Microeconomics
Introduction to Economics
Scarcity Situation where limited resources available unable to satisfy unlimited human wants
Opportunity Cost (OC) Cost of any activity measured in terms of next best alternative forgone
Production Possibility Curve (PPC) Shows all different maximum attainable combinations of goods &services
produced when all available resources are used efficiently at given state of technology
Law of Increasing Opportunity Cost
As more of a good is produced, more of another good has to be sacrificed in production
Comparative Advantage When one can perform an activity at a lower opportunity cost than anyone else
Law of Comparative Advantage Trade can benefit countries if they specialize in goods in which they have a
comparative advantage
Demand & Supply
Law of Demand Inverse relationship exists between price of good and quantity demanded of good, ceteris paribus
Law of Supply Direct relationship exists between price of good and quantity supplied of good, ceteris paribus
Price Elasticity of Demand (PED) Degree of responsiveness of quantity demanded of good to a change in
its own price, ceteris paribus
Income Elasticity of Demand (YED)
Degree of responsiveness of demand to a change in income of consumers, ceteris paribus
Cross Elasticity of Demand (XED) Degree of responsiveness of demand for one product to a change in price of
another, ceteris paribus
Price Elasticity of Supply (PES) Degree of responsiveness of quantity supplied of good to a change in its own price,
ceteris paribus
Consumer Surplus (CS) Excess of price buyers willing and able to pay for good over actual price paid
Producer Surplus (PS) Excess of what producer willing and able to put up for sale for a good over actual price paid
Deadweight Loss Loss in welfare not gained by anyone in society
Tax Incidence Division of tax between consumers & producers
Subsidies Fixed amount of money given to producers for each unit sold that lowers cost of good
Price Floor (minimum price) Legally established minimum price above market equilibrium price
Price Ceiling (maximum price) Legally established maximum price below market equilibrium price
Black Market Market where sellers ignore government’s price restrictions & sell illegally at whatever price equates
illegal demand & supply
Cost Theory & Size of Firms
Fixed Factor Factor of production whose quantity cannot be changed in short run to change output
Variable Factor Factor of production whose quantity can be changed within time period to change output
Short Run Production period in which there is / are fixed factor(s)
Long Run Production period in which there are no fixed factors
Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns (LDMR)
As more units of a variable factor are added to an unchanging fixed factor, the marginal product generated by adding the
variable factor will eventually decrease
Marginal Cost Additional cost from additional output
Economies of Scale Unit costs decrease as scale of production increases
Diseconomies of Scale Unit costs increase as scale of production increases
Minimum Efficient Scale (MES) Occurs at where LRAC curve stops falling / lowest point of LRAC curve
Internal Expansion Expanding productive capacity to enjoy internal EOS
Horizontal Integration Merger of two firms at same stage of production
Vertical Integration Merger of two firms at different stages of production
Conglomerate Integration Combination of two firms of different industries with nothing in common
Perfect Competition & Monopoly
Perfect Competition Market of many buyers and sellers of a homogeneous good
Monopoly Market of only one seller of a product without substitutes (absence of competition)
Price Taker A firm that takes the price from the market as given, without ability to influence the price
Price Setter A firm that has the ability to influence the market price
Productive Efficiency Occurs when firm is able to produce an output at any point along LRAC curve in long run or
least cost at any given period
Allocative Efficiency Occurs at where output level when price of good equals marginal cost of producing it
Natural Monopoly When it is cost efficient to have a single firm in the industry such that it has lower AC (substantial
EOS) over range of market demand
Predatory Pricing Selling below cost price to drive out competitors
Cartel Agreement among existing suppliers to keep out competitors
X-inefficiency Occurs when a firm becomes complacent and suffers from inefficiency due to lack of competition
Price Discrimination Charging different prices for the same product or for different units of it when such price
differences is not because of cost differences
1st Degree Price Discrimination
Monopolist sells each unit to consumers at maximum price they are willing to pay
2nd Degree Price Discrimination Monopolist sets uniform price per unit for specific quantity of good and lower
price per unit for subsequent units
3rd Degree Price Discrimination Monopolist charges different prices for the same commodity in different
markets
Oligopoly & Monopolistic Competition
Oligopoly Market where few large firms have large market share
Monopolistic Competition Market where many small firms exist, each providing different products or services
Price Rigidity Tendency for prevailing market prices to remain stable over a long time
Mutual Interdependence Each firm affects rival firms’ decisions and are also affected by rival firms’ decisions
Product Innovation Differentiation of product in consumer’s viewpoint through improvements to product
Process Innovation Reducing AC without sacrificing profits through streamlining processes
Brand Proliferation Firms produce many brands to saturate market, leaving no gaps for rivals
Market Segmentation Segmenting market into sub-markets / market niches with different needs catered through
product innovation
Kinked Demand Curve Theory Explains price rigidity; TR falls when prices rise / fall as rivals will match price
decreases but not price increases
Price Wars Used to eliminate new competitors, when a firm lowers its price, other firms start lowering prices and keep
undercutting competitors price
Collusive Oligopoly When there are tacit / explicit agreements among firms on operations
Cartel Theory Formal arrangement by sellers to fix prices through manipulating supply to the market
Price Leadership Theory Oligopolists agree to set same price as price leader in industry, allowing price adjustments
without price wars
Dominant Firm Price Leadership
Others in industry follow largest producer in industry in price changes
Barometric Firm Price Leadership
Others in industry follow price changes of producer most sensitive to market conditions
Contestable Market Theory In a market of free entry & exit, number of firms in industry unimportant
since firms always behave as if competition is very strong (no matter number of firms)
Differentiated Product Product that is slightly different from and yet close substitute to product of other firms in
industry
Product Development Production of good with potentially high demand and different from products of rival firms or
provision / improvement of service to better / differ from rivals
Excess Capacity Theorem Firms inefficient in using society’s & own resources, thus not producing at socially ideal
output
Alternative Theories of the Firm
Profit Satisficing Where managers of firm make enough profit to satisfy shareholder demands instead of profit
maximizing
Managerial Theories Managers, with discretionary power and freedom to run the firm, maximize their own utility
instead of profit
Revenue Maximization Firms aim to maximize sales revenue instead of profits
Growth Maximization Firms aim to maximize growth instead of profits
Organizational Slack Tendency of firms in non-competitive markets to produce at higher than AC (X-Inefficiency)
Nationalization Industry put under ownership and control of the state
Privatization Returning state-owned corporations to private sectors, involving transfer of assets from public to private
sector
Market Failure & Government Intervention
Social Efficiency / Pareto Optimality
Achieved when no one can be made better off without someone being made worse off
External Benefits Benefits from production / consumption experienced by people other than the producer /
consumer (third parties)
External Costs Costs from production / consumption experienced by people other than the producer / consumer
(third parties)
Private Marginal Benefit (PMB) of good
Value the consumer places on last unit of good produced, equal to price and thus represented by demand
Private Marginal Cost (PMC) of good
OC of resources used up in making additional unit of good, represented by supply
Social Marginal Benefit (SMB) Sum of PMB and External Benefit to represent marginal benefit on society
Social Marginal Cost (SMC) Sum of SMC and External Cost to represent marginal cost on society
Underproduction When in the production of the good, SMB > SMC (production can be increased to socially optimum
output)
Overproduction When in the production of the good, SMC > SMB (production can be decreased to socially optimum
output)
Market Failure Free markets, operating without government intervention, fail to deliver socially efficient allocation of
resources to produce good & services
Public Good Good / service with characteristic of non-excludability and non-rivalry
Positive Externalities Benefits from production or consumption experienced by society but not by producers or
consumers themselves
Negative Externalities Costs from production or consumption experienced by society but not by producers or
consumers themselves
Merit Goods Goods or services deemed socially desirable by government and seen as underproduced and thus
underconsumed
Demerit Goods Goods or services deemed socially undesirable by government and seen as overproduced and
overconsumed
Geographical Immobility Where barriers to people moving from one region to another thus disallowing resources to
respond to incentives to produce more goods &
services demanded
Occupational Immobility Mismatch of skills as labour is not transferable across industries as demanded, leading to
waste of resources
Government Failure Allocative efficiency is reduced following government intervention aimed to correct market
failure
Macroeconomics
National Income Accounting
National income Total value of an economy’s final output of goods & services in a year (NNP at Factor cost)
Households Basic consumers of finished products & owners of factors of production Firms Basic producers of
finished products & buyers of factor services
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Total market value of all final goods & services newly produced within country
Gross National Product (GNP) Total market value of all final goods & services newly produced by productive factors
of country’s citizens (GDP + NPIA)
GDP/GNP per capita GDP / GNP divided by population
Net Property Income from Abroad (NPIA)
Difference between property income from abroad & factor income paid abroad
Market price Value of output at shop level / price purchasers pay for goods & services sold
Factor cost What factors of production received for goods & services produced
GDP at Factor cost (GDP at market price – Indirect tax + Subsidies)
Capital depreciation Loss in value of physical assets due to wear & tear
Net National Product (NNP) (GNP – Depreciation)
Real GNP Level of output in terms of physical quantities without price changes
(Nominal GNP⁄GNP deflator)
Nominal GNP Value of output measured at current prices
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) How much goods & services can be bought by a unit of currency at home compared
with purchasing power of other countries’ currency
National Income Determination
Keynesian Theory Fundamental problem causing depression is insufficient demand for goods & services, so fiscal
policy can revive the economy
Desired Aggregate Expenditure (AE) Total planned expenditure on goods & services in an economy (C + I + G + X
– M for 4-sector economy)
Equilibrium NI Level of NI once reached will be maintained unless the economy is disturbed
Leakage / withdrawal Siphoning off of expenditure from income flow between firms & households
Injection Additional expenditure into domestic income flow
Autonomous consumption Minimal consumption households will still spend when income is zero
Induced consumption Amount of consumption changing when income changes
Average Propensity to Consume (APC) Proportion of total income consumed (C⁄Y)
Average Propensity to Save (APS) Proportion of total income saved (S⁄Y)
Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC) Change in consumption as income changes (ΔC⁄ΔY or 1 – MPS or 1 -
MPW)
Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS) Change in saving as income changes (ΔS⁄ΔY)
Marginal Propensity to Withdrawal (MPW) Change in withdrawals as income changes (MPS + MPM + MPT)
Investment Expenditure on production of capital goods and net additions to goods
Marginal Efficiency of Investment (MEI) Negative relationship between interest rates & level of investment
Government expenditure Current spending & capital spending by the government on provision of
goods & services
Full-employment level of NI Level where there is no deficiency in demand / full employment of production factors /
production on PPC
Deflationary gap Shortfall of AE below NI at full-employment level, causing demand-deficient unemployment
Inflationary gap Excess of AE above NI at full-employment level, causing demand-pull inflation
Multiplier (k) Number of times income changes as injection changes (ΔI⁄ΔAE)
Aggregate Demand (AD) Inverse relationship between price level & real equilibrium output
where planned spending = actual output
Aggregate Supply (AS) Amount of goods & services all firms in economy willing to supply at
different price levels
Unemployment & Inflation
Unemployment Number of people of working age without work, but willing & able to take up employment
Overheating Economy growing too quickly that high inflation occurs
Labour force All within working age (15<) who are able & willing to work and are either employed or seeking
employment
Frictional unemployment Unemployment occurring as workers change jobs / look for jobs after completing studies
Seasonal unemployment Unemployment varying with season / weather
Structural unemployment Unemployment resultant from geographical immobility of labour & occupational
immobility of labour
Geographical immobility of labour Labour unwilling to move to another region where prospects are better
Occupational immobility of labour Labour that do not have the necessary skills required by the employer
Technological unemployment Unemployment from labour made redundant as a result of increased
automation
Cyclical / Demand-deficient /Keynesian unemployment Unemployment as workers are retrenched in a
recession / depression (as part of the business cycle)
Full employment Occurs in economy when there is no cyclical unemployment
Inflation Sustained increase in general price level of a country, as prices rise and value of money falls
Consumer Price Index (CPI) Measures average price level of basket of goods & services consumed by typical
household
Hyperinflation Prices rise so fast that money ceases to be a medium of exchange & normal economic activity breaks
down
Demand-pull inflation Prices rise as supply cannot expand to meet demand
Cost-push inflation Prices rise as production costs rise
Wage-push inflation Inflation caused by wages rising faster than productivity gains
Import-price-push inflation Inflation caused by inflation in other countries where goods are imported from or when
local currency depreciates
Profit-push inflation Inflation caused by firms use market power to raise prices above what is required to offset
increases in cost of production to increase profits
Tax-push inflation Inflation caused by increases in indirect taxes adding to cost of living
Wage-price spiral Prices keep rising in vicious cycle as wages rise to offset higher costs of living & firms increase
prices to cover appreciating costs of production
Anticipated inflation Where rise in general price level is expected
Shoe leather costs Costs incurred by people & firms trying to minimize holdings of cash
Public Finance
Current / Ordinary expenditure Expenditure incurred in day-to-day routine work and recurrent year after year
Development / Capital expenditure Spending on public investment
Progressive tax As income increases, proportion of tax on one’s income increases
Regressive tax As income increases, proportion of tax on one’s income decreases
Proportional tax As income increases, proportion of tax on one’s income remains the same
Income tax Tax on ‘earned’ & ‘unearned’ income, taxed progressively
Corporation tax Tax on firm’s profits, usually taxed proportionally
Capital gains tax Tax on capital gains and capital appreciation of assets (land, shares etc)
Property tax Tax on annual rental value of land & buildings, usually proportional tax
Stamp duty Tax on legal & commercial down payments
Ad valorem tax Tax on fixed proportion of value of good or service (%)
Specific tax Tax on fixed amount per unit of good or service ($)
Value-added tax (VAT) Multi-stage tax levied on net value added at each stage of production
Excise duty Tax on manufacturer of goods so as to curtail domestic consumption
Customs duties / Tariffs Tax on goods imported from outside the country, to raise revenue or for
protectionist reasons
Fiscal Policy
Government budget Estimate of government revenue & expenditure for coming year
Balanced budget Estimated revenue = Estimated expenditure
Deficit budget Estimated revenue < Estimated expenditure
Surplus budget Estimated revenue > Estimated expenditure
Deficit financing Financing extra spending by government through other methods (e.g. borrowing)
Fiscal policy Government policy where government expenditure is increased & taxes are reduced to stimulate
economy
Automatic fiscal stabilizers Built-in features of economy operating automatically to smooth out fluctuations in
disposable income over business cycles, without government intervention
Disposable income Income households have available to spend after paying income taxes & receiving transfer
payments (e.g. unemployment benefits)
Crowding-out effect Government cuts taxes or expands borrowing to finance increased expenditure, crowding out
private investment due to higher interest rates
Interest Rate Determination & Monetary Policy
Money supply Quantity / Stock of money held by households & firms in economy
Demand deposits Money deposits in checking accounts (for checks)
Nominal money Amount of money in dollars & cents
Real money Amount of goods & services one can purchase with the money
Money substitutes Items serving as temporary medium of exchange but not stores of value
Fiat money Notes & coins determined as legal tender but not backed by gold, circulated by faith alone
Interest rates (Rate charged) Cost of borrowing & reward for lending
Nominal interest rate Interest rate charged by lender
Real interest rate Nominal interest rate minus inflation rate
Demand for money Desire to hold money rather than spend it or for financial investment
Liquidity preference Desire to hold non-interest bearing cash balances as part of wealth portfolio instead of interest-
bearing bonds
Transactions motive Cash balances to meet planned expenses
Precautionary motive Cash balances to meet unforeseen expenses
Speculative motive / Idle balances Cash balances to purchase assets & bonds to make capital gains
Total demand for money Active balances (Transactions motive & precautionary motive) + Idle balances
Loanable funds Funds available for lending
Central bank Institution supervising monetary system, implementing monetary policy & ensuring banks & financial
institutions operate efficiently
Monetary policy Deliberate attempt by Central Bank to regulate money supply or manipulate interest rates
Irrational exuberance Consumers continue to spend regardless of high interest rates because of high consumer
confidence
Velocity of money Rate at which money supply turns over each year
Economic Growth
Economic growth Annual percentage increase in real value of goods and services produced by economy
Actual economic growth Annual percentage increase in national output
Potential economic growth Speed at which economy could grow / Percentage annual increase in economy’s capacity
to produce
Human capital Accumulated skill & knowledge of workers
Supply-side Policy
Supply-side policy Focusing on adjusting AS such that the AS curve expands outwards
Prices & income policy Direct or indirect intervention by government on wage-price setting to influence inflation
rate
Earnings Wages + Overtime payments + Bonuses
International Trade
Trade Exchange of goods & services between two parties
International trade Exchange of goods & services across national borders
Factor price equalization Prices of factor inputs brought closer to each other
Absolute advantage Where a country can produce more of a good using the same amount of resources
Comparative advantage Where a country can produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another country
Law of comparative advantage Trade can benefit all countries if they specialize in goods in which they have a
comparative advantage
Terms of trade (TOT) Rate at which one good can be exchanged for another
Terms of trade index Comparison of export price index with import price index (Export Price Index/Import Price
Index X 100%)
Balance of trade (BOT) Difference between value of commodity exports & imports (Export revenue-Import
spending)
Free trade Exchange of goods & services between countries without any artificial restrictions
Protectionism Policy of sheltering domestic industries from foreign competition through tariff & non-tariff barriers
Infant industry Industry with potential comparative advantage but too young / undeveloped to realize potential
Dumping Selling of goods in foreign market below cost price / price sold in home market
Import quota Legal limit on quantity of imports over given time period
Subsidy Indirect protection of domestic producers so they become more competitive against more efficient foreign
producers
Voluntary restraint agreement (VRA) Agreement to reduce trade volume in specific good
Exchange control Government’s buying & selling of foreign exchange to regulate imports & exports to ensure healthy
BOP and prevent undue fluctuations in country’s foreign exchange value
Embargo Total ban on certain imports
Economic integration Neighboring countries integrate as an economic unit to take advantage of extended market &
allow better allocation of resources
Free trade area (FTA) Agreement where member countries agree to remove tariff & non-tariff barriers among
themselves but retain restrictions against non-member countries
Trade deflection Imports enter FTA via country with lowest external tariff
Customs union (CU) Agreement where member countries remove all trade barriers among themselves & adopt
common external tariff for non-member countries
Common market Member countries operate as a single market, lifting all restrictions on trade in services, capital &
labour movements and adopting laws & regulations on trade, production & employment
Trade diversion Trade diverted from more efficient non-member producer to less efficient but tariff-free member
nation
Balance of payments (BOP) Summary statement of money value of economic transactions between country
residents & rest of world
Credit item (+) International transaction earning foreign currency, providing demand of domestic currency
Debit item (-) International transaction requiring foreign currency to make payments, providing supply of domestic
currency
Current account Flow of goods & services + incomes & net transfer of money flowing into & out of country
Trade in goods account Import & export of tangible goods
Trade in services account Import & export of services (invisibles)
Income flows Investment income in forms of rent, interest, profits & dividends (net
property income from abroad)
Current transfers Unilateral flows such as government contributions & receipts from international organizations &
remittances
Capital account Records debt forgiveness, migrant transfers & acquisition & disposal of non-financial assets such as
patents & copyrights
Financial account Records purchase & sales of assets in terms of direct investment, portfolio investment & monetary
flows
Direct investment Purchase & sale of real assets (capital goods)
Portfolio investment Purchase & sale of shares & bonds (long-term investment)
Monetary flows Bank deposits, loans & debts (short-term investment)
Balancing item Statistical adjustment to record errors & omissions in calculations
Official Reserves Account (ORA) Accommodates surpluses or deficits in overall balance
BOP equilibrium Trade & capital flows into & out of country equal over number of years
BOP disequilibrium Persistent tendency for outflows to be greater or less than corresponding inflows
Expenditure-reducing policies Contractionary demand-side policies to reduce imports and hence AD & NI of
country
Expenditure-switching policies Policy that raises import prices relative to domestic-produced goods
Marshall-Lerner (ML) condition Sum of PEDX & PEDM > 1 for devaluation of currency to be successful in
correcting adverse BOP
J-curve effect Where current account worsens in short-run after currency devaluation before improving
Foreign exchange (Forex) Trading of one country’s currency for another foreign currency
Exchange rate Rate at which one currency is exchanged for another
Nominal exchange rate Exchange rate based on nominal value of currency before adjustment to price changes
Bilateral exchange rate Exchange rate between two currencies
Trade-weighted / Effective exchange rate Value of currency against basket of other currencies of major trading
partners
Derived demand for currency Currency demand stems from foreigners’ demand for our goods, services & financial
assets
Depreciation One currency weakens relative to another, when demand for it falls or supply for it rises
Appreciation One currency strengthens relative to another, when demand for it rises or supply for it falls
Purchasing power parity (PPP) theory Equilibrium rate of exchange between two currencies determined by
relative domestic purchasing power; exchange rates between two currencies in equilibrium when equivalent domestic
purchasing power
Fixed exchange rate Government of country fixes & guarantees official price of currency in terms of other foreign
currencies
Devaluation Government declares lowering of fixed exchange rate
Revaluation Government declares raising of fixed exchange rate
Freely-floating / Flexible exchange rate Exchange rate determined freely by market forces of demand & supply in
forex market
Managed float exchange rate Government lets market forces determine exchange rate but will interfere to change it
if beyond certain band
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