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Econ Ch 1, 2
Chapter One and Two
172
Economics
Undergraduate 1
04/10/2012

Additional Economics Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

Economics

Definition

Social science that studies choices that…

            -Individuals

            -Businesses

            -Governments

            -& Entire societies

make when they cope with…

1.    Scarcity

2.    Incentives that influence choices

3.    Arrangements that coordinate choices (price, allocation)

Term

Micro Economics

Definition

The choices that individuals and businesses make

The way these decision makers respond to changes in scarcity, constraints, laws, technology, etc

Term

Macroeconomics

Definition

Study of why the aggregate utilization of resources (total sum of individuals’, businesses, and govt’s demand) in the economy varies over time

Term

Simplifying Assumption

Definition

1.   1. Preferences do not change over the course of study

2.    2. Changes in behavior is due to changes in constraints

3.    3. People make choices in line w/ preferences and minimizing adverse affects of constraints

4.    4. People are rational and self-interested (interested in “utility maximizing”)

Term

Postulates of Behavior

Definition

1. People have preferences


2. More is preferred to less


3. People are willing to substitute one good for another


4. For all individuals & goods, marginal value of goods decreases as more of that good is consumed, ceteris paribus.

Term

If people are rational and self-interested, how do you explain donating?

Definition

Donating gives people a good feeling, this is their benefit/utility

Term

Positive Statement

Definition

Predicts how people will behave

Term

Normative Statement

Definition

States how people ought to behave

Term

Correlation vs Causation in regards to variables

Definition

Correlation: The tendency for two variables to move together

Causation: One variable directly impacts another

Term

Nationally, is it better to import more or export more goods?

Definition

Export more. Lowers deficit and creates surplus.

If you import more, you create a deficit.

Term

Explain how the decision process that leads to the production of goods is highly decentralized

Definition

No single person completely controls or gives orders to every single producer in the process of making a good.


Individual producers decide to voluntarily engage in this process in turn for wages/other benefits

Term

In unplanned market economies, activities are based on what?

Definition

Mutual benefits coordinated by prices determined by the market.

Term

What determines price?

Definition

Demand (actions of consumers)

and

Supply (actions of producers)

Term

What does PRICE mean?

Definition

The willingness of consumers to forgo other goods in order to obtain that particular good

Term

Are economic transactions zero-sum or positive sum?

Definition

Positive sum. In zero-sum situations, one person gains while the other loses. In economic situations, both parties gain.

Term

What is the problem with “letting the facts speak for themselves”?

How do economists think differently than this way of thinking?

Definition

Problem: too many facts, many are irrelevant


Economists think within conceptual framework.

Facts are used only when relevant to certain theories.

Term

Theory

Definition

Assertions and propositions we consider to be universally true.


-Helpful when they have simplicity and generality (but increasing either one of these often decreases the other)

-A good theory predicts well

Term

Ad Hoc Theory

Definition

A theory that only explains one event.


Useless to economics

Term

Refutable Propositions

Definition

Theories that could, in principle, be wrong

Term

Affirming the consequent

Definition

When one uses a theory of "A implies/causes B" and incorrectly infers that B also causes A

Ex: Two triangles are congruent, so they are similar (true)

Two triangles are similar, so they are congruent (not true – affirming the consequent)

Term

Spurious

Definition

When there is no causality between two factors, the correlation is spurious

Term

Difference between scarce and limited goods

Definition

Scarce: Not enough of a certain DESIRABLE good


Limited: Not enough of a certain good

Term

How does economics study scarcity?

Definition

Study of how scarce resources, that have alternative uses, are allocated amongst competing ends

Term

How are scarcity and competition entwined?

Definition

Scarcity means that some people will get goods that others desire.

As long as goods are scarce, people will have to compete for these goods

Term

Cost

Definition

Value of the next best alternative forgone.

EVERY human action has a cost associated with it b/c of scarcity

Term

Demand

Definition

Consumer behavior regarding the goods they consume. Influenced by…


1. Constraints/opportunities

-MEASUREABLE

2. Tastes/Preferences

-NOT MEASUREABLE

Term

Assumption about Demand and Tastes/Preferences

Definition

Tastes & preferences do not change during the course of investigation

Term

Assumption about Demand and Constraints

Definition

All individuals strive to mitigate or reduce (rather than reinforce) adverse consequences of constraints

Term

Law of Demand

Definition

As the price of a good increases, the quantity


demanded by consumers decreases, ceteris paribus

Term

Law of Supply

Definition

As the price of a good increases, the quantity supplied


by producers increases, ceteris paribus

Term

Demand Curve Slope

Definition

Negative because...

1. As prices increase, quantity consumed decrease

2. As quantity consumed increases, marginal value decreases, so consumers are less willing to buy an additional unit as they were w/ the last unit

Term

Why is it that while output expands, the cost production tends to increase?

Definition

This is due to the inability to replicate the most efficient resources

Term

Supply Curve

Definition

Price of a good and the willingness of individuals to offer the good for sale

Positive because...

1. Law of supply: As price increases, individuals are likely to supply more of that good

2. Law of diminishing returns: After some point, the value of producing one additional output declines

Term

Market Equilibrium

Definition

Where the supply and demand curve meet

Term

What is the conceptual framework, or paradigm of economics?

Definition

How market equilibrium occurs when constraints/opportunities change

Term

What are the general mechanisms for determining and coordinating in a decentralized economy?

Definition

Actions are based on mutual benefits coordinated by price


Prices are determined by demand and supply

Term

Why do we restrict science to positive rather than normative statements?

Definition

Because normative statements are value judgments, cannot be measured or proved right/wrong, and are therefore not a part of science

Term

Why do we use the term refutable proposition as opposed to provable proposition?

Definition

It is logically impossible to prove theories

Term

What is the true cost of attending college for four years?

Definition

Value of the second best alternative forgone 

This value = the money you would save not paying tuition + the money you can make at a job instead of at school

Term

How is it that unplanned, “market” economies operate at all? What aspect of human behavior puts bread on the table?

Definition

Unplanned market economies work because many people perform decentralized activities based on mutual benefit, and coordinated by price.

Competition, because of scarcity, is what drives people to prefer more goods for themselves

Term

Production is characterized by____, another way to say “division of labor”

Definition

Specialization

Term

What drives production in a market economy?

Definition

Coordination of mutual gains through the price system

Prices, determined by supply and demand, give information about the cost of production and customer’s valuations of a good. This, along with mutual benefits from exchange of goods for money, drives a market economy

Term

What mechanisms are there for correcting erroneous decisions about production levels?

Definition

If a seller cannot sell all of their goods, they will lower the price so that the demand increases and all of the goods will be sold

If a seller does not make enough of a good, they will raise prices so that the demand decreases, avoiding excess demand

Term

Why is economics considered a science? What types of statements are to be avoided if the subject is to be scientific?

Definition

Science because:

-Seeks explanations of real-world events

-Uses a set of propositions to analyze human behavior

-These propositions can predict certain outcomes of situations

Term

Is "scientific" the same thing as "true"?

Definition

No. Scientific statements are positive statements and can be true or false.

Term

What is it that makes some proposition scientifically interesting and useful?

Definition

Propositions that could be wrong but are confirmed by the facts

Term

Can theories be “proven?” Explain what it means to have “confirmed” a theory, or theoretical explanation of some event

Definition

No, theories cannot be proven.


Theories are refutable propositions that we consider to be universally true. They could be wrong, but consistently predict factual events.

Term

Can propositions be “good in theory but lousy in practice?”

Definition

No, because by definition a good theory is good in practice.

Term

Make up some examples of events which happen together, but for which neither event causes the other.

Definition

Fact: People who own running shoes are less likely to have heart disease


This does not mean running shoes cause lower rates of heart disease

Term

People in the Pacific Northwest consume more water per person than people in the southwest. Does this mean that North westerners like water more, or are thirstier than South westerners?

Definition

In the NW, water is more plentiful, and therefore cheaper.

In the SW, water is scarcer and therefore more expensive.


According to the law of demand, at lower prices people consume more.

Term

“If only people learned to love other people and respect differences, we wouldn’t live in such a competitive, unpleasant world.” Do you agree? What is the fundamental reason why competition for goods exists?

Definition

The fundamental reason for competition is scarcity, not a lack of love or respect.

Even if all people were angelic, distribution of goods would have some competition due to scarcity.

Term

In some countries, a test that can determine the sex of a fetus is being used to abort female fetuses. As a result, 60% babies in these countries are male. What will be the long-term effects of this on traditional gender and marriage roles?

Definition

The supply of women decreased, so this would cause the value of women as wives and mothers to increase. This reinforces traditional marriage roles

Term

A survey once showed that 70 percent of married men are bald. Does this mean that marriage leads to baldness? What general principle does this illustrate about the problem of inferring causality from correlation?

Definition

This is called affirming the consequent, which is when one takes a postulate in which A implies some event B, and then mistakenly assumes that that if you observe B, that A must be true.

Term

Can a good be scarce for some people and not for others? If you think so, give some examples.

Definition

Yes, when demand is influenced by preferences


For example, meat is not a scarce for a vegetarian

Term

What does free enterprise mean? Does it mean we are free to do anything we want?

Definition

Free enterprise is where individuals can own resources and use those resources how they choose, but these choices are constrained by laws.

Term

Some define economics as the study of the proposition, “there’s no such thing as a free lunch.” Do you think this is a good definition?

Definition

This statement only refers to opportunity cost of lunch.

But, it does not clearly outline that economics is the study of how people respond to changes in the constraints that scarcity imposes.

Term

Absolute Price

Definition

The price of a good in money terms

Term

Incentive

Definition

A reward that encourages an action

or

A penalty that discourages an action

Term

Scarcity

Definition

People have boundless needs and wants, and good wanted goods are limited. Even at the price of zero, there is not enough of that good.

Term

Scarce Good

Definition

Limited AND wanted

Term

Aggregate Demand

(Macro and Micro)

Definition

Macro: Sum of demands from customers, businesses, and government


Micro: Sum of individual demand curves into a market demand curve

Term

Assertions vs Assumptions

Definition

Assertions: Universal postulates of a theory


Assumption: Simplifications to make a theory more usable

Term

Asset / Capital

Definition

Resource/produced good that produces income in future

Term

“Bad” or “Economic Bad”

Definition

Undesirable good. Something people would pay to have LESS of

Term

Bilateral Trade

Definition

Exchange between two parties

Term

Capital Gain

Definition

Increase in the market value of an asset between the time its bought and sold

Term

Capitalism

Definition

Economic system wherein the means of production, capital and land are privately owned and operated in the pursuit of individual gain

Term

“All else being equal”

Definition

Ceteris Paribus.


All other variables fixed to determine how changes in one specific variable would affect another specific variable.

Term

Commodity

Definition

Any item that is bought and sold

Term

Commodity Money

Definition

Item used as medium of exchange that also has nonmonetary value


Example: Gold

Term

Efforts of parties to secure rights to scarce goods

Definition

Competition

Term

Constraints

Definition

All things that impinge on behavior and are measureable


(As opposed to preferences)

Term

Examples of Constraints

Definition

Income

Prices

Time

Technology

Education

Laws

Term

Consumption

Definition

Spending by households on final goods

Term

Demand Schedule

Definition

Table showing quantity demanded per specific prices

Term

Derived Demand

Definition

Demand not for the good itself, but for what the good produces (Ex: Labor)

Term

Double Coincidence of Wants

Definition

When I have what you want, and you have what I want

Term

Durable Good

Definition

Goods that provide a service over a long period of time

Term

Economic Behavior

Definition

When individuals strive to...

1. Mitigate adverse consequences &

2. Exploit beneficial consequences

Of changes in constraints



Term

Economic Efficiency

Definition

Exhaustion of mutual benefits. When it is impossible to make one variable improve without hurting the other variable.

Term

Economic Explanation

Definition

Based on responses to changes in constraints, using the postulates of economics

Term

Economic Good

Definition

A good that is scarce (limited AND desirable)

Term

Economic Growth

Definition

 

Increase in the real (inflation-adjusted) GNP of an economy

Term

Economic Model

Definition

Simplified econ theory, or mathematical framework on an econ theory

Term

Economic Problem

Definition

Scarcity exists, therefore competition exists. Competition means people have to make decisions about allocating goods.

Term

Economic Profit

Definition

Total revenues MINUS total costs (including opportunity costs)

Term

Empirical

Definition

Based on observations and experiments

Term

Equilibrium

Definition

Also called “market clearing”

Quantity demanded = quantity supplied.

Consumers and producers have no incentive to deviate

Term

Excess Demand

Definition

Quantity demanded > quantity supplied

Term

Exports

Definition

Domestically produced goods which are sold abroad

Term

Final good

Definition

Purchased by final customer (As opposed to customer re-selling good)

Term

Free Good

Definition

When price is zero, availability still exceeds demand

Term

Free Market

Definition

When sale and purchase of goods is mostly unhindered by government

Term

Gold Standard

Definition

When a country’s paper money is redeemable in whole or part by gold

Term

Impatience

Definition

Time preference. Good is valued higher when consumed now instead of later

Term

Implicit Cost

Definition

Value of using factors in production for which no actual payment is made

Term

Import

Definition

Domestic purchase of foreign good

Term

Inefficient

Definition

When mutual gains are not exhausted


Possible to improve one variable while NOT making the other variable worse off

Term

Not Relating to Money

Definition

Non-Pecuniary

Term

Input

Definition

Something used in production process

Term

Intrinsic Value

Definition

Supposed underlying worth of a good without reference to the value humans place on it.


NOT consistent with behavioral postulates. Economists say only intrinsic value is price.

Term

Labor Market

Definition

Market where firms demand labor, households supply labor.


This determines the ‘price’ of labor, AKA wages

Term

Leisure

Definition

An activity an individual does not consider work/will perform without compensation

Term

Pareto Optimal / Pareto Efficient

Definition

When all mutual benefits are exhausted


Impossible to increase production of one good w/o decreasing production of another

Term

Market Economy

Definition

Economy where resources are allocated by interactions of individual and firms in markets, as opposed to allocation by central planning and command

Term

Market Value of Life

Definition

Value of life measured by amounts people accept in compensation for a higher probability of death

Term

Market Wage

Definition

Wage people actually pay/receive for services

Term

Maximizing

Definition

“Economic Behavior”

With changes in constraints, people

-Mitigate adverse consequences

-Exploit beneficial consequences

Term

Mixed Economy

Definition

Market economy with governmental controls

Term

Movement Along the Demand Curve

Definition

Changes in the quantity demanded

Term

Movement Along the Supply Curve

Definition

Changes in the quantity supplied

Term

Need

Definition

Good that has no present alternative other than death

Term

Non-Economic Behavior

Definition

Behavior that violates postulates

Term

Having to do with Money

Definition

Pecuniary

Term

Nonprice Competition

Definition

Competition based on something other than price, like quality of service.

Term

Nonrival in Consumption

Definition

A characteristic of a public good that one individual’s consumption of the good does not detract from anyone else’s consumption

Term

Nonwage Income

Definition

Earnings received from activity other than in the labor force

Term

Non-zero sum game

Definition

Mutual benefits and mutual losses are possible.

Sum of payoffs does NOT equal zero

Term

Oligopoly

Definition

Form of imperfect competition where there are only a few firms in an industry, and some or all can influence the marketplace

Term

Output

Definition

New good resulting from combined actions of inputs.

Outputs valued higher, by customers, than inputs.

Term

Pareto Efficient/ Pareto Optimal

Definition

When all mutual benefits are exhausted

Term

Pareto Superior

Definition

Allocation w/ the result where: A is better off, but B is not worse off

Term

Is a person better off according to his or her own preferences?

Definition

Economics say YES

Term

Preferences

Definition

Tastes; immeasurable influences on the choices consumers make

Term

Prejudice

Definition

Inclination or taste for discrimination

Term

Premium

Definition

Additional amount paid/charged, typically in compensation for added risk

Term

Production

Definition

Process of combining inputs to yield goods and services (outputs) of greater value

Term

Rent Maximization

Definition

Production of goods to obtain the highest amount of profit

Term

Public Good

Definition

Consumed by many individuals at once, never any congestion

Term

Real

Definition

Adjusted for inflation

Term

Relative Price

Definition

Or REAL Price

Price of one good in terms of a quantity of another good

Term

Resources

Definition

Anything of value

Commonly, goods that are NOT final

Term

Substitution Postulate

Definition

Postulate of behavior


Individuals will substitute goods for other goods (make trade-offs)

Term

Shortage

Definition

Continuing situation of excess demand


Only caused by government control of price

Term

Skilled Worker vs Unskilled Worker

Definition

Skilled: Has special ability/training


Unskilled: No special ability/training

Term

Private Cost vs External Cost vs Social Cost

Definition

Private: Cost incurred by individual or firm

External: Cost by firm (not taken into account), and incurred by third party

Social Cost: Private and external costs of an action

Term

Socialism

Definition

Economic system where factors of production are owned publicly, and the government directs distribution of goods

Term

Sunk Cost

Definition

A cost that is irretrievable and therefore irrelevant to the production decision

Term

Supply Shock

Definition

Something that causes a change in supply

Term

Theory

Definition

Assertions/Propositions considered to be universally true, used to explain or predict events

Term

Utility

Definition

An ordinal measure of the satisfaction people get from consuming goods.

Term

Utility Maximization

Definition

Choosing to gain the highest degree of satisfaction

Term

Value-added

Definition

The difference between the value of a final good and the value of the intermediate goods used in production

Term

Value Judgments

Definition

Statements about ones own assessment of the desirability of something


NOT scientific/ applicable to economics

Term

Wage

Definition

The price for the service of labor


Often the opportunity cost of labor

Term

Wealth

Definition

Net present value of a person’s assets (capital)

MINUS

liabilities

Term

Windfall

Definition

Unexpected financial gain

Term

Yield

Definition

The amount produced

Term

Why are the behavioral postulates predict individual behavior, and not aggregate (group) behavior?

Definition

Group behavior cannot be predicted because groups have differing preferences

Term

How does the law of diminishing marginal values contribute to variety of demand?


Definition

Because marginal value decreases as more of a good is consumed. 


Marginal value will eventually decrease until an alternative is valued more

Term

Marginal Value

vs

Total Value

vs

Total Expenditure

vs

Consumer's Surplus

Definition

Marginal Value: Additional benefit of the consumption of a good. Also, the difference of two total values at two given prices

Total Value: Maximum amount a person is willing to pay to consume ALL units rather than none at all

Total Expenditure: What someone ACTUALLY paid for a good (Often less than, and never more than total value)

Consumers Surplus/Net Consumer's Gain: Difference between total value and total expenditure. “Monetary evaluation of benefits from purchasing goods at a given price”

Term

When should a demand curve be straight?


When should a demand curve be curved?

Definition

Straight: When marginal value decreases at a constant rate

 

Curved: When marginal value does not decrease at a constant rate 

Term
Reservation Price
Definition

Price at the top of the demand curve

 

At this price, quantity demanded = ZERO

Term

A consumer will buy a good as long as


_____ exceeds ______

Definition
As long as marginal value exceeds market price
Term
How are preferences measured?
Definition

By ordinal numbers (1st, 2nd, 3rd)


Or indifference

 

NOT cardinal numbers(measureable amounts)


Term

"If you eat less broccoli, you can have more icecream."

According to the substitution postulate, what two goods in this tradeoff?

Definition

Good #1: Less Broccoli


Good #2:More icecream


Term

"Not buying a safer, newer car to save money."

According to the substitution postulate, what two goods in this tradeoff?

Definition

Good #1: Opp cost of a new car

 

Good #2: Safety

Term

"Use of potentially life-saving drugs are delayed by safety regulations"

According to the substitution postulate, what two goods are involved in a tradeoff?

Definition

Good #1:Drug Safety

 

Good #2:Available number of drugs

Term

Criminals roam the streets because of people value the notion 'innocent until proven guilty'

According to the substitution postulate, what two goods in this tradeoff?

Definition

Good #1: Safety from criminals

 

Good #2: Protection of innocent

Term

Two jobs that only differ in that one job has a higher risk of death. The riskier job comes w/ a higher wage. 


What theory does this follow?


What do you call the difference between these two wages?

Definition

Theory of compensating differentials. 

 

Difference = the premium for incr risk

also = market price for accepting that additional risk of death

Term

What is the diamond-water paradox?



Definition

total expenditure does not = total value

Water

Total expenditure:Low (b/c of larger quantity of supply)

Marginal Value: VERY high with first units bought (b/c it is necessary)

                                 ^Causes higher total value

                      Low for normal quantities (b/c of large supply)

                                 ^Causes lower market prices

Total Value: High because dramatic high marginal value at 1st units are always added

Consumer's Surplus: High because of lower expenditure and higher total value

Diamonds

Total Expenditure: High (b/c of smaller quantity of supply)

Marginal Value: High, but no dramatic MV at 1st units

Total Value: Relatively low (b/c no dramatic MV at 1st units)

Consumer's Surplus: Relatively low because of higher expenditure and lower total value





Term

Football players are paid a much higher salary than nurses. 


Does this mean society values football players more than nurses?

Definition

No, this just means the marginal value of a football player is higher than that of a nurse.

 

The market price (or wages) of these two professions do not reflect total value of the occupations

Term

What is the price of present consumption?

 

Why do people's consumption vary less than their income?

Definition

Price of present consumption = amount of future consumption given up in order to consume a unit of present consumption

 

Consumption varies less than income b/c people borrow during times of low income and invest during times of high income

Term
Regarding market price and marginal value, when consuming increasing quantities of a good, when will a customer STOP consuming that good?
Definition

Customer will consume a good until marginal value falls to the market price

 

After that, the customer would not gain from consuming any more. 

Term
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Definition
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Term
Total Product
Definition
Amount of output that factors of production create
Term
Total Revenue
Definition

Total sale of output

 

Same # as Total Expenditure (of consumers)

Term
Market Demand Curve
Definition
Lateral Sum of individual demand curves
Term

A grocery store threatens to relocate if city does not contribute to building improvements

 

A stadium threatens to relocate if city does not contribute to building improvements


What does the city do in both situations? Why? 

 

Definition

1. Grocery store: City does nothing

The grocery store will be replaced by another competitor

 

2. Stadium: City pays for improvements

The Stadium has a MONOPOLY, therefore total value of the stadium is higher

Term
What is the cost of present consumption?
Definition
Number of units of future consumption forgone per unit of present consumption
Term

The price of a durable good decreases. 

People don't automatically rush out to buy the good because they already have it.

 

How does the law of demand apply?

Definition

No immediate change

 

But the RATE of consumption will increase over time after the price decrease

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