1 / 27

ECON 101 MIDTERM 2

ECON 101 MIDTERM 2. Agenda. Chapter 8: Utility and Demand Chapter 9: Possibilities, Preferences, and Choices Chapter 11: Output and Costs. Chapter 8. Definitions: Utility: The benefit that a person gets from the consumption of a good or service

cecile
Télécharger la présentation

ECON 101 MIDTERM 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ECON 101 MIDTERM 2

  2. Agenda Chapter 8: Utility and Demand Chapter 9: Possibilities, Preferences, and Choices Chapter 11: Output and Costs

  3. Chapter 8 Definitions: • Utility: The benefit that a person gets from the consumption of a good or service • Total Utility: The total benefit that a person gets from the consumption of a good/service • Marginal Utility: The change in total utility that results from a one-unit increase in the quantity of good consumed.

  4. Meet Billy

  5. Total and Marginal Utility

  6. Diminishing Marginal Utility

  7. Diminishing Marginal Utility

  8. Marginal Utility Rule A consumer’s total utility is maximized by following the rule: • Spend all available income • Equalize the marginal utility per dollar for all goods

  9. Exercise Billy makes $40 a month. Hair gel costs $10 per bottle and T-shirts are $5 each. • How many units of each product should Billy buy to maximize his total utility? • Suppose that the price of T-shirts doubles to $10 what is the new consumer equilibrium? • Suppose that hair gel sells for $10, and T-shirts $10, and Billy gets a raise and is now making $60 a month. What is his consumer equilibrium?

  10. What have we learned True or False (1) If the marginal utilities from consuming two goods are not equal, the consumer cannot be in equilibrium. (2) When the price of a good increases, the marginal utility from the consumption of that good decreases.

  11. Paradox of Value • Water is cheap but essential but diamonds are very expensive and mostly unnecessary • Resolving the Paradox: distinguish between total utility and marginal utility • Consumer Surplus

  12. Remember Billy

  13. Chapter 9 Budget Line: limits to a household’s consumption choices Divisible Goods: goods that can be bought in any quantity desired Budget Equation: Expenditure = Income

  14. Budget Equation Real Income: a household’s income expressed as a quantity of goods that the household can afford to buy Relative price: the ratio of the price of one good or service to the price of another good or service; is an opportunity cost

  15. Change in Price or Income • Change in prices: changes the slope of the budget line • Change in income: shifts the budget line but does not change its slope

  16. Indifference Curve Indifference Curve: shows combinations of goods among which a consumer is indifferent • The consumer is indifferent between the combinations indicated by any two points on one indifference curve • Any point above an indifference curve is preferred to any point along the same indifference curve; any point on the curve is preferred to any point below it

  17. Marginal Rate of Substitution Marginal rate of substitution: the rate at which a person will give up good y to get an additional unit of good x and at the same time remain indifferent (stay on the same indifference curve) • Steep IC = high marginal rate of substitution • Flat IC = low marginal rate of substitution Key Assumption: • Diminishing marginal rate of substitution

  18. Predicting Consumer Choices Best Affordable choice • The point on the budget line and on the highest attainable indifference curve Price Effect • The effect of a change in the price on the quantity of a good consumed Income Effect • The effect of a change in income on buying plans

  19. Substitution and Income Effects Price effect can be divided into two parts: • Substitution effect: the effect of a change in price on the quantity bought when the consumer remains indifferent between the current situation and the new one • Income effect

  20. Chapter 11 Short run: time frame in which the quantity of at least one factor of production is fixed Long run: time frame in which the quantities of all factors of production can be varied Total product: maximum output that a given quantity of labour can produce Marginal product: increase in total product that results from a one-unit increase in the quantity of labour employed Average product: (Total product)/(Quantity of labour employed)

  21. Short-Run Cost Total Cost: cost of all the factors of production a firm uses Total fixed cost: cost of the firm’s fixed factors Total variable cost: cost of the firm’s variable factors Total cost = Total fixed cost + Total variable cost Marginal cost = (Increase in total cost)/(Increase in Output)

  22. Short-Run Cost Average Fixed cost: total fixed cost per unit of output Average variable cost: total variable cost per unit of output Average total cost: total cost per unit of output

  23. Exercise Billy opens his own Hair Gel company and the total product schedule is: a) Draw the Total product curve, Average product curve, Marginal product curve

  24. Exercise: Short Run Billy hires workers at $200 per month. He also has fixed costs of $200 a month. • Calculate the total cost, total variable cost, and total fixed cost at each output. • Sketch the short-run total cost curves. • Calculate the average total cost, average fixed cost, and marginal cost of each output. • Describe the effect of an increase in fixed costs. • Describe the effect of an increase in variable costs.

  25. Exercise: Long Run Billy opens a second plant and the output produced by each worker increases by 100%. The total fixed cost of operation each plant is $200 a month. Each worker is paid $200 a month. • Draw the ATC curves for both plants. • Identify the LRAC curve.

  26. GOOD LUCK!

More Related