Individual Economic Decision Making/ behavioural economics Flashcards

1
Q

What does an individuals demand curve show

A

How much of a good or service the consumer is willing to demand at different prices

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2
Q

Define rational behaviour

A

Acting in pursuit of self interest, maximising welfare satisfaction or utility gained from consuming

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3
Q

Define utility

A

The satisfaction or economic welfare gains from comsuming

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4
Q

Define marginal utility

A

Additional welfare gained from one extra unit of a good

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5
Q

Diminishing marginal utility

A

The marginal utility derived from a good diminishing/decreasing after each additional unity

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6
Q

Example of utility and scarcity

A

Adam smiths diamond and water paradox
Price of water is low but sustains life
Diamonds expensive but purely ornamental

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7
Q

Constraints on maximising utility

A

Limited income
A given set of prices (price takers)
Budget constraint limit freedom of action
Limited time available

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8
Q

Explain the concept of the margin

A

Rational consumers choose between goods to try max utility/welfare.
The marginal utilities gained determines combination of goods consumer must choose to maximise utility

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9
Q

When is utility maximised

A

MU=P

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10
Q

Link to imperfect information in decision making

A

The underconsumption of merit goods

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11
Q

Define asymmetric information

A

When one party of an economic transaction possesses less information than the other

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12
Q

Define behavioural economics

A

A method of economic analysis that applies psychological insights into human behaviour to explain decisions and choices made by individuals

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13
Q

Define rule of thumb

A

A rough and practical method or procedure that can be applied when making decisions (social norms)

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14
Q

Bounded rationality

A

An individuals rationality is limited by the info they have

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15
Q

Bounded self control

A

Limited self control in which lack self control to act in self interest

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16
Q

Cognitive bias

A

A mistake in reasoning occurring as a result of holding onto preferences, dislikes and past experiences

17
Q

Anchoring

A

Comparing and contrasting limited options to make decision
Relying heavily on the first piece of info given

18
Q

Economic sanctions

A

Restrictions I,posed by regulations which limit economic freedom
Breaking sanction would lead to punishment

19
Q

Example of social norms

A

Negative attitudes towards drinking alcohol

20
Q

Altruism

A

Acting to promote someone’s wellbeing,even if we suffer consequences

21
Q

Factors effecting decision making

A

Choice architecture - how or where info is given
Framing - how info is presented
Restructured choice- reduces complexity

22
Q

Explain nudges

A

Provide info to respond to
Opt out schemes rather than opt in
Active choosing

23
Q

positive statement

A

based on factual evidence

24
Q

normative statement

A

based on judgment or opinion

25
Q

central purpose of economic activitity

A

to satisfy and produce needs and provide for wnats

26
Q

what are economic resources

A

land labour capital enterprise

27
Q

fundamental economic problem

A

scarcity and unlimited wants and needs with limited resources

28
Q

what do PPFs demonstrate

A

scarce resources, trade offs, and opportunity costs
productive potential of the economy

29
Q

maximising utility

A

utility is the satisfaction derived from consumption of a good or service

30
Q
A