Micro Notes.
Micro Notes.
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– Models are useful if they predict economic phenomena.
– Economic models predict how people react, not how they think.
Economics Theories
● A Theory is a hypothesis that has been tested and proved.
● A hypothesis is an intelligent guess (a supposition or an assumption) the
validity of which is to be tested.
Two Main Streams
• The study of Economics is divided into two parts on the basis of looking the
system as whole or in terms of its innumerable decision-making units
– Micro Economics
• It is also called Price Theory
– Macro Economics
• It is also called Income Theory
Positive Economics
– Purely descriptive statements or scientific predictions; “If A, then B,”
– a statement of what is
– Positive economics deals with facts (and theories about these facts)
and avoids value judgments. Attempts to set out scientific statements
about economic behaviour
– It describes what exists and how it works.
Normative Economics
• Normative Economics are based upon someone’s value judgments about
what the economy should be like or what particular policy action should be
recommended, based on a given economic generalisation or relationship.
• It is also called policy economics, analyzes outcomes of economic behavior,
evaluates them as good or bad, and may prescribe courses of action.
• It embodies subjective feeling about ‘what ought to be’
• Normative economics is concerned about welfare propositions.
Methods of Economics
• Like other sciences Economics also uses scientific methods. These methods
are:
– Deductive Method
– Inductive Method
Proper Method
Deductive Method
• Economists of Classical School tried to build up the science of Economics
from few simple generalizations
• Classical economists by and large supported this method
• Reasoning from assumptions to conclusions
by testing a hypothesis
• Starts from General and moves to the particular
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• Begin with general assumptions and moves to particular conclusion
• Develops a theory, and then examine the facts to see if they follow the theory
• Researcher begins with a hypothesis/ theory,
• Then makes observations or collects data to test that hypothesis.
• Based on empirical evidence from the study,
The researcher then decides whether to accept or reject the hypothesis.
The deductive methodology, in short, tests theories and hypotheses
Inductive Method
Starts from the particular and moves to the general
Begin with particular observation and moves to the general explanation
Collect the observation , then the develops a theory to fit the facts
Introduced by Historic school
This method insists on the examination of facts and then laying down general
principles
Here we go from “particulars” to “generals”
Under this methodology,
• Social scientists observe social phenomena,
• Identify patterns
• Then analyze them to reach broad conclusions
• Develop new theories based on research findings
Proper Method
• The modern economist does not rely on one method. He uses both. It is said
– “Induction and Deduction are both needed for scientific thought as the
right and left foot are both needed for walking”
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Law of Demand:
● There is, thus, inverse relationship between the price of the product and the
quantity demanded. The economists have named this inverse relationship
between demand and price as the law of demand.
● According to Prof. Samuelson: "The law of demand states that people will
buy more at lower prices and buy less at higher prices, other things remaining
the same".
Here the M, Po, and T are kept constant. The demand function can also be
symbolized as under:
Qdx = f (Px) ceteris paribus
Ceteris Paribus. In economics, the term is used as a shorthand for indicating the
effect of one economic variable on another, holding constant all other variables
that may affect the second variable.
Law of Demand Curve/Diagram:
4
● In the figure (4.1), the quantity. demanded of shirts in plotted on horizontal
axis OX and "price is measured on vertical axis OY.
● Each price- quantity combination is plotted as a point on this graph. If we join
the price quantity points a, b, c, d, e and f, we get the individual demand curve
for shirts.
● The DD/ demand curve slopes downward from left to right.
● When the price of a good rises, the quantity demanded decreases and when
its price decreases, quantity demanded increases, ceteris paribus.
● Demand, thus, is a negative relationship between price and quantity.
(i) Prestige goods: There are certain commodities like diamond, sports cars etc.,
which are purchased as a mark of distinction in society. If the price of these goods
rise, the demand for them may increase instead of falling.
(ii) Price expectations: If people expect a further rise in the price particular
commodity, they may buy more in spite of rise in price. The violation of the law in this
case is only temporary.
(3) Ignorance of the consumer: If the consumer is ignorant about the rise in price
of goods, he may buy more at a higher price.
(iv) Giffen goods: If the prices of basic goods, (potatoes, sugar, etc) on which the
poor spend a large part of their incomes declines, the poor increase the demand for
superior goods, hence when the price of Giffen good falls, its demand also falls.
There is a positive price effect in case of Giffen goods.
Types of Demand
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Joint demand :means two or more goods are demanded together. To consume one
good, you need another good. In other words they are complements.
Eg: printers and ink cartridges.
Alternative demand: Alternative demand is derived from the changes in the price of
substitutes. When the price of a good goes down, people who have been using other
goods with similar or exact same use (substitutes) may move to buying that
particular good.
Income Demand:
Let us now study income demand which indicates the relationship between income
and the quantity of commodity demanded
Cross Demand:
Let us now take the case of related goods and how the change in the price of one
affects the demand of the other. This is known as cross demand and is written as D
= f (pr). Related goods are of two types, substitutes and complementary.
Derived demand- Demand for labour - demand for any factor is a demand derived
from the final product which that factor helps to produce- is derived demand.
Composite / Rival demand – multi uses commodities/services
Composite demand happens when goods or services have more than one use so
that an increase in the demand for one product leads to a fall in supply of the other.
Horizontal summation is the process of adding the quantities demanded by each individual consumer
at each price level to determine the total quantity demanded in the market. It's used to derive the
6 market demand curve from various individual demand curves. Horizontal summation is different for
public goods, where the market demand is equal to the demand of an individual. This is because the
availability of a public good applies to all consumers in the market. For example, the demand for a
national highway by one consumer is the same as the demand by ten consumers.
Horizontal Summation: Total quantity demanded at each price (focus on quantity).
Vertical Summation: Total willingness to pay for each quantity (focus on price).
Determinants of Demand:
(i) Changes in population: If the population of a country increase account of
immigration or through high birth rate or on account of these factors, the demand for
various kinds of goods will increase even the prices remains the same. The demand
curve will shift upward to the right.
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The nature of the commodities .demanded will depend up to taste of the
consumers. If due to high net production rate, the percentage of children to the total
population increases in a country, there will greater demand for toys, children food,
etc.
(ii) Changes in tastes: Demand for a commodity may change due to changes in
tastes and fashions.
(iii) Changes in income: When the income of consumers increases generally leads
to an increase in the demand for some commodities and a decrease in the demand
for other commodities.
(v) Changes in the price of substitutes: if the price of a particular commodity rises,
people may stop further purchase of that commodity and spend money on its
substitute which is available at a lower price. Thus we find, a change in demand can
also be brought about by a change in the price of the substitute.
(vi) Changes in the state of trade: The total quantity of goods demanded is also
affected by the cyclical fluctuations in economic activities.
(vii) Climate and weather conditions: The climate and weather conditions have an
important bearing on the demand of a commodity. For instance, the consumer's
demand for woolen clothes increases in winter and decreases in summer.
The fundamental reasons for demand curve to slope downward are as follows:
%∆𝑄 𝑄
Ed = %∆𝑃
𝑥 𝑃
A demand is perfectly elastic when a small increase in the price of a good its quantity
to zero. Perfect elasticity implies that individual producers can sell all they want at a
ruling price but cannot charge a higher price. If any producer tries to charge even
one penny more, no one would buy his product.
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It shows that the demand curve DD/ is a horizontal line which indicates that the
quantity demanded is extremely (infinitely) response to price. Even a slight rise in
price (say $4.02), drops the quantity demanded of a good to zero. The curve DD/ is
infinitely elastic. This elasticity of demand as such is equal to infinity.
When the quantity demanded of a good dose not change at all to whatever change
in price, the demand is said to be perfectly inelastic or the elasticity of demand is
zero.
For example, a 30% rise or fall in price leads to no change in the quantity demanded
of a good.
Ed = 0/30%, Ed = 0
Ed = 0
Δp Ed = 0
When the quantity demanded of a good changes by exactly the same percentage as
price, the demand is said to has a unitary elasticity.
For example, a 30% change in price leads to 30% change quantity demand = 30% /
30% = 1.
One or a one percent change in price causes a response of exactly a one percent
change in the quantity demand.
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● The percentage change in price brings about an exactly equal percentage in
quantity at all points a, b. The demand curve of elasticity is, therefore, a
rectangular hyperbola.
Ed = 1
● If a one percent change in price causes greater than a one percent change in
quantity demanded of a good, the demand is said to be elastic.
Alternatively, we can say that the elasticity of demand is greater than. For example, if
price of a good change by 10% and it brings a 20% change in demand, the price
elasticity is greater than one.
Ed = 2
Ed > 1
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When a change in price causes a less than a proportionate change in quantity
demand, demand is said to be inelastic.
The elasticity of a good is here less than I or less than unity. For example, a 30%
change in price leads to 10% change in quantity demanded of a good, then:
Ed = 1/3, Ed = <1
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Note:
As the demand curve slopes downward, therefore, the coefficient of price
elasticity of demand is always negative. The economists for convenience sake,
omit the negative sign and express the price elasticity of demand by positive number.
(2) Geometric Method/Point Elasticity Method:
"The measurement of elasticity at a point of the demand curve is called point
elasticity".
The point elasticity of demand is defined as "The proportionate change in the
quantity demanded resulting from a very small proportionate change in price".
The elasticity at each point on the demand curve can be traced with the help of point
method as:
Ed = Lower Segment
Upper Segment
Summing up, the elasticity of demand is different at each point along a linear
demand curve. At high prices, demand is elastic. At low prices, it is inelastic. At the
midpoint, it is unit elastic.
If the demand curve is non linear, then elasticity at a point can be measured by
drawing a tangent at the particular point. This is explained with the help of a figure
given below:
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In figure 6.10, the elasticity on DD/ demand curve is measured at point C by drawing
a tangent. At point C:
Ed = BM = BC = 400 = 2 (>1).
MO CA 200
Here elasticity is greater than unity. Point C lies above the midpoint of the demand
curve DD/. In case the demand curve is a rectangular hyperbola, the change in price
will have no effect on the total amount spent on the product. As such, the demand
curve will have a unitary elasticity at all points.
● Normally the elasticity varies along the length of the demand curve. If we are
to measure elasticity between any two points on the demand curve, then
the Arc Elasticity Method, is used.
● Arc elasticity is a measure of average elasticity between any two points on the
demand curve.
● is defined as: "The average elasticity of a range of points on a demand
curve".
Formula:
Arc elasticity is calculated by using the following formula: Ed = Δq/∆p x P1+P2/q1 + q2
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change in the income of a consumer".
● The formula for measuring the income elasticity of demand is the percentage
change in demand for a good divided by the percentage change in income.
Putting this in symbol gives.
(iii) Unrelated Goods. The two goods which a re unrelated to each other, The
elasticity is zero of unrelated goods.
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Concept of Utility:
Utility is defined as: "The power of a commodity or service to satisfy human want".
Utility is thus the satisfaction which is derived by the consumer by consuming the
goods.
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Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility:
The law of diminishing marginal utility is true under certain assumptions. These
assumptions are as under:
(i) Rationality: In the cardinal utility analysis, it is assumed that the consumer is
rational. He aims at maximization of utility subject to availability of his income.
(ii) Constant marginal utility of money: It is assumed in the theory that the
marginal utility of money based for purchasing goods remains constant..
(iii) Diminishing marginal utility: Another important assumption of utility analysis is
that the utility gained from the successive units of a commodity diminishes in a given
time period.
(iv) Utility is additive: In the early versions of the theory of consumer behavior, it
was assumed that the utilities of different commodities are independent. The total
utility of each commodity is additive.
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There are some exceptions or limitations to the law of diminishing utility.
(i) Case of intoxicants: Consumption of liquor defies the low for a short period. The
more a person drinks, the more likes it. However, this is truer only initially. A stage
comes when a drunkard too starts taking less and less liquor and eventually stops it.
(ii) Rare collection: If there are only two diamonds in the world, the possession of
2nd diamond will push up the marginal utility.
(iii) Application to money: The law equally holds good for money. It is true that
more money the man has, the greedier he is to get additional units of it.
The consumer will maximize total utility from his income when the utility from the last
rupee spent on each good is the same. Algebraically, this is:
Assumptions:
The ordinal utility theory or the indifference curve analysis is based on four
main assumptions.
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(i) Rational behavior of the consumer: It is assumed that individuals are rational in
making decisions from their expenditures on consumer goods.
(ii) Utility is ordinal: Utility cannot be measured cardinally. It can be, however,
expressed ordinally. In other words, the consumer can rank the basket of goods
according to the satisfaction or utility of each basket.
(iii) Diminishing marginal rate of substitution: In the indifference curve analysis,
the principle of diminishing marginal rate of substitution is assumed.
(iv) Consistency in choice: The consumer, it is assumed, is consistent in his
behavior during a period of time. For insistence, if the consumer prefers
combinations of A of good to the combinations B of goods, he then remains
consistent in his choice.
An Indifference Map:
● A graph showing a whole set of indifference curves is called an indifference
map. An indifference map, in other words, is comprised of a set of indifference
curves.
● Each successive curve further from the original curve indicates a higher level
of total satisfaction
● The concept of marginal rate substitution (MRS) was introduced by Dr. J.R.
Hicks and Prof. R.G.D. Allen to take the place of the concept of diminishing
marginal utility.
● The rate or ratio at which goods X and Y are to be exchanged is known as
the marginal rate of substitution (MRS). In the words of Hicks:
● “The ratio of exchange between small units of two commodities, which are
equally valued or preferred by a consumer”.
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(3) Indifference Curve are Convex to the Origin:
This is an important property of indifference curves. They are convex to the origin
(bowed inward). This is equivalent to saying that as the consumer substitutes
commodity X for commodity Y, the marginal rate of substitution diminishes of X for Y
along an indifference curve.
(4) Indifference Curve Cannot Intersect Each Other:
Given the definition of indifference curve and the assumptions behind it, the
indifference curves cannot intersect each other. It is because at the point of
tangency, the higher curve will give as much as of the two commodities as is given
by the lower indifference curve. This is absurd and impossible.
(5) Indifference Curves do not Touch the Horizontal or Vertical Axis:
One of the basic assumptions of indifference curves is that the consumer purchases
combinations of different commodities.
● "A budget line or price line represents the various combinations of two
goods which can be purchased with a given money income and assumed
prices of goods".
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(ii) Price changes. Now let us consider that there is a change in the price of one
good. The income of the consumer and price of other good is held constant
Conditions:
Thus the consumer’s equilibrium under the indifference curve theory must meet the
following two conditions:
First: A given price line should be tangent to an indifference curve or marginal rate
of satisfaction of good X for good Y (MRSxy) must be equal to the price ratio of the
two goods. i.e. MRSxy = Px / Py
Second: The second order condition is that indifference curve must be convex to the
origin at the point of tangency.
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● In the consumer’s equilibrium analysis, it is primarily assumed that the
price of the goods X and Y and the income of the consumer remains
constant.
● If the prices of goods, tastes and preferences of the consumer
remains constant and there a change in his income, it will directly
affect consumer’s demand.
● This effect on the purchase due to change in income is called
the income effect.
● We now discuss the reaction of the consumer to the changes in the price of a
good while his money income, tastes, preferences and prices of other goods
remain unchanged.
● When there is change in the price of a good shown on the two axes of an
indifference map, there takes place a change in demand in response to a
change in price of a commodity, other things remaining the same, is
called price effect.
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The price effect on the consumption of a normal good is negative. If we join the
equilibrium points PUS, we get price consumption curve (PCC) of the consumer for
the commodity wheat.
● For instance, the price of good say X falls, and that of good Y remains
unchanged. With this fall in the price of good X, then the real income of the
consumer would increase.
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● In Slutsky’s version of substitution effect when the price of good changes and
consumer’s real income or purchasing power increases.
● That is, the income is changed by the difference between the cost of the
amount of good X purchased at the old price and the cost of purchasing the
same quantity if X at the new price.
● Income is then said to be changed by the cost difference. Thus, in Slutsky
substitution effect, income is reduced or increased not by compensating
variation as in case of the Hicksian substitution effect but by the cost
difference.
Consumer's Surplus:
● The concept of consumer’s surplus was introduced by Alfred Marshall.
According to him:
● "A consumer is generally willing to pay more for a given quantity of good
than what he actually pays at the price prevailing in the market".
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● “Consumer’s surplus is equal to the difference between the amount of
money that consumer actually pays to buy a certain quantity rather than go
without it”.
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● If the slope of the budget line is greater than the slope of indifference
curves, B would lie on a higher indifference curve than L and the consumer
will buy only Y.
● If the slope of the budget line is less than the slope of indifference
curves, L would lie on a higher indifference curve than B and the consumer
will buy only X. It is thus manifest that even in case of perfect substitutes,
the consumer will succumb to monomania.
Cobweb theorem
The cobweb theorem is an economic model used to explain how small economic
shocks can become amplified by the behaviour of producers. 1.Convergent
Cobweb
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The convergence would be obtained if the demand curve is flatter than
the supply curve. This type of Convergent Cobweb is called Dynamic
Equilibrium with insulated adjustment.
2.Divergent Cobweb
The price fluctuations tend to become larger and larger and the market is subject to
explosive oscillations, i.e., here price diverges away from equilibrium and the market
is unstable. As already obtained, this will be the case if the demand curve is steeper
than the supply curve.
3.Continuous Cobweb
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Choice under Risk in Economics
Utility Theory and Attitude toward Risk
“The attitude toward risk we will consider a single composite commodity, namely,
money income. An individual’s money income represents the market basket of goods
that he can buy. It is assumed that the individual knows the probabilities of making or
gaining money income in different situations. But the outcomes or payoffs are
measured in terms of utility rather than rupees”.
RISK:
Risk Preferences
Different people have different views, perspectives, and preferences about risk.
Some people enjoy a risky situation and others do not.
● Risk Aversion: This exists when a person has decreasing marginal utility of
income. In this case you prefer the certain income to the risky income.
● Risk Loving: This exists when a person has increasing marginal utility of
income. With increasing marginal utility of income you obtain more utility from
the income won than the income lost.
● Risk Neutrality: This exists when a person has constant marginal utility of
income. With constant marginal utility of income you obtain the same utility
from the income won as the income lost.
● Risk Aversion: A preference for risk in which a person prefers guaranteed or
certain income over risky income.
Risk Pooling:
Risk spreading: spreads the risk of a venture among multiple sub insurers.
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The logic is similar to participating in an office Super-Bowl lottery.
RISK PREMIUM:
The difference between a guaranteed or certain income and a risky income that
generate the same level of utility. Risk premium is the amount of income that a risk
adverse person is willing to pay to avoid the risk.
The neo-classical theory assumes that the consumer is a rational human being who
does not indulge in gambling or even in fair bet with 50-50 odds. The reason why
people were unwilling to stake even at fair bets was provided by Daniel Bernoulli, the
18th century Swiss mathematician.
Staying in St. Petersburg in 1732 for some time, Bernoulli found that Russians were
unwilling to make bets even at better than 50- 50 odds knowing fully that their
mathematical expectations of winning money in a particular kind of gamble were
greater the more money they bet. This contradiction is known as St. Petersburg
Paradox.
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(4) If two lottery tickets offer the same prizes, the individual prefers the lottery ticket
with the higher probability of winning.
(5) The individual can completely order probability combinations of uncertain
choices. (6) Uncertainty or risk does not possess utility or disutility of its own.
Given the assumptions, it is possible to derive a cardinal utility index based on the
above formula.Suppose there are the three events (lotteries) С, A, B. Out of these,
event (lottery) A is certain, С has probability P, and В probability (1-P), and if their
respective utilities are Ua ,Ub and Uc then
Ua =PUc + (1-P)Ub
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● Prof. Markowitz found the Friedman-Savage hypothesis contrary to common
observations.
● According to him, it is not correct to say that the poor and the rich are
unwilling to gamble and take risks except at favourable odds. Rather, both
purchase lotteries and gamble on horse races.
● According to Markowitz, when income increases by a small increment, it leads
to increasing marginal utility of income.
● But large increases in income lead to diminishing marginal utility of income.
● That is why at higher levels of income people are reluctant to indulge in
gambling even at fair bets and people in slowly rising income groups indulge
in gambling to improve their position.
● On the other hand, when there are small decreases in income, the marginal
utility of income rises.
● But large decreases in income lead to diminishing marginal utility of income.
That is why people insure against small losses but indulge in gambling where
large losses are involved.
● This is called the Markowitz hypothesis which is explained in Figure 3 where
Markowitz takes three inflexion points M, N and P in the upper portion of the
diagram with present income at the middle point N on the TU curve of income.
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● They accepted the fundamental ‘law of demand’ on trust, and formulated
demand functions directly on the basis of market data without reference to the
theory of utility and the behaviour of the individual consumer.
The most commonly used form of demand function in applied research has
been the ‘constant-elasticity’ type:
Qx = b0 – Pxb1. P0b2. Yb3. eb4t
Where Qx = quantity demanded of commodity x
Px = price of x
P0 = prices of other commodities
Y = consumers’ aggregate income
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Nerlove’s ‘stock-adjustment principle’:
The model as applied to consumer durables results in a demand function of the form
● The current demand for durables depends on, among other things, the stock
of such commodities (stock- adjustment process).
● The current demand for non-durables depends on, among other things, the
purchases of the commodities in the past, because by consuming a certain
commodity we get accustomed to it (habit-formation process). Stocks S,
however, cannot be measured:
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Characteristics demand theory
● Characteristics demand theory states that consumers derive utility not from
the actual contents of the basket but from the characteristics of the goods in it.
● This theory was developed by Kelvin Lancaster in 1966 in his working paper
“A New Approach to Consumer Theory”.
Demonstration Effect:
By emphasising relative income as a determinant of consumption, the relative
income hypothesis suggests that individuals or households try to imitate or copy the
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consumption levels of their neighbours or other families in a particular community.
This is called demonstration effect or Duesenberry effect
Two things follows from this. This is because if incomes of all families increase in the
same proportion, distribution of relative incomes would remain unchanged and
therefore the proportion of consumption expenditure to income which depends on
relative income will remain constant.
Ratchet Effect:
The other significant part of Duesenberry’s relative income hypothesis is that it
suggests that when income of individuals or households falls, their consumption
expenditure does not fall much. This is often called a ratchet effect.
Veblen effect
Abnormal market behavior where consumers purchase the higher-priced goods
whereas similar low-priced (but not identical) substitutes are available. It is caused
either by the belief that higher price means higher quality, or by the desire for
conspicuous consumption (to be seen as buying an expensive, prestige item).
Named after its discoverer, the US social-critic Thorstein Bunde Veblen
(1857-1929).
Bandwagon Effect:
The existence of positive network externalities gives rise to Bandwagon effect.
Bandwagon effect refers to the desire or demand for a good by a person who wants
to be in style because possession of a good is in fashion and therefore many others
have it.
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In due course of time people come to know how many people actually buy the good.
However, in addition to the bandwagon effect, the quantity demanded of the good
depends on the price of the good.
Snob Effect:
● In case network externalities are negative, snob effect arises. Snob effect
refers to the desire to possess a unique commodity having a prestige value.
Snob effect works quite contrary to the bandwagon effect.
● The quantity demanded of a commodity having a snob value is greater, the
smaller the number of people owning its.
● Rare works of art, specially designed sport cars, specially designed clothing
made to order, very expensive luxury cars.
It is important to note that snob effect makes the demand curve less elastic.
● Moreover, supply depends on cost of production. The firm’s cost, in its turn,
depends on two main factors:
(1) the technical relation between inputs and output (i.e., how outputs vary as inputs
vary), and
(2) factors price’s (i.e., the price of labour or the wage, the price of capital or
the interest rate, etc.).
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The production function shows the relation between input changes and output
changes.
The distinction between the short-run and the long-run is based on the difference
between fixed and variable factors.
The Short-Run:
● The short-run refers to the period of time over which one (or more) factor(s) of
production is (are) fixed.
● In the real world, land and capital (such as plant and equipment) are usually
treated as fixed factors.
The Long-Run:
On the other hand the long- run is defined as the period over which all factors of
production can be varied, within the confines of existing technology.
Production Isoquants:
An isoquant is a curve or locus of points showing all possible combinations of inputs
physically capable of producing a certain fixed level of output.
Iso-Quant Curve: Definitions, Assumptions and Properties!
The term Iso-quant or Iso-product is composed of two words, Iso = equal, quant =
quantity or product = output.
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2. Isoquants are Convex to the Origin:
Like indifference curves, isoquants are convex to the origin. In order to understand
this fact, we have to understand the concept of diminishing marginal rate of technical
substitution (MRTS), because convexity of an isoquant implies that the MRTS
diminishes along the isoquant.
diminishing MRTS causes the isoquant
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4. Higher Iso-Product Curves Represent Higher Level of Output:
A higher iso-product curve represents a higher level of output as shown in the
figure 7 given below:
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6. No Isoquant can Touch Either Axis:
If an isoquant touches X-axis, it would mean that the product is being produced with
the help of labour alone without using capital at all.
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Kinked iso-quant Curve:
● This curve assumes, that there is a limited substitutability between the factors
of production.
● This shows that substitution of factors can be seen at the kinks since there
are a few processes to produce any one commodity.
Kinked iso-quant curve is also known as activity analysis programming
iso-quant or linear programming iso-quant.
Ridge Lines:
One knows from the iso-quant curves the extent to which production should
be carried out. Lines which represent the limits of the economic region of
production are called ridge lines.
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Iso-Cost Line:
The iso-cost line is similar to the price or budget line of the indifference curve
analysis. It is the line which shows the various combinations of factors that will result
in the same level of total cost.
Iso-Cost Curves:
After knowing the nature of isoquants which represent the output possibilities of a
firm from a given combination of two inputs. We further extend it to the prices of the
inputs as represented on the isoquant map by the iso-cost curves.
● In short, the producer is producing given amount of output with least cost
combination of factors. It is also known as optimum combination of the
factors.
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(ii) At point of tangency i.e., iso-quant curve must be convex to the origin or
MRTSLk must be falling.
Optimal Combination of Resources:
Output Maximisation subject to Cost Constraint:
A rational producer, whose objective is output maximisation subject to cost
constraint, will always try to reach the highest attainable isoquant permitted by the
isocost line.
At point E the slope of the isoquant or MRTS is equal to the slope of the
isocost line:
Expansion Path:
43
The Law of Variable Proportions:
The Law states that “when increasing quantities of a variable factor are used in
combination with a fixed factor, the marginal and average product of the
variable factor will eventually decrease.”
(2) In the second stage TP increases no doubt, but not proportionately. In other
words, the rate of increase of TP falls. This means that MP diminishes. This is the
stage of diminishing return to the variable factor (labour). This is perhaps the most
important stage of the production process in the short run.
(3) In the third stage, TP itself diminishes and the MP is negative. This is the stage of
negative return to the variable factor (labour).
2. Thus, it follows as a corollary of this that only when MP falls below the level of AP,
does AP fall.
3. Since MP rises when MP is exceeding AP, while AP falls where MP is less than
AP, it follows that where AP is at a maximum, it is equal to MP. This is why; the MP
curve intersects the AP curve at the latter’s maximum point. (The relation between
the margin and the average is mathematical.) In this context we may note that MP
can be zero or negative, but AP can never be so.
44
Returns to Scale:
● The long run, however, refers to a period of time over which all the factors of
production can be varied.
● The laws of returns to scale can also be explained in terms of the isoquant
approach.
● The laws of returns to scale refer to the effects of a change in the scale of
factors (inputs) upon output in the long-run when the combinations of factors
are changed in some proportion.
1. Indivisibilities:
The inability to divide certain factor units into smaller units without either complete
loss of usefulness in production or partial loss in efficiency results in a relatively low
output per unit of input when operations are conducted on a very small scale.
2. Specialisation:
45
● The other and closely related cause of increasing returns to scale is the
advantage offered by specialisation.
● Furthermore new inventions may result in the increase of the efficiency of all
methods of production. At the same time some techniques may become
inefficient and drop out from the production function.
46
● These changes in technology constitute technological progress.
● This shift shows that the same output may be produced by less factor inputs,
or more output may be obtained with the same inputs.
47
● The downwards-shifting isoquant becomes steeper along any given radius
through the origin. This is shown in figure 3.30.
Neutral-technical progress:
● Technical progress is neutral if it increases the marginal product of both
factors by the same percentage, so that the MRSL K (along any radius)
remains constant. The isoquant shifts downwards parallel to itself.
This is shown in figure 3.31.
● Charles W. Cobb and Paul H. Douglas studied the relationship of inputs and
outputs and formed an empirical production function, popularly known as
Cobb-Douglas production function.
48
● Originally, C-D production function applied not to the production process of an
individual firm but to the whole of the manufacturing production.
● The Cobb-Douglas production function is expressed by
Q = ALαKβ
● where Q is output and L and A’ are inputs of labour and capital respectively.
● A, α and β are positive parameters where α > 0, β > 0. The equation tells that
output depends directly on L and K and that part of output which cannot be
explained by L and К is explained by A which is the ‘residual’, often called
technical change.
(iii) α and β represent the labour and capital shares of output respectively.
(iv) α and β are also elasticities of output with respect to labour and capital
respectively.
(vi) The expansion path generated by C-D function is linear and it passes through
the origin.
(vii) The marginal product of labour is equal to the increase in output when the labour
input is increased by one unit.
(viii) The average product of labour is equal to the ratio between output and labour
input.
49
(ix) The ratio α /β measures factor intensity. The higher this ratio, the more labour
intensive is the technique and the lower is this ratio and the more capital intensive is
the technique of production.
● Arrow, Chenery, Minhas and Solow in their new famous paper of 1961
developed the Constant Elasticity of Substitution (CES) function.
● This function consists of three variables Q, С and L, and three parameters A,
α and l-α.
Its Properties:
The CES production function possesses the following properties:
1. The CES function is homogenous of degree one. If we increase the inputs С and L
in the CES function by n-fold, output Q will also increase by n-fold.
Thus like the Cobb-Douglas production function, the CES function displays constant
returns to scale.
2. In the CES production function, the average and marginal products in the
variables С and L are homogeneous of degree zero like all linearly homogeneous
production functions.
3. From the above property, the slope of an isoquant, i.e., the MRTS of capital for
labour can be shown to be convex to the origin.
4. The parameter (theta) in the CES production function determines the elasticity of
substitution. In this function, the elasticity of substitution,
σ = 1/ 1 + θ
This reveals that when σ = 1, the CES production function becomes the
Cobb-Douglas production function. Thus the isoquants for the CES production
50
function range from right angles to straight lines as the elasticity substitution ranges
from 0 to1.
5. As a corollary of the above, if L and С inputs are substitutable ∞ for each other an
increase in С will require less of L for a given output. As a result, the MP of L will
increase. Thus, the MP of an input will increase when the other input is increased.
CHAPTER-4
Cost concepts
Accounting and Economic Costs: Money costs are the total money expenses
incurred by a firm in producing a commodity. They include wages and salaries of
labour; cost of raw materials; expenditures on machines and equipment;
Production Costs:
The total costs of production of a firm are divided into total variable costs and total
fixed costs. The total variable costs are those expenses of production which change
with the change in the firm’s output
Market Cost
The total cost associated with delivering goods or services to customers. The
marketing cost may include expenses associated with transferring title of goods to a
customer, storing goods in warehouses pending delivery, promoting the goods or
services being sold, or the distribution of the product to points of sale.
Opportunity cost is the cost of sacrifice of the best alternative foregone in the
production of a good or service.
51
● Implicit costs refer to the payments made to the self-owned resources used in
production.
● Are the earnings of owner’s resources employed in their best alternative uses.
The cost function expresses a functional relationship between total cost and factors
that determine it. Usually, the factors that determine the total cost of production (C)
of a firm are the output (0, the level of technology (T), the prices of factors (Pf) and
the fixed factors (F). Symbolically, the cost function becomes
C=f (Q, T, Pf, F)
Thus the total cost function is expressed as: C=f (Q)
Which means that the total cost (C) is a function if) of output (Q), assuming all other
factors as constant. The cost function is shown diagrammatically by a total cost (TC)
curve.
52
Total Variable Costs or TVC:
Are those costs of production that change directly with output. They a rise when
output increases, and fall when output declines.
Average Fixed Costs or AFC equal total fixed costs at each level of output
divided by the number of units produced:
AFC = TFC /Q
The average fixed costs diminish continuously as output increases. Thus the AFC
curve is a downward sloping curve which approaches the quantity axis without
touching it, as shown in Figure 3. It is a rectangular hyperbola.
Short-Run Average Variable Costs (or SAVC) equal total variable costs at each
level of output divided by the number of units produced:
SAVC = TVC/Q
The average variable costs first decline with the rise in output as larger quantities of
variable factors is applied to fixed plant and equipment. But eventually they begin to
rise due to the law of diminishing returns. Thus the SAVC curve is U-shaped, as
shown in Figure 3.
53
A fundamental concept for the determination of the exact level of output of a firm is
the marginal cost.
Algebraically, it is the total cost of n + 1 units minus the total cost of n units of output
MCn = TCn+1 – TCn.
The long run average total cost or LAC curve of the firm shows the minimum
average cost of producing various levels of output from all-possible short-run
average cost curves (SAC). Thus the LAC curve is derived from the SAC curves.
● The LAC curve is known as the “envelope” curve because it envelopes all the
SAC curves.
● The long-run marginal cost (LMC) curve of the firm intersects SAC1 and LAC
curves at the minimum point E.
● The modem theory of costs differs from the traditional theory of costs with
regard to the shapes of the cost curves.
54
● In the modem theory which is based on empirical evidences, the short-run
SAVC curve and the SMC curve coincide with each other and are a horizontal
straight line over a wide range of output.
● So far as the LAC and LMC curves are concerned, they are L-shaped rather
than U-shaped.
The saucer-shaped SAVC and SMC curves are shown in Figure 7. To begin with,
both the curves first fall upto point A and the SMC curvelies below the SAVC curve.
“The falling part of the SAVC shows the reduction in costs due to the better utilisation
of the fixed factor and the consequent increase in skills and productivity of the
variable factor (labour).
● With better skills, the wastes in raw materials are also being reduced and a
better utilisation of the whole plant is reached.”
● The reason for the saucer-shaped SAVC curve is that the fixed factor is
divisible.
● Over that range, SMC and SAVC are equal and are constant per unit of
output. The firm will, therefore, continue to produce within Q1Q2 reserve
capacity of the plant, as shown in Figure 7.
● In the beginning, the LAC curve rapidly falls but after a point “the curve
remains flat, or may slope gently downwards, at its right-hand end.”
55
● Economists have assigned the following reasons for the L-shape of the LAC
curve.
1. Technical Progress:
Another reason for the existence of the L-shaped LAC curve in the modern theory of
costs is technical progress. The traditional theory of costs assumes no technical
progress while explaining the U-shaped LAC curve.
2. Learning:
● Another reason for the
L-shaped long- run average
cost curve is the learning
process. Learning is the
product of experience.
Introduction
1. Internal Economies
2. External Economies
56
Internal Economies
● When a firm expands its scale of production, the economies, which accrue to
this firm, are known as internal economies.
External Economies
● External economies refer to gains accruing to all the firms in an industry due
to the growth of that industry.
● All the firms in the industry irrespective of their size can enjoy external
economies. The emergence of external economies is due to localization.
● Real economies are those associated with a reduction in the physical quantity
of inputs, raw materials, various types of labour and various types of capital,
(fixed or circulating capital).
Economies of Scope
● Economies of Scope refers to the reduction in the average cost per unit, by
increasing the variety of products produced.
● In this technique, the total cost of producing two products (related or
unrelated) is less than the cost of producing each item individually.
● Economies of Scope focuses on better utilisation of the firm’s resources and
common assets.
57
CHAPTER 5: MARKET STRUCTURE
58
Another condition is that there are no transport costs in carrying of product from one
place to another..
(9) Absence of Selling Costs:
Under perfect competition, the costs of advertising, sales-promotion, etc. do not arise
because all firms produce a homogeneous product.
Perfect Competition vs Pure Competition:
Perfect competition is often distinguished from pure competition, but they differ only
in degree. The first five conditions relate to pure competition while the remaining four
conditions are also required for the existence of perfect competition.
In the figure (15.2) quantity of output is measured along OX axis and marginal cost
and marginal revenue on OY axis. The marginal cost curve cuts the marginal
revenue curve at two points K and T.
● In the long run, the price will be determined at a point where the demand
curve and the long run supply curve intersect each other.
59
● The shape of the long run supply curve will, however, be different with
different industries.
● "All the firms in a competitive industry achieve long run equilibrium when
market price or marginal revenue equals marginal cost equals minimum
of average total cost."
Formula:
Price = Marginal Cost = Minimum Average Total Cost
● When the period is long and profit level of the competitive industry is high,
then new firms enter the industry.
● If the profit level is below the competitive level, the firm then leave the
industry.
● When all the competitive firms earn normal profit, then there is no tendency
for the new firms to enter or leave the industry. The firms are then in the long
run equilibrium.
● The case of long-run equilibrium of a firm can be easily explained with .the
help of a diagram given below:
At price OP, all the identical firms to the industry earn only normal profit. There is no
tendency for the new firms to enter or leave the industry provided
Monopoly
● Monopoly is from the Greek word meaning one seller. It is the polar opposite
of perfect competition.
● Monopoly is a market structure in which one firm makes up the entire market.
Monopoly and competition are at the two extremes.
● According to D. Salvatore, “Monopoly is the form of market organisation in
which there is a single firm selling a commodity for which there are no close
substitutes.”
● Thus the monopoly firm is itself an industry and the monopolist faces the
industry demand curve.
60
● The demand curve for his product is, therefore, relatively stable and slopes
downward to the right, given the tastes, and incomes of his customers.
● It means that more of the product can be sold at a lower price than at a higher
price. He is a price-maker who can set the price to his maximum advantage.
The main features of monopoly are as follows:
1. Under monopoly a firm itself is an industry.
2. A monopoly may be individual proprietorship or partnership or joint stock company
or a cooperative society or a government company.
3. A monopolist has full control on the supply of a product.
4. There is no close substitute of a monopolist’s product in the market. Hence, under
monopoly, the cross elasticity of demand for a monopoly product with some other
good is very low.
5. There are restrictions on the entry of other firms in the area of monopoly product.
6. A monopolist can influence the price of a product. He is a price-maker, not a
price-taker.
7. Pure monopoly is not found in the real world.
8. Monopolist cannot determine both the price and quantity of a product
simultaneously.
9. Monopolist’s demand curve slopes downwards to the right. That is why, a
monopolist can increase his sales only by decreasing the price of his product and
thereby maximise his profit.
● The marginal revenue curve of a monopolist is below the average revenue
curve and it falls faster than the average revenue curve.
● This is because a monopolist has to cut down the price of his product to sell
an additional unit.
● In the short period, the monopolist behaves like any other firm. A monopolist
will maximize profit or minimize losses by producing that output for which
marginal cost (MC) equals marginal revenue (MR).
61
● Whether a profit or loss is made or not depends upon the relation between
price and average total cost (ATC).
62
● A monopoly firm will maximize profit at that level of output for which long run
marginal cost (MC) is equal to marginal revenue (MR) and the LMC curve
intersects the MR curve from below.
● In the figure (16.6), the monopoly firm is in equilibrium at point E where LMC =
MR and LMC cuts MR curve from below. QP is the equilibrium price and OQ
is the equilibrium output.
Monopoly Price Discrimination:
The practice on the part of the monopolist to sell the identical goods at the same
time to different buyers at different prices when the price difference is not Justified by
difference in costs in called price discrimination. In the words of Mrs. Joan
Robinson:
There are three main degrees of price discrimination: (1) First degree price
discrimination, (2) Second degree price discrimination and (3) Third degree price
discrimination.
63
Conditions of Price Discrimination:
Price discrimination can only be possible if the following three essential conditions
are fulfilled.
.
(1) Segregation by price. There should be no possibility, of transferring a unit of
commodity supplied from the low priced to the high priced market.
(2) Segregation by market. Another essential characteristic of price discrimination
is that there should be no possibility of transferring one unit of demand from the high
priced to the low priced market. (3) Segregation by demand. Price discrimination
can be possible if there is difference in the elasticity of demand in different markets.
64
● The concentration ratio may act as a measure of monopoly power because in
a competitive industry, sales are more evenly distributed among
firms—concentration of sales is more or less absent.
● On the other hand, in a monopolistic industry, sales tend to concentrate in a
few large firms—in the limiting case, sales are concentrated in only one firm
when we have the case of a pure monopoly.
Monopolistic Competition:
● Monopolistic competition refers to a market situation where there are many
firms selling a differentiated product.
● “There is competition which is keen, though not perfect, among many firms
making very similar products.”
● No firm can have any perceptible influence on the price-output policies of the
other sellers nor can it be influenced much by their actions.
● Thus monopolistic competition refers to competition among a large number of
sellers producing close but not perfect substitutes for each other.
It’s Features:
The following are the main features of monopolistic competition:
(1) Large Number of Sellers:
● In monopolistic competition the number of sellers is large. They are
“many and small enough” but none controls a major portion of the
total output.
● No seller by changing its price-output policy can have any
perceptible effect on the sales of others and in turn be influenced by
them.
● Thus there is no recognised interdependence of the price-output
policies of the sellers and each seller pursues an independent
course of action.
(2) Product Differentiation:
● One of the most important features of the monopolistic
competition is differentiation.
● Product differentiation implies that products are different in
some ways from each other. Products are close substitutes with
a high cross-elasticity and not perfect substitutes.
● Product “differentiation may be based upon certain
characteristics of the products itself, such as exclusive patented
features; trade-marks; trade names; peculiarities of package or
container, if any; or singularity in quality, design, colour, or style.
It may also exist with respect to the conditions surrounding its
sales.”
65
(3) Freedom of Entry and Exit of Firms: Another feature of monopolistic
competition is the freedom of entry and exit of firms.
(4) Nature of Demand Curve:
● The demand curve (AR curve) of the monopolistic firm is therefore, highly
elastic and is downward sloping.
● As regards the marginal revenue curve, it slopes downward and lies below the
demand curve because price is lowered of all the units to sell more output in
the market.
66
Firm's Equilibrium Price and Output:
In the short-run, the number of firms in the 'product group' remains the same. The
size of the plant of each firm remains unaltered. The firm whether operating under
perfect competition, or monopoly wants to maximize profits.
In the figure (17.1), the downward sloping demand curve (AR curve) is quite elastic.
The MR curve lies below-the average curve except at point N. The SMC curve which
includes advertising and sales promotional costs is drawn in the usual fashion. The
firm sells output OK at OE/KM per unit price..
67
Oligopoly:
(1) Interdependence:
There is recognised interdependence among the sellers in the oligopolistic market.
Each oligopolist firm knows that changes in its price, advertising, product
characteristics, etc. may lead to counter-moves by rivals. (2) Advertisement:
● The main reason for this mutual interdependence in decision making is that
one producer’s fortunes are dependent on the policies and fortunes of the
other producers in the industry.
● It is for this reason that oligopolist firms spend much on advertisement and
customer services.
(3) Competition:
This leads to another feature of the oligopolistic market, the presence of competition.
Since under oligopoly, there are a few sellers, a move by one seller immediately
affects the rivals.
(4) Barriers to Entry of Firms:
● As there is keen competition in an oligopolistic industry, there are no barriers
to entry into or exit from it.
● However, in the long run, there are some types of barriers to entry which tend
to restraint new firms from entering the industry.
68
● The rivalry arising from interdependence among the oligopolists leads to two
conflicting motives.
● Each wants to remain independent and to get the maximum possible profit.
Three Important Models of Oligopoly:
Non-Collusive Oligopoly:
69
The MR curve has two segments :
● At output less than OQ the MR curve (i.e., dA) will correspond to DE portion of
AR curve, and, for output larger than OQ, the MR curve (i.e., BMR) will
correspond to the demand curve ED.
● Thus, discontinuity in MR curve occurs between points A and B. In other
words, between these two points, MR curve is vertical.
● Equilibrium is achieved when MC curve passes through the discontinuous
portion of the MR curve. Thus the equilibrium output is OQ, to be sold at a
price OP.
70
● The organization does not dominate others and need not to be the leader in
the industry. Such type of organization is known as barometer.
Let us first state the assumptions which are made by Cournot in his analysis of price
and output under duopoly.
First, Cournot takes the case of two identical mineral springs operated by two
owners who are selling the mineral water in the same market. Secondly,in Cournot’s
model, cost of production is taken as zero; only the demand side of the market is
analysed.
● It may be noted that the assumption of zero cost of production is made only to
simplify the analysis.
Thirdly, The market demand for the product is assumed to be linear, that is, market
demand curve facing the two producers is a straight line.
Lastly, Cournot assumes that each duopolist believes that regardless of his actions
and their effect upon market price of the product, the rival firm will keep its output
constant, that is, it will go on producing the same amount of output which it is
presently producing.
71
Cournot’s Duopoly Equilibrium:
It will be seen from Fig. 29A.1 that when each producer is producing 1/3 OD (that is,
when producer A is producing OC and producer B equal to CT), the best that his
rival can do is to produce 1/3 OD = OC – CT. Thus, when each producer is producing
1/3 OD so that the total output of the two together is 2/3 OD, no one will expect to
increase his profits by making any- further adjustment in output. Thus, in Cournot’s
model of duopoly, stable equilibrium is reached when total output produced is 2/3rd
of OD and each producer is producing 1/3rd of OD.
To sum up, under Cournot’s duopoly equilibrium, output is two thirds of the
maximum possible output (i.e., perfectly competitive output) and price is
two-thirds of the most profitable price (i.e., monopoly price).
72
● Instead, the producers first set the price of the product and then produce the
output which is demanded at that price.
● Thus, in Bertrand’s model adjusting variable is price and not output.
In Bertrand’s model each producer believes that his rival will keep his price constant
at the present level whatever price he might himself set.
73
his model is based on the assumption that the oligopolists recognise their
interdependence and act accordingly.
● Chamberlin criticises the behavioural assumption of Cournot, Bertrand and
Edgeworth that the oligopolists behave independently in the sense that they
ignore their mutual dependence and while ‘deciding about their output or price
assume that their rivals will keep their output or price constant at the present
level.
● According to him, oligopolists behave quite intelligently as they recognise their
interdependence and learn from the experience when they find that their
action in fact causes the rivals to react and adjust their output level.
● This realisation of mutual dependence on the part of the oligopolists leads to
the monopoly output being produced jointly and thus charging of the
monopoly price.
● In this way, according to Chamberlin, maximisation of joint profits and stable
equilibrium are achieved by the oligopolists even though they act in a
non-collusive manner. Given identical costs, they will also equally share these
monopoly profits.
74
● Actually he maintained that price was set at a level above the LAC (= pure
competition price) and below the monopoly price (the price where MC = MR
and short-run profits are maximized).
● This behaviour can be explained by assuming that there are barriers to entry,
and that the existing firms do not set the monopoly price but the ‘limit price’,
that is, the highest price which the established firms believe they can charge
without inducing entry.
● Bain, in his 1949 article, develops two models of price setting in oligopolistic
markets.
CHAPTER:6
Game Theory
● Game theory attempts to take into consideration the interactions between the
participants and their behavior to study the strategic decision-making between
rational individuals.
● It tries to find out the actions that a “player” should perform which would
maximize his chances of success mathematically and logically.
● John von Neumann is the pioneer of the field of game theory.
75
During the interview the police officer becomes suspicious that the two prisoners are
also guilty of a serious crime, but is not sure he has any evidence.
Robin and Tom are placed in separate rooms and cannot communicate with each
other. The police officer tries to get them to confess to the serious crime by offering
them some options, with possible pay-offs.
The options
Each is told that if they both confess to the serious crime they will receive a sentence
of 3 years. However, each is also told that if he confesses and his partner does not,
then he will get a light sentence of 1 year, and his partner will get 10 years. They
know that if they both deny the serious offence they are certain to be found guilty of
the lesser offence, and will get a 2 year sentence.
Types of strategy
Minimax
A minimax strategy is one where the player attempts to earn the maximum possible
benefit available. This means they will prefer the alternative which includes the
chance of achieving the best possible outcome – even if a highly unfavourable
outcome is possible.
This strategy, often referred to as the best of the best is often seen as ‘naive’ and
overly optimistic strategy, in that it assumes a highly favourable environment for
decision making.
Maximin
● A maximin strategy is where a player chooses the best of the worst pay-off.
This is commonly chosen when a player cannot rely on the other party to keep
any agreement that has been made –
● therefore the best of the worst is to confess.
.
Dominant strategy
A dominant strategy is the best outcome irrespective of what the other player
chooses, in this case it is for each player to confess - both the optimistic minimax
and pessimistic maximin lead to the same decision being taken.
Nash equilibrium
Nash equilibrium, named after Nobel winning economist, John Nash, is a solution to
a game involving two or more players who want the best outcome for themselves
and must take the actions of others into account. When Nash equilibrium is reached,
players cannot improve their payoff by independently changing their strategy.
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● One alternative to profit maximization has been suggested by W.J. Baumol
that firms operating in oligopoly will seek to maximize sales revenue subject to
a profit constraint.
His argument is largely, if not entirely, based on “public statements by
businessmen and on a number of a priori arguments as to the disadvantages
of declining sales, for example, fear of customers shunning a less popular
product, less favourable treatment from banks, loss of distributors and a
poorer ability to adopt a counter strategy against a competitor.”
Total profit is maximized when the firm produces OQ* units of output (as in Figure
7.1)
Sales maximization, on the other hand, refers to maximization of total revenue ( = P
x Q ), rather than maximization of Π (It is because if a firm quotes zero price it can
sell an astronomical amount but its total revenue will be zero.) Total revenue is
maximum when MR = 0, and MR = 0 when the demand for a company’s product is
unitary elastic.
In Figure 7.4 we observed that if the firm wishes to maximize total revenue (without
profit constraint) it will choose output Q’s, where TR is maximum (i.e., the slope of
the TR curve is zero or MR = 0). However, Baumol has argued that, a constraint
operates from shareholders. They require a minimum sum as dividend which would
keep them content.
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● He argues that managers of such large firms conduct the affairs of the firm to
serve their own interests.
● In other words, managers are concerned with the goodwill of the firm only to
the extent that it favours their own personal motives and ambitions.
● He argues that the most important motives of businessmen are desires for
salary, security, dominance and professional excellence. All these yield
additional utility or satisfaction to the manager.
● These can be gained by incurring additional expenditure on staff, managerial
emoluments and discretionary investment.
● Williamson argues that managers have discretion in pursuing policies which
maximize their own utility rather than seeking the maximization of profits
which maximize the utility of most shareholders (i.e., the owners of the
company).
● In Williamson’s model, each manager is supposed to have a utility function —
i.e., a set of factors which provide managerial satisfaction. Such utility arises
from certain aspects of the management task — e.g. responsibility, prestige,
status, power, salary, etc.
78
divorce of ownership from management) under uncertainty in an imperfect,
market.
● They have expressed more concern in the decision making process than in
the objectives or motivations of such firms (e.g., profit/sales maximization and
satisficing).
● At the outset Cyert and March declare that if we are to develop a theory
that predict and explain business decision making behaviour, the
following two points have to taken note of:
(i) People (i.e., individuals) like organizations have goals,
(ii) In order to define a theory of organizational decision making, we need something
analogous — at the organizational level — to individual goals at the individual level.
Five Goals:
Cyert and March go a step further and postulate that the firm may be pursuing
the following five basic common goals:
(a) Production goal:
This goal will be set as a target for the period and will have two aspects: level and
smoothness.
(b) Inventory goal:
Business firms have to hold inventories because production and sales do not always
coincide. It is absolutely essential to hold sufficient stocks of finished goods to meet
consumer demand (as and when it arises). (c) Sales goal:
This goal may be specified for the future either in volume or in value terms. Moreover
it may again be expressed in terms of a level and/or range.
(d) Market share goal:
● The firm may set a target related to its share of the market (i.e., the industry of
which it is a part for the product concerned).
● In some cases this may be a substitute for the sales goal, but in other cases it
may be a supplementary goal.
(e) Profit goal:
The purpose of setting this goal is twofold: to measure the effectiveness of
management and to act as a source of payment of dividends to shareholders.
Adverse selection
● Adverse selection is a case of asymmetric information. It occurs when both
parties assign or are subject to a different probability of a same (normally
adverse) event occurring.
● In this case, the agent that has the best information is clearly at an advantage.
We say that this advantage is ex-ante because, contrary to moral hazard, the
advantage occurs before the ‘contract’ (real or otherwise) is signed.
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● In order to clarify this concept, let’s take a quick look at an example: insurance
premiums.
● The person taking out an insurance policy is at an advantage versus the
insurer, who therefore charges a premium for the risk derived from
their imperfect information, aside from any mark-up designed purely in order
to generate benefits.
The Market for Lemons
● “The Market for ‘Lemons’” is a key article written by George Akerlof in 1970,
which aims to explain some of the market failures derived from imperfect
information, in this case asymmetry.
We are presented with the problem of someone who wants to buy a car, and decides
to scout the used car market for a bargain. The market itself is composed of two
types of cars: those that are being sold in good faith and those that are being sold off
because they are known to be unreliable: these are the ‘lemons’ (in US slang). The
seller, of course, knows how good the car is: they’ve had time to decide. The buyer,
however, comes to the market blind: all they have to go on is the average quality of
the used car market (which Akerlof defines as μ) and the price of the car, p.
Obviously, all similar models of cars need to be sold for an identical price, p.
Screening
● Screening is one of the main strategies for combating adverse selection.
● It is often confused with signalling, but there is one main difference: in both,
‘good’ agents (the cherries of this world) are set apart from the ‘bad’ agents,
or lemons, which are weeded out. In signalling, it is the uninformed agent (the
victim of asymmetric information) who moves first, and comes up with a
strategy to weed out the lemons. In signalling, however, it is the cherries, the
informed agents, who make the first move to set themselves apart. The
analysis of screening processes was put forward by Michael Spence in his
article “Job Market Signaling”, 1973.
● There are two basic types of screening: in the first, the ‘victim’ of asymmetric
information simply sets about finding out as much as possible about the other
agent. For example, carrying out a health check before offering health
insurance, or running a background check before offering a job.
● The second option is using game theory to set up the terms of a contract so
that they only interest the cherries. Something as simple as copayment in
case of a claim (for example, paying a small percentage of the claim amount
in case a car is damaged) can help to weed out those who are not risk
adverse.
Signalling
● Signalling is similar to screening, except it is the agent with complete
information who decides to move first to mark themselves out as a ‘good’
agent, as a cherry.
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● The most cited example is generally in the job market. When we examine
most qualified positions, we realise that those carrying out those jobs
generally have some form of higher education.
● Eg: education certificate, experience certificate, aptitiude test
Moral hazard
● Moral hazard is a case of asymmetric information.
● It occurs when both parties (usually an agent and a principal) assign or are
subject to a different probability of a same (normally adverse) event occurring.
● The behaviour of the agent changes ex-post, after a contract is signed and as
a consequence of their new, advantageous position. As economist Paul
Krugman puts it, moral hazard refers to “any situation in which one person
makes the decision about how much risk to take, while someone else bears
the cost if things go badly”.
● Moral hazard also appears in other markets, such as in the credit market. In
their article about credit rationing, economists Joseph E. Stiglitz and Andrew
Weiss explain how raising interest rates will make indebted people take
higher risks.
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● To Adam Smith, economic growth meant bringing W (actual wealth ) closer to
W* (potential wealth ).
2. Bentham’s Criterion:
● Jeremy Bentham, an English economist, argued that welfare is improved
when ‘the greatest good (is secured) for the greatest number’.
● Implicit in this dictum is the assumption that the total welfare is the sum of the
utilities of the individuals of the society.
● To illustrate the pitfalls in Bentham’s criterion let us assume that the society
consists of three individuals, A, B, and C, so that W = UA + UB + UC
3. A ‘Cardinalist’ Criterion:
● Several economists proposed the use of the ‘law of diminishing marginal
utility’ as a criterion of welfare.
● In fact cardinal welfare theorists would maintain that social welfare would be
maximised if income was equally distributed to all members of the society.
● The cardinalist approach to welfare has a serious flaw: it assumes that all
individuals have identical utility functions for money, so that with an equal
income distribution all would have the same marginal utility of money.
● This assumption is too strong. Individuals differ in their attitudes towards
money. A rich person may have a utility for money function that lies far above
the utility (for money) function of poorer individuals.
● According to this criterion any change that makes at least one individual
better-off and no one worse-off is an improvement in social welfare.
Conversely, a change that makes no one better-off and at least one worse-off
is a decrease in social welfare.
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For the attainment of a Pareto-efficient situation in an economy three marginal
conditions must be satisfied:
(a) Efficiency of distribution of commodities among consumers (efficiency in
exchange);
● Assume that a change in the economy is being considered, which will benefit
some (‘gainers’) and hurt others (‘losers’).
● One can ask the ‘gainers’ how much money they would be prepared to pay in
order to have the change, and the ‘losers’ how much money they would be
prepared to pay in order to prevent the change.
● If the amount of money of the ‘gainers’ is greater than the amount of the
‘losers’, the change constitutes an improvement in social welfare, because the
‘gainers’ could compensate the ‘losers’ and still have some ‘net gain’.
● If the economy consists of two individuals the social welfare function could be
presented by a set of social indifference contours (in utility space) like the
ones shown in figure 23.3. Each curve is the locus of combinations of utilities
of A and B which yield the same level of social welfare.
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● The further to the right a social indifference contour is, the higher the level of
social welfare will be. With such a set of social indifference contours
alternative states in the economy can be unambiguously evaluated. For
example a change which would move the society from point b to point c (or d)
increases the social welfare. A change moving the society from a to b leaves
the level of social welfare unaltered.
1. Efficiency in Exchange:
The first condition for Pareto optimality relates to efficiency in exchange. The
required condition is that “the marginal rate of substitution between any two products
must be the same for every individual who consumes both.”
It means that the marginal rate of substitution (MRS) between two consumer goods
must be equal to the ratio of their prices. Since under perfect competition every
consumer aims at maximising his utility, he will equate his MRS for two goods, X and
Y to their price ratio (Px/Py).
2. Efficiency in Production:
● The second condition for Pareto optimality relates to efficiency in production.
There are three allocation rules for demonstrating efficiency in production
under perfect competition. Rule one relates to the optimum allocation of
factors.
● It requires that the marginal rate of technical substitution (MRTS) between any
two factors must be the same for any two firms using these factors to produce
the same product.
● The slope of an isoquant is the MRTS of labour and capital, and the slope of
the iso-cost line is the ratio of the prices of labour and capital. Thus the
condition of equilibrium for firm A is AMRTSLK. = PL/PK, and that of firm В
is BMRTSLK, = PLPK. Therefore, rule one for efficiency in production
is AMRTSLK = BMRTSLK= PL/PK.
Efficiency in Exchange and Production (Product Mix):
● Pareto optimality under perfect competition also requires that the marginal
rate of substitution (MRS) between two products must equal the marginal rate
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of transformation (MRT) between them. It means simultaneous efficiency in
consumption and production.
● Since the price ratios of the two products to consumers and firms are the
same under perfect competition, the MRS of all individuals will be identical
with MRT of all firms consequently, the two products will be produced and
exchanged efficiently. Symbolically, MRSXY = PX/PY, and MRTxy = Px/Py.
Therefore, MRSXY = MRTxy.
Scitovsky Paradox:
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● It is a function which establishes a relation between social welfare and all
possible variables which affect each individual’s welfare, such as a services
and consumption of each individual.
● It is an ordinal index of society’s welfare and is a function of individual utilities.
It is expressed as
● W = F (U1,.U2, Un)
Assumptions:
(a) It assumes that social welfare depends on each individual’s wealth and income
and each individual’s welfare depends, in turn, on his wealth and income and on the
distribution of welfare among the members of the society.
(h) It assumes the presence of external economies and diseconomies with their
consequent effects.
(c) It is based on ordinal ranking of combinations of those variables which influence
individual welfare.
(d) Interpersonal comparisons of utility involving value judgments are freely
permissible.
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4. Non-dictatorship:
Social choices must not be dictatorial. They must not be imposed by one individual
within the society. In other words, social choices must not be based on any single
individual’s ordering.
5. Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives:
Social choices must be independent of irrelevant alternatives. In other words, if any
one alternative is excluded, it will not affect the ranking of other alternatives. Arrow
demonstrates that it is not possible to satisfy all these five conditions and obtain a
transitive social choice for each set of individual preferences without violating at least
one condition.
● Kelvin Lancaster and Richard G. Lipsey, in their article “The General Theory
of Second Best”, 1956, following an earlier work by James E. Meade, treated
the problem of what to do when certain optimality conditions (which must be
considered in order to arrive at a Paretian optimum solution in a general
equilibrium system) cannot be satisfied.
● The main idea in this article is that, when a constraint prevents the fulfilment
of one of these conditions, the other conditions are in general no longer
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desirable. The optimum situation in this case can be attained only by
neglecting the other conditions. Indeed, this new optimum is called “second
best” because a Paretian optimum cannot be attained.
● This can be easily understood using the diagram depicted in the article. We
start by considering a typical optimization problem, with a given production
possibility frontier (PPF) considered as a boundary condition, indifference
curves (green curves, in this case representing a welfare function, ω) and the
optimum where the PPF is tangent to ω (point P). Since this points lies on the
transformation line and an indifference curve, it defines the production and
consumption o
The segment MN is technically more efficient than R, but since the points on this
segment cannot be attained, R is the second best solution.
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● It is also the important task of the social institutions to allocate judiciously the
privileges and advantages for the people of society. Constitution, social,
political and economic arrangements are included into these social
institutions.
CHAPTER 10
Introduction to Theory of Factor Pricing OR Theory of Distribution:
● The theory of distribution or the theory of factor pricing deals with the
determination of the share prices of four factors of production, viz., land, labor,
capital and organization.
● In the theory of distribution, we are chiefly concerned wrath the principles
according to which the price of each factor of production is determined and
distributed.
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Formula: VMP = MP x P
The marginal productivity theory contends that in a competitive market, the price or
reward of each factor of production tends to be equal to its marginal productivity.
In the figure 18.1, the supply of labor is perfectly elastic. The wage (W) is equal to
average wage (AW) and marginal wage, (MW) = W = AW = MW. At point E, the MRP
of labor is equal to marginal wage (MW). The producer is-in equilibrium at point E.
He will employ ON units of labor because when ON units of labor are employed, the
marginal revenue productivity of labor MRPL = Wage.
Assumptions: The theory of marginal productivity is based on the following
assumptions:
(i) Factor identical: It assumes that all the units of a factor are exactly alike and so
can be substituted to any extent.
(ii) Factors can be substituted: It is assumed that the various factors of production,
which help in the production of particular commodity can also be substituted for one
another. We can use more of labor or less of land or more of labor and less of
capital.
(iii) Perfect mobility of factors: It is assumed that the various factors of production
can be moved from one use to another.
(iv) Application of law of diminishing return: The theory rests en the assumption
that the law of diminishing returns applies also to the organization of a business.
(v) Perfect competition: It is based on the assumption that the reward of each
factor of production is determined under conditions, of perfect competition and full
employment.
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● In a perfectly competitive market, an individual firm cannot influence the
market price of a factor by increasing or decreasing its demand.
● So it has to hire units of a factor at its prevailing price in the market. Same is
the case with the supplier of a factor.
● As the supplier of a factor sells an insignificant quantity of the total supply, it is
therefore not in a position to alter the market price of a factor by its own
individual action.
● Since a firm in a perfect competitive factor market is a price taker, so the
marginal product of the factor (MP) and the average product (AP) are the
same and their curves coincide.
● They are a horizontal straight time and parallel to the X-axis.
The equilibrium of the firm in the factor market is explained with the help of a
diagram.
● The modern economist discard the marginal productivity theory on the ground
that it completely ignores the supply side of a factor of production.
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● Just as the price of a commodity in the market, they say, is determined by
matching of demand and supply, similarly the price of an agent of production
is determined by their forces of demand and supply in the factor market.
● Demand For a Factor of Production:
● The demand for factors is a derived demand.
● The demand for a factor of production, like the price of commodity, is a
function of price. How much a factor of production will be demanded in
the market depends upon two parameters:
(1) The Magnitude of Demand:
(ii) If the demand for final product is expected to be high, then the demand for all the
factors which produce the product will go up.
(iii) If a factor of production has close substitutes, then its demand will not rise even if
the demand for final product in which it is used increase. The reason is that the
employers of factors of production would prefer to engage a substitute which is
available in the market at an attractive price.
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CHAPTER X : Theories of Factor Pricing
"Quasi-rent is, thus, a temporary gain which is earned by a factor of production due
to the temporary limitation of its supply".
There are various theories of wages which lave been put forward by different
economists from time to time but none of them is free from criticism. The most
important theories of wages determination are:
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The subsistence theory of wages owes its origin to Physiocratic School of
France. The theory is also named as Iron or Brazen Law of Wages. According
to this theory:
● "The wage in the long run tends to be equal to the minimum level of
subsistence.
● By 'minimum level of subsistence is meant the amount which is just sufficient
to meet the bare necessities of life of the worker and his family".
The theory of wage fund first introduced in Economics by Adam Smith and
later on it was developed by J.S. Mill. The theory briefly explains that:
● "Wages depend upon the proportion between population and capital, or rather
between the number of laboring classes who work for hire and the aggregate
of what may be called the wage fund which consists of that part of circulating
capital which is expanded in the direct hire of labor".
Theories of Interest
Definition of Interest:
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"Interest is the price paid by the borrower to the lender for the use of borrowed funds
during a certain period".
Let us, now, examine these theories, one by one and see how they explain the
economic cause of interest.
Definition:
● Turgot and other physiocrats were of the opinion that interest is the reward
for the use of capital in production.
● Interest is paid, they say, because capital is productive. The labor assisted by
capital can produce more things than what they can do without it.
(2) Abstinence or Waiting Theory of Interest:
● This theory of interest is associated with the name of Senior. According to the
theory:
● "Interest is a reward for abstinence. When a person saves money from his
income and lends it to somebody else, he in fact makes sacrifice.
● Sacrifice in the sense, that he abstains from consuming the whole of his
income which he could have easily spent.
(3) Austrian or Agio Theory of Interest:
● The Austrian or Agio Theory of interest was first advanced by John Rao in
1834 and later on, it was developed by the Austrian
economist, Bohm-Bowerk.
● According to Bohm-Bowerk: "Interest is the premium or agio which present
goods command over future goods. The reason as to why present goods are
preferred over future goods are as follows:
● Firstly, Future is shrouded in mystery and so is uncertain.
● Secondly, present wants are more urgently felt than the future ones.
● Thirdly, present goods posses a technical superiority over future goods.
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(4) Loanable Fund Theory of Interest (Neo Classical Version):
● The theory was first put forward by Wicksell and later on it was elaborated
by Ohlin, Robertson and Pigou, Myrdal etc.
● According to the neoclassical economists:
● "The rate of interest is determined by the interaction of the forces of demand
for loanable funds and the supply of it in the credit market".
theories of profit
(i) Hawley's Risk Bearing Theory of Profit.
(ii) Uncertainty Theory of Profit.
(iii) Rent Theory of Profit.
(iv) Marginal Productivity Theory of Profit.
(v) Dynamic Theory of Profit.
(vi) Monopoly Theory of Profit.
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According to Professor Knight:
"Profit is the reward for uncertainly-bearing and not of risk-taking in a business".
3) Rent Theory of Profit:
The Rent Theory of Profit is associated with the name of American
economist, Francis A Walker.According to him: "Profits are of the same genius as
rent". The main points of Walker's Theory of Profit can be summed up as such:
(4) Marginal Productivity Theory of Profit:
According to this theory: "The earning of entrepreneur like the reward of other factors
of production can be explained by the marginal productivity analysis".
(5) Dynamic Theory of Profit:
In the world of reality, according to J.B. Clark: "Profit arises only in a dynamic
economy. An economy is said to be dynamic when there is a change in the
population growth or a change in the method of production or a change in the
consumers wants, etc
6) Monopoly Theory of Profit:
Kalecki's theory of monopoly profits
● Another view point of profit is that monopolistic and monopolistic competition
in the market also give rise to profits.
● The firms under monopoly or monopolistic competition have greater control
over the price of the product.
● They are the price makers rather than the price takers. As such they raise
prices by restricting the level of output and thus keep profit at higher level.
● Monopoly power, thus, is the basic sources of business profits.
● In other words, innovation theory of profit posits that the main function of an
entrepreneur is to introduce innovations and the profit in the form of reward is
given for his performance.
● This includes all those activities which reduce the overall cost of production
such as the introduction of a new method or technique of production, the
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introduction of new machinery, innovative methods of organizing the industry,
etc.
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