2: Competitive markets: demand and supply Flashcards

1
Q

What was the original nature of markets?

A

A physical meeting place where buyers and sellers meet face to face with a bartering system.

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2
Q

What is the evolved definition of a market?

A

Any kind of arrangement where buyers and sellers of goods, services and resources are linked together to carry out an exchange.

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3
Q

What are the two different markets and what is sold in them?

A

Goods and services are sold in product markets whilst resources (factors of production) are sold in resource markets (factor markets).

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4
Q

What is competition? What is it in microeconomics?

A

The process whereby rivals compete in order to achieve some objective. In microeconomics competition occurs when there are many buyers and sellers acting independently, so that no one has the ability to influence the price at which a product is sold in the market.

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5
Q

What is market power?

A

Also known as monopoly power, which is the control that a seller may have over the price of the product it sells. The greater the market power, the greater the influence over the price.

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6
Q

What is demand?

A

The demand of an individual consumer indicated the various quantities of a good (or service) the consumer is willing and able to buy at different possible prices during a particular time period, ceteris peribus.

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7
Q

What do willing and able mean?

A

Willing means the consumer wants to buy the good and able means the consumer can afford to buy it.

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8
Q

What does ceteris peribus mean?

A

It simply means all else remaining the same, in the case of demand ceteris peribus means that all things other than the price that can affect how much the consumer is willing and able to buy are assumed to be constant and unchanging.

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9
Q

What is the law of demand?

A

The law of demand states a negative, causal relationship between the price of a good and quantity demanded over a particular time period, ceteris peribus. As the price of the good increases, quantity demanded falls, ceteris peribus.

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10
Q

Why is the shape of the demand curve as such?

A

Due to the principle of decreasing marginal benefit: since marginal benefit falls as quantity consumed increases, the consumer will be induced to buy each extra unit only if the price falls.
Also income effect and substitition effect.

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11
Q

What is market demand?

A

The sum of all the individual demands for a good. The market demand curve illustrates the law of demand, shown by the negative relationship between price and quantity demanded, ceteris peribus. The market demand is also the sum of comsumers’ marginal benefits.

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12
Q

What does a shift in the demand curve suggest? What does left and right mean?

A

A non price determinant of demand has changed. Rightward means an increase in demand and leftward means a decrease.

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13
Q

What are the non price determinants of demand?

A
  • Income
  • Substitute products
  • Compliments in consumption
  • Changes in population
  • Normal/inferior goods
  • Preferences
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14
Q

Distinguish between a movement along and a shift in the demand curve:

A

A movement along the demand curve indicated a change in the price of the good itself, thereby changing quantity demanded. A shift in the demand curve indicates a change in non price determinants, changing the demand.

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15
Q

What is the definition of supply?

A

The supply of an individual firm indicates the various quantities of a good or service a firm is willing and able to produce and supply to the market for sale at different possible prices, during a particular time period, ceteris peribus.

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16
Q

What is the law of supply?

A

The law of supply states a positive causal relationship between price and quantity supplied, over a particular time period, ceteris peribus.

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17
Q

Why is the supply curve sloped upward?

A

Higher prices generally mean that the firms profits increase, and so the firm faces an incentive to produce more output.

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18
Q

What is market supply?

A

Market supply is the sum of all individual firms’ supplies for a good. The market supply curve illustrates the law of supply, shown by a positive relationship between price and quantity supplied, ceteris peribus.

19
Q

What does a vertical supply curve indicate?

A

Even as price increases, the quantity supplied cannot increase; it remains constant, meaning the quantity supplied is independent of price. For example there is a fixed quantity of theatre tickets due to a fixed number of seats in that period of time.

20
Q

Why would there be a vertical supply curve?

A

Either:

  1. There is a fixed quantity of the good supplied because there is no time to produce more of it.
  2. There is a fixed quantity of the good because there is no possibility of ever producing more of it, for example antique Stradivarius violins.
21
Q

Non price determinants for supply?

A
  1. Cost of production (-)
  2. Technology (+)
  3. Compliments in production/joint supply (-) e.g. diesel and diesel
  4. Expectations of future price (-)
  5. Taxes (-)
  6. Subsidies (+)
  7. Number of firms (+)
  8. Unpredictable events (-)
22
Q

Distinguish between the movement along a supply curve and the shift of a supply curve:

A

Any change in price produces a change in quantity supplied, shown as a movement on the supply curve. Any change in a non price determinant produces a change in supply, shown by a shift of the whole supply curve.

23
Q

What happens when supply is greater than demand?

A

The producers will lower the price gradually, causing quantity supplied to fall and quantity demanded to increase due to the laws of supply and demand. Eventually it reaches a point where quantity demanded is equal to quantity supplied and the surplus is eliminated. This is the equilibrium price.

24
Q

What happens when demand is greater than supply?

A

Producers will notice that the good is quickly being sold out and so they will raise the price. As they raise the price quantity supplied will increase and quantity demanded will fall. Eventually they will be equal at the equilibrium price.

25
Q

What does it mean for a market to be in equilibrium?

A

When a market is in equilibrium, quantity demanded equals quantity supplied, and there is no tendency for the price to change. In a market disequilibrium, there is excess demand (shortage) or excess supply (surplus) and the forces of demand and supply cause the price to change until the market reaches equilibrium.

26
Q

What is the demand function equation?Sy

A

Qd = a-bP

Qd = quantity demanded
P = price
a = the horizontal intercept of the curve (where the line meets Qd) 
-b = the slope
27
Q

How can we use the demand function?

A

In paper 3 they will give you an equation, say it is Qd = 14-2P. From this you can figure out Qd by inserting several prices, starting with P = 0 then increasing until 5.

28
Q

What will happen to the demand curve if the demand curve function changes?

A

If a changes then there will be a parallel shift of the demand curve. If -b changes the steepness of the curve will change as -b represents the slope.

29
Q

How does the number representing -b effect the slope exactly?

A

The greater the absolute value of the slope, the flatter the demand curve.

30
Q

What is the supply function equation?

A

Qs = c + dP

Qs = quantity supplies
P = price
c = horizontal/x intercept
d = the slope
31
Q

How do you calculate the slope?

A

∆Q/∆P

32
Q

What will happen to the supply curve if the supply curve function changes?

A

If c changes, it is a shift. If d changes, the slope changes.

33
Q

What if the c value in the supply function is negative?

A

This just means it starts from a negative value, but you do not see this as it is impossible to have a negative value for quantity supplied.

34
Q

How does the number representing d effect the slope exactly?

A

The greater the value of the slope, the flatter the curve.

35
Q

How can you use linear equations to calculate equilibrium price and quantity?

A

If you are given the supply function and demand function, the equilibrium price can be calculated by setting the equal to each other and solving for P. Then plug this P value back into the equations to find Q, which should be the same for Qd and Qs, test this.

36
Q

How can you plot demand and supply curves from linear functions to find EQ and EP?

A

You plot several points and draw the curves. Then you find where they intersect.

37
Q

What is the role of price in the allocation of resources?

A

Prices are signals and incentives. As signals, prices are used to communicate information to decision-makers. As incentives, prices motivate decision makers to respond to the information.

38
Q

What is the meaning of efficiency in competitive markets?

A

The competitive market realises allocative efficiency, producing the combination of goods most wanted by society. It also means productive efficiency involving production with the fewest possible resources.

39
Q

What is consumer surplus? How is it shown on a graph?

A

Consumer surplus is the highest price consumers are willing to pay for a good minus the price actually paid. It is shown on a graph by the shaded area between the demand curve and the equilibrium price.

40
Q

What is producer surplus? How is it shown on a graph?

A

Producer surplus is the price received by firms for selling their good minus the lowest price that they are willing to accept to produce the good.

41
Q

What is marginal cost?

A

The lowest price that a firm is willing to accept to produce the good.

42
Q

What is social surplus?

A

The sum of consumer and producer surplus.

43
Q

When is social surplus maximised? What does this mean?

A

At the point of competitive market equilibrium. This means at competitive market equilibrium, markets are achieving allocative and productive efficiency.

44
Q

If markets are achieving efficiency at competitive market equilibrium, why is government intervention ever necessary?

A

Efficiency can only arise under a number of strict and unrealistic conditions that are never met in the real world. Market failures occur. In addition market equilibrium does not answer the for whom to produce question as income distribution is unequal which leads to inequity.