Chapter 8 - Markets and Government Intervention Flashcards

1
Q

Whether a purely competitive industry is one of constant or increasing costs, in the final long run equilibrium how will it be represented?

A

Everything is equal MR=P=MC= Minimum AC

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2
Q

What does it mean if average cost is at a minimum?

A

The most efficient known technology is being used and producing output at the lowest average cost

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3
Q

What does the equality of price and marginal cost indicate?

A

That resources are being allocated in accordance with consumer preferences.

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4
Q

What does allocative efficiency equal?

A

Price = Marginal Cost. Resources allocated to achieve maximum consumer satisfaction. That is resources are allocated in the right mix most wanted by consumers.

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5
Q

What does productive efficiency equal?

A

Minimum average cost (AC), that is that the least cost production method is used, the minimum amount of resources are used and costs are limited to those costs essential to product production.

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6
Q

What is marginal benefit?

A

It is the margin received based on product price at equilibrium

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7
Q

What is marginal cost?

A

It is the cost sacrifice to society of other goods in using resources to produce more of product X.

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8
Q

What does P>MC mean?

A

Under allocation - under competition a company will produce up to where P=MC, as to produce less means resources are under allocated and maximum profits cannot be achieved.

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9
Q

What does P<MC mean?

A

Over allocation - this means resources are being used to produce X when society values Y more highly.

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10
Q

What does the long-run position of minimum AC mean when looking at competitive firms?

A

That they will use the most efficient technology available.

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11
Q

The competitive price system will reallocate resources in response to what?

A
  • change in consumer tastes
  • technology
  • resource supplies.
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12
Q

Pure competition results in what?

A

productive efficiency and allocative efficiency

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13
Q

Because society values additional units of a monopolised product more highly than alternative products that those resources produce, what occurs?

A

The monopolist’s maximising output results in an under allocation of resources because it is more profitable to restrict output and therefore employ fewer resources than are justified from society’s standpoint, and charge a higher price.

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14
Q

This restriction of output causes what?

A

allocative inefficiency as is evidenced by the fact that price exceeds marginal cost. This is common in a monopolised industry.

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15
Q

Why do monopoly’s tend to increase income inequality?

A

Due to concentration of the payment of economic profits to a few individuals.

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16
Q

Why are the costs of monopolists and a competitive industry different?

A

Because unlike a competitive industry a monopoly may be affected by X-inefficiency.

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17
Q

What is X-inefficiency?

A

It is the failure to produce any given output at the lowest average and total cost possible.

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18
Q

Why does X-inefficiency occur in a monopoly?

A
  • There is not constant pressure from rivals

* Management may be motivated by different (non-profit) goals.

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19
Q

What is dynamic efficiency?

A

It is the ability to develop the most efficient production techniques over time.

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20
Q

What is the challenge for a competitive firm in regards to innovation?

A

They are driven to the most efficient KNOWN production techniques but lack of economic profit reduces innovation budgets

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21
Q

what is the challenge for a monopolist in regards to innovation?

A

They have the economic profit to innovate but may not have the drive.

22
Q

What is one reason why a monopolist may choose to innovate?

A

To help create a barrier to entry for others or to avoid falling prey to new competitors who attack the fringe.

23
Q

What is excess capacity and when does it occur?

A

It is when firms produce at a higher cost than minimum ATC at equilibrium. The result is under utilised plants with consumers penalised through higher than competitive prices.

24
Q

What is the trade off for society for the higher prices because of the under utilisation of monopolists?

A

product differentiation

25
Q

What is an oligopoly?

A

The situation when the number of firms in an industry is so small that each must consider the reactions of rivals in formulating its price

26
Q

Why is an oligopoly similar to a monopoly?

A

Because neither allocative or productive efficiency occurs.

27
Q

Why do some people argue that an oligopoly is more desirable than a monopoly?

A

Because a monopoly may be subject to government regulation, and although informal collusion may occur to give similar results, the oligopoly maintains the appearance of several independent firms.

28
Q

What are the two views of dynamic efficiency in regards to an oligopoly?

A

1 - competition drives companies to be technologically progressive for short term projects and long term survival.
2 - Schumpter-Galbraith view suggests developing productive techniques is expensive and that barriers to entry give the oligopolist assurance that they will realise profit rewards before others do.

29
Q

What does analysis show in relation to the Schumpter-Galbraith view?

A

That it does not hold true with two thirds of basic inventions this century coming from small to medium sized firms.

30
Q

What are the two major cases of market failure?

A

When the competitive price system either:

1) produces the wrong amounts of goods and services, or
2) fails to allocate any resources at all to the production of certain goods and services whose output is economically justified.

31
Q

When does a spillover or externality occur and what is it?

A

It occurs when some of the benefits or costs associated with the production or consumption of a good or service that flow on to parties external to the market transaction.

32
Q

How would spillover costs be drawn on a graph?

A

A shift of the supply curve left, as resources are over allocated to production. So the cost is inflicted on some third party without compensation, for example environmental pollution.

33
Q

What are spillover benefits and how are they drawn?

A

They cause an under allocation of resources in that optimum output exceeds the equilibrium output, so a third party gets a benefit they did not pay for. Eg vaccines and education.

34
Q

What is the problem of the commons?

A

That there are some resources which no one has clear rights to which results in their overuse or misallocation, eg air and water.

35
Q

Describe private goods?

A

They are divisible in that they come in small enough units to be bought by individuals and they are subject to the exclusion principle.

36
Q

What is the exclusion principle?

A

This is when those who do not pay for a product are excluded from its benefit.

37
Q

Describe what public goods are?

A

They are goods and services that are not provided by the market system, as they are indivisible and often not bound by the exclusion principle.

38
Q

What are pure public goods?

A

Those goods and services that are both indivisible and not subject to the exclusion principle, eg a lighthouse.

39
Q

What is the free-rider problem?

A

Where people can receive benefits from the consumption of a good or service without directly contributing to its costs.

40
Q

How is the free rider problem drawn on a graph?

A

The individual demand curve is not high enough, so doesn’t intersect the supply curve. So we need to add all the social demand for the public good together, this gives us a Demand curve that is higher and would cross the supply curve.

41
Q

What is quasi-public goods?

A

Those large externalities that occur with the provision of government services such as medical care and education. In these cases both public and private versions exist.

42
Q

What are the three basic types of corrective action common for correcting spillover costs?

A

1) legislation that prohibits the spillover cost eg ban on pollution, this will shift the supply curve left bringing it back to equilibrium
2) Specific taxes - less direct, the govt applies a tax to increase firms costs therefore shifting the supply curve left and back towards equilibrium
3) property rights and individual bargaining.

43
Q

Where does Coase theorem suggest government intervention is not required?

A

Where

  • property ownership is clearly defined
  • the number of people involved is small
  • bargaining costs are neglible
44
Q

Instead of government intervention for property rights, what does coase theorem suggest?

A

Bargaining between the owner of the property and the party causing the spillover. A settlement should result which will increase the firms costs and therefore shift the supply curve left and equilibrium is restored. Where there are large numbers of people, individual bargaining is unlikely to work.

45
Q

How can spillover benefits be corrected?

A

By subsidies to producers or government provision.

46
Q

How would a subsidy work to remove spillover benefits?

A

They encourage a greater demand for the product that is generating the positive eternality, therefore increasing the allocation of resources to its production and leading to an output level that is closer to that of the social optimum.

47
Q

What does subsidising the buyers achieve?

A

increases demand by effectively making the product cheaper.

48
Q

What does subsidising the producers encourage?

A

more production of the item

49
Q

How does the government achieve a reallocation of resources from the private to the public sector in order to provide public and other goods and services?

A

Achieved through the collection of taxes, which reduces private investment and consumption expenditure.

50
Q

What are the benefits and shortcomings of cost-benefit analysis?

A

It can provide useful guidance as to the economic desirability and most efficient scope of public goods output, but is limited due to difficulties in measuring the value of certain costs and benefits in practice

51
Q

What is the performance of any economic system judged on?

A

efficiency - the bigger the cake the better, and

equity - how the cake is split up and distributed