EM 4 - Markets Flashcards

1
Q

Market equilibrium

A

The price and quantity designated at the intersection of the demand and supply curves.

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2
Q

Excess demand and excess supply of a product

A

When prices are higher than the equilibrium price - excess supply

When prices are lower than the equilibrium price - excess demand

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3
Q

Property of efficiency

A

At equilibrium, total surplus - i.e. consumer surplus + producer surplus - is maximised.

There is no deadweight loss - or loss in value from trades between buyers and sellers that could have occurred but didn’t.

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4
Q

Government interventions

A

Often undertaken to achieve “fairer” outcomes.

Often these involve price ceilings or price floors.

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5
Q

Price ceiling

A

Maximum price that can be charged for a product.
If it’s above the market equilibrium, it will have no effect. If it’s lower than equilibrium, it will lead to excess demand or a shortage.

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6
Q

Price floor

A

Minimum price that can be charged for a product (e.g. minimum wage)
If it’s lower than the market outcome, it has no effect.
If it’s higher, it leads to excess supply, or surplus (e.g. unemployment).

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7
Q

Taxes

A

Levied on producers -
Typically increase the cost of producing the good - shift supply curve upward.

Levied on consumers -
Reduce demand - shift demand curve leftward.

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8
Q

Tax bearing and elasticity of curves

A

When demand curve is steeper (inelastic) - consumers bear the tax

When supply curve is steeper (inelastic) - producers bear the tax

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9
Q

Creating markets

A

Markets can be created where they previously didn’t exist by assigning ownership of a good to individuals, or by creating a forum in which individuals can trade.

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10
Q

Role of prices in the market

A

Buyers operate independently, and sellers operate independently - prices act as the “go-between”
Prices contain information that co-ordinates and incentivizes both sides.

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11
Q

Three questions when analyzing a market in terms of supply and demand

A

i. What are the sources of ss and dd? (who’s buying, selling);
ii. What drives the shape (elasticity) of the ss and dd curves? (how sensitive to price shifts and what causes it); and
iii. What forces could shift dd and ss in this market?

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12
Q

Four categories of spillovers

A

i. Complements and substitutes;
ii. both sides of the market - i.e. demand and supply;
iii. geographic spillovers; and
iv. changes in product markets affecting factor markets.

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