Title: Chapter 2 Thinking Like an Economist
1Chapter 2Thinking Like an Economist
2The Basic Competitive Model
- Rational consumers
- Profit-maximizing firms
- Competitive markets
- Government is ignored for now
3Rational Consumers
- Scarcity forces us to make choices.
- Economists assume individuals and firms make
choices rationally - Pursue what they see as their own self-interest
- Weigh costs and benefits as they see them
- If benefits costs, take the action
- However, different people have different
interests - Economists do not judge people's preferences.
4Profit-Maximizing Firms
- For firms rationality means maximizing profits.
- Profit revenue ? costs
- Revenue pQ, where p price and Q quantity
- Profit pQ ? costs
5Information Costs
- Individuals and firms often make decisions with
little or no information. - Is the car a lemon?
- Will the worker be productive?
- Will the investment be profitable?
- Rationality applies to acquiring information to
answer these questions. - If the benefit of more information the cost of
acquiring the information, the information is
acquired.
6Competitive Markets
- Many firms sell identical products to many
consumers. - Firms and consumers are price takers in
competitive markets. - Firms provide as much output as consumers will
buy. - Each firm can sell as much as it wants the size
of the firm is small compared to the size of the
market. - If firms charge a price higher than the market
price, they lose all their customers. - All firms in the industry charge the same price.
7The Basic Competitive Model as a Benchmark
- Combines self-interested consumers,
profit-maximizing firms, and competition - The model is tested by comparing its predictions
with actual markets. - Economists believe this model can provide answers
to the four basic questions - What is produced, and in what quantities?
- How are goods produced?
- For whom are those goods produced?
- Who decides the answers to the first three
questions, and how? - Government is not needed to answer these
questions in the basic competitive model.
8Efficiency in the Basic Competitive Model
- The basic competitive model is efficient.
- That means scarce resources are not wasted.
- It is not possible to produce more of one good
without producing less of another good. - It is not possible to make one person better off
without making someone else worse off. - Known as Pareto efficiency
9Income
- Income is an incentive for consumers, workers,
investors, and firms. - Consumer or household income is personal income.
- Firm income is revenue divided between costs and
profit.
10Property Rights
- The right of the owner to use and sell his or her
property. - With well-defined property rights, access is
excludable, rivalrous, and transferable. - A combination of freedom and responsibility is
crucial to markets. - Freedom Individuals and firms must be free to be
creative and try new techniques. - Responsibility Individuals must reap the reward
if successful or suffer the losses if not.
11Incentives versus Equality
- Well-defined property rights permit incentives to
provide rewards and costs. - If rewards are tied to performance, then a
problem arises when many people help to produce a
good or service. - Who contributed what?
- Who are the most productive employees is the hot
salesperson good or just lucky?
12Performance-Based Compensation
- Even if pay can be tied to performance, how does
one measure performance? - If compensation is tied to performance, this
leads to inequality since different people
perform differently. - However, if this inequality is from luck, would
another criterion of compensation do "better"? - Some economists hold equality as a value in its
own right.
13When Property Rights Fail
- In many cases property rights are not clearly
defined. - This causes problems with the efficient
allocation of resources. - Example
- In the early days of radio broadcasting, many
broadcasters used the same frequency and jammed
each other's broadcasts. - Property rights were ill defined anyone could
infringe on others' uses of the airwaves. - The government established a licensing system,
which created well-defined property rights. - Broadcasters became the sole owners of
frequencies. - They could sue to protect their property.
14Nontransferable Property Rights
- Sometimes the ability to dispose of property is
restricted by law some property rights are not
transferable. - Water rights cannot, in general, be sold.
- If water rights were sellable, ranchers could
sell water to thirsty cities. - Both benefit
- Ranchers earn extra income.
- Cities pay less for water.
15Consensus among Economists on Incentives
- Providing appropriate incentives is a fundamental
economic problem. - Profits provide incentives for firms to produce
the goods individuals want. - Wages provide incentives for individuals to work.
- Property rights provide people with important
incentives, to invest, save, and to put their
assets to the best possible use.
16Alternative to the Price System
- In a market, those individuals who are willing to
pay the most receive the good. - The allocation of goods is based on a price
system. - Rationing is an alternative to price allocations.
17Types of Rationing
- Queues If the price of a good or service is set
below market price, customers may have to wait in
line to buy it. - The wasted time is a waste of resources.
- There are long lines for food in countries with
price controls. - Lottery Customers are picked at random.
- Coupons One must pay both the market price and a
coupon to buy a good. - Coupon rationing is favored during wartime.
- Often goods and coupons may be traded in a black
market.
18The Inefficiency of Rationing
- Those who are most willing to pay for the
rationed good or service do not necessarily get
the good or service.
19Opportunity Sets
- Opportunity sets are combinations of goods.
- Due to the scarcity of money or time, not all
combinations of goods are attainable.
20Budget Constraint (a)
- Alice has 160 to spend on CDs and books. The
price of a CD is 16 and the price of a book is
20. - She can buy either 10 CDs and no books or 8 books
and no CDs or some combination in between.
21Budget Constraint (b)
- If the price of books falls to 10, Alice's
budget constraint rotates outward along the book
axis (the x axis). - Alice's new budget constraint is
- Flatter than her previous budget constraint
because books are relatively cheaper now. - Farther from the origin than her previous budget
constraint. The lower price for books has
increased her purchasing power, and her
opportunity set has expanded.
22Time Constraint
- Bob has 6 hours of free time every day after we
subtract time spent - Working
- Getting ready for work
- Commuting
- Sleeping
- It takes Bob 1 hour to listen to a CD and 2 hours
to watch a video.
23Time Constraint (cont.)
- Bob can listen to 6 CDs and watch no videos or
watch 3 videos and listen to no CDs or some
combination in between.
24The Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)
- The PPC is a producer's constraint.
- With a given quantity of inputs, a firm can only
produce certain quantities of goods. - Guns versus butter
- The boundary of what can be produced is the
production possibilities curve.
25The Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)
(continued)
- PPCs are curved, bowed out from the origin. Why?
- Guns and butter have different inputs.
- Steel makes great artillery shells but not
butter. - Cows' udders do not make good weapons.
26Optimal Production on the PPC
- Inside the PPC, a firm can produce more of both
goods by moving out to the curve. - So points interior to the curve are not
inefficient. - Economists want to know the source of these
inefficiencies, what resources are unemployed. - The optimal production mix is always on the curve.
27Costs
- The opportunity cost is the value of the next
best alternative when one makes a choice. - Time and budget constraints and production
possibilities curves illustrate the cost of one
option in terms of the other opportunity cost. - The cost of an education is
- Tuition
- Room and board
- Books
- Travel expenses
- Opportunity cost lost earnings from not working
for four years - The opportunity cost is often used by the
government when it considers the costs and
benefits of a program.
28Sunk and Marginal Costs
- Sunk costs are non-recoverable expenditures.
- Sunk costs play no role in deciding whether to
continue an activity. - Setup costs are sunk costs.
- The installation charge to turn on electricity is
a sunk cost. - Marginal costs are the extra costs of small
changes in production or consumption. - Marginal costs are the additional costs of
producing or consuming one additional unit. - Monthly electric bills are marginal costs.