factors limiting production due to costs.
  3. Input Choices: Decisions firms make regarding the mix of inputs to minimize costs.
Production Function:
  • Describes the highest output a firm can produce for a given input combination:
    $$ q = F(K, L) $$
  • q: Output
  • K: Capital
  • L: Labor
Production with One Variable Input:
  • Total Product (TP): Output for varying input amounts.
  • Average Product (AP): Output per unit of input:
    $$ AP_L = \frac{q}{L} $$
  • Marginal Product (MP): Additional output per extra unit of input:
    $$ MP_L = \frac{\Delta q}{\Delta L} $$
Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns:
  • With fixed inputs, increasing one input results in smaller output increments over time.
Isoquant & Isocost Lines:
  • Isoquant: Curve showing all input combinations that yield the same output.
  • Isocost Line: Shows combinations of inputs a firm can afford at a given cost.
Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution (MRTS):
  • The rate at which one input can be substituted for another while keeping output constant:
    $$ MRTS = – \frac{\Delta K}{\Delta L} $$
Returns to Scale:
  1. Increasing Returns to Scale: Output more than doubles when inputs double.
  2. Constant Returns to Scale: Output doubles when inputs double.
  3. Decreasing Returns to Scale: Output increases less than double when inputs double.
Costs of Production:
  • Accounting Cost: Actual expenses + depreciation.
  • Economic Cost: Costs including opportunity cost of resources.
Short-Run vs. Long-Run Costs:
  • User Cost of Capital:
    $$ \text{User Cost} = \text{Economic Depreciation} + (r \times \text{Value of Capital}) $$
  • Example: If the purchase price is $150 million, depreciation is $5 million/year, and the interest rate is 10%, then:
    $$ \text{User Cost} = 5M + (0.10 \times 150M) = 20M $$
Economies and Diseconomies of Scale:
  • Economies of Scale: Output can be doubled for less than a doubling of cost.
  • Diseconomies of Scale: Doubling output costs more than doubling the input costs.
Market Structures:
Perfectly Competitive Markets:
  • Features:
  1. Price-taking behavior.
  2. Product homogeneity.
  3. Free entry and exit.
Profit Maximization:
  • In perfect competition, firms maximize profit where:
    $$ MC(q) = MR = P $$
Short-Run Supply Decision:
  • A firm produces where:
    $$ P = MC $$
  • The firm shuts down if:
    $$ P < \text{Average Economic Cost} $$
Long-Run Profit Maximization:
  • Firms choose output where:
    $$ P = LMC $$

Government Policies and Market Intervention
  • Price Ceiling:
  • Effect: Increases demand, decreases supply → leads to shortages.
  • Impact on Consumers: Some benefit from lower prices, while others cannot buy due to shortages.
  • Evaluating Impact: Changes in Consumer Surplus (CS) and Producer Surplus (PS) are key metrics.
  • Consumer Surplus (CS):
    $$ \text{CS} = \text{Willingness to Pay} – \text{Actual Price Paid} $$
  • Measures the extra benefit consumers receive beyond the price they pay.
  • Producer Surplus (PS):
    $$ \text{PS} = \text{Market Price} – \text{Marginal Cost of Production} $$
  • Summed over all units produced, PS is the benefit producers get from selling above their cost.
  • Deadweight Loss (DWL):
    $$ \text{DWL} = \text{Loss of Total Surplus due to Market Inefficiency} $$
  • Price controls (like price ceilings) can cause DWL because the loss in producer surplus often outweighs consumer gains.
    $$ \Delta \text{CS} + \Delta \text{PS} = – B – C $$
Market Efficiency and Failure
  • Economic Efficiency:
    $$ \text{Maximization of Total Surplus (CS + PS)} $$
  • Occurs in a perfectly competitive market.
  • Market Failure:
    Occurs when unregulated markets are inefficient, e.g., externalities (costs/benefits not reflected in prices) or information asymmetry.
Price Supports and Production Quotas
  • Price Support:
  • Government sets a support price ( P_s ), buying up the excess supply to maintain prices above equilibrium.
  • Effect: Reduces consumer surplus, increases producer surplus, but at a cost to the government.
    $$ \Delta \text{CS} = – A – B $$
    $$ \Delta \text{PS} = A + B + D $$
    $$ \text{Cost to Government} = (Q_2 – Q_1) P_s $$
  • Production Quotas:
    To sustain higher prices, the government restricts supply via quotas or incentives for producers to reduce output.
Taxes and Subsidies
  • Tax:
    $$ P_b = \text{Price paid by buyers (includes tax)} $$
    $$ P_s = \text{Price sellers receive (net of tax)} $$
  • Impact: Divided between buyers and sellers, depending on the elasticity of supply and demand.
  • Deadweight Loss:
    $$ \text{DWL} = B + C $$
  • Subsidy:
    $$ \text{A negative tax, benefits divided between buyers and sellers depending on relative elasticities.} $$
Price Floors (Minimum Prices)
  • Effect: Raises prices above equilibrium (e.g., minimum wage laws, agricultural price supports).
    $$ \Delta \text{CS} = – A – B $$
    $$ \Delta \text{PS} = A – C $$
    $$ \text{Total change in surplus} = – B – C $$
Import Tariffs and Quotas
  • Elimination of Imports:
  • Raises domestic prices, benefiting producers but harming consumers and creating deadweight loss.
    $$ \Delta \text{CS} = – (A + B + C) $$
    $$ \text{DWL} = B + C $$

Monopoly
  • Definition: A market with only one seller who completely controls output and price.
  • Average Revenue (AR): The price received per unit sold, which is the market demand curve.
  • Marginal Revenue (MR): Change in revenue from a unit change in output. The monopolist uses MR to choose the profit-maximizing output.
Monopoly Power
  • P = MC for Competitive Firms: Price equals marginal cost.
  • P > MC for Monopoly: A monopolist sets a price greater than the marginal cost.
  • Lerner Index: A measure of monopoly power, calculated as the excess of price over marginal cost as a fraction of price. $$ L = \frac{P – MC}{P} $$
Rule of Thumb for Pricing
  • Monopolist’s price markup over MC is: $$ P = \frac{MC}{1 + (1/Ed)} $$ where ( Ed ) is the elasticity of demand for the firm.
Markup Pricing Examples
  1. Supermarkets: Typically, the price is set about 11% above MC when elasticity is -10. $$ P = \frac{MC}{1 – 0.1} = 1.11 MC $$
  2. Convenience Stores: Face less elastic demand, setting prices 25% above MC when elasticity is -5. $$ P = \frac{MC}{1 – 0.2} = 1.25 MC $$
  3. Designer Jeans: Markups range from 33% to 50% higher than MC when elasticity is between -3 and -4.
Sources of Monopoly Power
  1. Elasticity of Market Demand: The less elastic the demand, the greater the monopoly power.
  2. Number of Firms: Fewer firms mean more market control.
  3. Firm Interaction: Competitors’ reactions can influence monopoly pricing.
Social Costs of Monopoly Power
  • Rent Seeking: Expenditure in socially unproductive efforts to maintain monopoly power, such as lobbying or avoiding antitrust.
Price Regulation
  • Eliminating Deadweight Loss: In monopolies, price regulation can prevent deadweight loss unlike in competitive markets.
Natural Monopoly
  • Definition: A single firm that can produce the entire market output at a lower cost than multiple firms.
Monopsony
  • Definition: A market with a single buyer.
Monopsony Power
  • Marginal Value (MV): The additional benefit from purchasing one more unit.
  • Marginal Expenditure (ME): The additional cost of buying one more unit.
  • Average Expenditure (AE): The price paid per unit of a good.
Sources of Monopsony Power
  1. Elasticity of Market Supply: The less elastic the supply curve, the more monopsony power, as ME > AE.
  2. Number of Buyers: More buyers reduce the power of any single buyer.
  3. Buyer Interaction: Collusion among buyers can increase monopsony power.
Limiting Market Power
  • Antitrust Laws: Regulations that prevent actions restraining competition (e.g., Sherman Act, Clayton Act).
  • Parallel Conduct: Implicit collusion where one firm follows another.
  • Predatory Pricing: Pricing strategies to eliminate competitors.
Philippine Context
  • Philippine Competition Act (RA No. 10667): A local version of antitrust regulations to limit market dominance.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *