How markets work Pt.2 Flashcards

1
Q

Equilibrium price

A

Where there is a state of balance between market supply and demand
- at a given price, quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal
- if there is a change in either, a new equilibrium is established

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2
Q

Excess demand on diagram

A

Where demand exceeds supply at a given price
- horizontal distance between the demand and the supply curves at a price below the equilibrium price.

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3
Q

Excess supply on diagram

A

Where supply offered for sale exceeds the quantity demanded by consumers at a given price
- horizontal distance between the demand and the supply curves at a price above the equilibrium price.

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4
Q

Market forces to eliminate excess supply and demand

A
  • When supply of a product decreases and demand increases, the market force increases the price
  • When supply increases and demand decreases, the price of the product decreases.
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5
Q

Price mechanism (invisible hand)

A

How the free market allocates resources i.e. how supply and demand arrive at equilibrium

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6
Q

Functions of the price mechanism to allocate resources

A

Incentives
Rationing
Signalling

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7
Q

Incentives

A

Consumers send information to producers (through their choices) about the changing nature of needs and wants
- higher prices are incentive to raise output as profit is higher
- lower prices cause supply to contract as producers reduce output

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8
Q

Rationing

A

Prices serve to ration scarce resources when demand in a market outstrips supply, higher prices will cause a contraction in demand
- when there is a shortage the price is bid up leaving only those willing and able to pay
- the market price acts a rationing device to equate demand with the supply

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9
Q

Signalling (price adjusting)

A

When prices adjust to demonstrate where resources are required and where they are not
- Expansion of supply:
If prices rise, it signals to suppliers there are scarcities and more is needed of this product
- Contraction of supply:
If prices fall, it signals to suppliers this product has been oversupplied and they should cut back

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10
Q

Consumer surplus

A

The difference between the price a consumer is willing and able to pay for a product and the price that is actually paid
- shown by the area under the demand curve and above the equilibrium

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11
Q

Producer surplus

A

The difference between the price producers are willing and able to sell for and what they actually sell for
- shown by area under equilibrium and above the supply curve

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12
Q

Supply and Demand effect on producer surplus

A

Supply:
- increase = more producer surplus
- decrease = less producer surplus
Demand:
- increase = more producer surplus
- decrease = less producer surplus

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13
Q

Supply and Demand effect on consumer surplus

A

Supply:
- increase = more consumer surplus
- decrease = less consumer surplus
Demand:
- increase = more consumer surplus
- decrease = less consumer surplus

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14
Q

Indirect tax

A

A payment which must be made to the government in addition to the cost of production of certain goods and services

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15
Q

2 types of indirect tax

A

Ad valorem taxes: a % of the unit cost of a good
- e.g. Value Added Tax (VAT), insurance premium tax
Specific taxes: a fixed tax per unit of the good or service produced

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16
Q

Consumer and Producer incidence

A

Consumer: how much of an indirect tax the consumer pays
Producer: how much of an indirect tax the producer pays

17
Q

Indirect tax on diagram

A

Vertical distance between the pre-tax and post-tax supply curves. Because of the tax, less can be supplied to the market at each price level.

18
Q

Advantages of indirect tax

A
  • Reduces the consumption of demerit goods (goods harmful to customers)
  • Increases government revenue
  • Government revenue gained can be spent on further correcting the problem (revenue can be hypothecated)
  • Easy to understand and implement
  • Can change the distribution of income e.g. taxing products which are consumed by the rich)
19
Q

Disadvantages of indirect taxes

A
  • Most can have regressive effects on low-income consumers e.g. if inelastic, consumers take most of the burden of tax
  • Tax revenue may not be hypothecated back e.g. used to correct market failure
  • Higher indirect tax can cause inflation i.e. suppliers decide to pass on a tax by raising prices
  • Government revenue from indirect taxes can be uncertain particularly when there is a recession i.e. low employment so less being paying tax
20
Q

Incidence of indirect taxes on consumers

A

The burden/incidence is determined by the PED of in response to a price rise. - If the consumer is unresponsive (PED is inelastic), the burden will fall mainly on the consumer
- If PED is elastic, the producer incidence will be greater

21
Q

Incidence of indirect taxes on producers

A

When supply is perfectly elastic (PES=infinity) output can be supplied at constant cost
- tax on producers causes an inward shift of the supply curve, but all tax would be paid by the consumer, regardless of PED
- when demand is elastic consumers pay all tax, but equilibrium quantity will contract by a large amount

22
Q

Subsidies

A

Represent payments by the government to suppliers that have the effect of reducing the costs and encouraging them to increase output
- lower costs lower prices increasing demand

23
Q

Effect of subsidy

A
  • to increase supply
  • a subsidy on a product will lower its price causing extension of market demand
24
Q

2 types of subsidies

A

Producer: guaranteed payment per product created e.g. payments for farmers
- financial support e.g. grant/block payment to cover business losses
Consumer: government payment to consumers designed to allow them to purchase more of a good or service
- might take form of: interest free loans, direct grants

25
Q

Producer subsidy on diagram

A

Increase in supply, difference between supply pre-subsidy and supply post-subsidy

26
Q

Consumer subsidy on diagram

A
27
Q

Irrational behaviour

A

When people make choices/decisions that go against the assumption of rational utility-maximising behaviour

28
Q

Rational behaviour

A

When people make choices/decisions that support the assumption of rational utility-maximising behaviour

29
Q

Causes of irrational behaviour

A

Consideration of the influence of other peoples behaviour e.g. trends
Importance of habitual behaviour i.e loyalties
Consumer weakness at computation