Macroeconomics - Ch 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Demand

A

Schedule or curve that shows the various amounts of a product that consumers are willing and able to purchase at each of a series of possible prices during a specified period of time (other things equal)

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2
Q

Demand Schedule/curve

A

Graph showing price and quantity’s inverse relationship (as price declines, people buy more); downward slope reflects law of demand

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3
Q

Law of demand

A

Inverse relationship between price and quantity demand

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4
Q

Diminishing marginal utility

A

Consumption subject to this; successive units of a particular product yield less and less marginal utility; consumers will only buy additional units if the price is progressively reduced

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5
Q

Income Effect

A

A lower price increases the purchasing power of a buyer’s money income, enabling the buyer to purchase more of the product than before; higher price has the opposite effect

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6
Q

Substitution Effect

A

At a lower price, buyers have the incentive to substitute what is now a less expensive product for other products that are now relatively more expensive (product whose price has fallen is now a better deal relative to other products)

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7
Q

Determinants of demand (demand shifters)

A

Factors affecting purchases other than price these = other things equal; when determinants change, curve shifts to the left or right; basic ones: (1) Consumers’ tastes/preferences (2) # of buyers in the market (3) consumers’ incomes (4) prices of related goods (5) consumer expectations

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8
Q

Normal goods (superior goods)

A

Products whose demand varies directly with money income; most products fall into this category

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9
Q

Inferior goods

A

Goods whose demand varies inversely with money income

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10
Q

Substitute Good (substitutes in consumption)

A

One that can be used in place of another good

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11
Q

Complementary Good (complements)

A

One that is used together with another good

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12
Q

Independent Goods

A

Vast majority of goods that are not related to one another; change in the price of one has little or no effect on the demand for the other

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13
Q

Increase in demand

A

Due to favorable change in consumer tastes, increase in # of buyers, rising incomes (normal goods), falling incomes (inferior goods), increase in the price of a substitute good, decrease in the price of a complementary good, new consumer expectation that either prices or income will be higher in the future; reverse these to explain decrease in demand

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14
Q

Change in Quantity Demanded

A

Movement from one point to another point (from one price-quantity combo to another) on a fixed demand curve; cause = increase/decrease in price

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15
Q

Supply

A

Schedule/curve showing the various amounts of a product that producers are willing/able to make available for sale at each of a series of possible prices during a specific period; supply schedule tells us (other things equal) firms will produce and offer for sale more of their product at a high price than at a low price (price represents revenue)

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16
Q

Law of Supply

A

As price rises, the quantity supplied rises; as price falls, the quantity supplied falls

17
Q

Marginal cost

A

The added cost of producing one more unit of output

18
Q

Supply curve

A

Upward slope reflecting the law of supply; positive/direct relationship between price & quantity

19
Q

Determinants of Supply (supply shifters)

A

(1) Resource prices (2) Technology (3) Taxes & Subsidies (4) Prices of other goods (5) Producer expectations (6) # of sellers in the market; change in one of these shifts the entire curve right or left

20
Q

Change in supply

A

Change in the schedule, shift of the curve

21
Q

Change in quantity supplied

A

Movement from one point to another on a fixed supply curve

22
Q

Equilibrium price (market-clearing price)

A

Price where the intentions of buyers and sellers match (quantity demanded = quantity supplied)

23
Q

Equilibrium quantity

A

Quantity at which the intentions of buyers and sellers match

24
Q

In equilibrium

A

a market in balance, or at rest

25
Q

Surplus

A

Excess supply; drives prices down

26
Q

Shortage

A

Excess demand; drives prices up

27
Q

Productive Efficiency

A

the production of any particular good in the least costly way

28
Q

Allocative Efficency

A

the particular mix of goods and services most highly valued by society (minimum-cost production assumed)

29
Q

MB=MC

A

Marginal benefit = marginal cost at the intersection of the demand and supply curves (allocative efficiency results)

30
Q

Price ceiling

A

sets the maximum legal price a seller may charge for a product or service (ex. rent control, usury laws- limits rent, interest)

31
Q

Black markets

A

product illegally bought/sold above legal limits

32
Q

Price floor

A

minimum price fixed by the government; invoked when society feels the free functioning of the market system has not provided a sufficient income for certain groups of resource suppliers or producers (Ex. agricultural products, minimum wages)

33
Q

Increase in demand ______ equilibrium price and quantity; a decrease in demand ______ equilibrium price and quantity

A

Increases; decreases

34
Q

Increase in supply ______ equilibrium price but ______ equilibrium quantity; a decrease in supply ______ equilibrium price but _______ equilibrium quantity

A

reduces; increases

increases; reduces