- •2. The use and limitation of Microeconomic theory. Economic methodology
- •2.1. Microeconomic models
- •2.2. Equilibrium analysis
- •1. Demand Function
- •1.1. Individual Demand Function
- •1.2. Market Demand Function
- •1.3. Change in Quantity Demanded and Change in Demand
- •1.4. Inferior, Normal and Superior Goods
- •2. Supply Function
- •2.1. Change in quantity supplied and Change in supply
- •3. Equilibrium
- •4. Market Adjustment to Change
- •4.1 Shifts of Demand
- •If supply is constant, an increase in demand will result in an increase in both equilibrium price and quantity. A decrease in demand will cause both the equilibrium price and quantity to fall.
- •4.2. Shift of Supply
- •4.3. Changes in Both Supply and Demand
- •Lecture 3 Equilibrium and Government regulation of a market
- •Cobweb theorem as an illustration of stable and unstable equilibrium
- •Stable cobweb
- •2.2. Impact of a tax on price and quantity
- •1.2. Impact of demand elasticity on price and total revenue
- •1.3. Income elasticity of demand (yed) and Cross elasticity of demand (ced)
- •C ategories of income elasticity:
- •Persantage changes in Price of good y
- •Price elasticity of supply
- •3. Market adaptation to Demand and Supply changes in long-run and in short-run
- •Lecture 5. Consumer Behavior
- •1. Three parts and three assumptions of consumer behavior theory
- •2. Consumer Choice and Utility
- •2.1. Total Utility (tu) and Marginal Utility (mu)
- •2.2. Indifference curves
- •3. Budget Constraint
- •3.1. The effects of changes in income and prices
- •4. Equimarginal Principle and Consumer equilibrium
- •Lecture 6. Changes in consumer choice. Consumer Behavior Simulation
- •1. Income Consumption Curve. Engel Curves
- •2. Price Consumption Curve and Individual Demand curve
- •3. Income and Substitution Effects
- •1. Income Consumption Curve. Engel Curves
- •2. Price Consumption Curve and Individual Demand curve
- •3. Income and Substitution Effects
- •The slutsky method
- •Lecture 7. Production
- •1. The process of production and it’s objective
- •2. Production Function
- •3. Time and Production. Production in the Short-Run
- •3.1. Average, Marginal and Total Product
- •3.2. Law of diminishing returns
- •4. Producer’s behavior
- •4.1. Isoquant and Isocost
- •4.2. Cost minimization (Producer’s choice optimisation)
- •In addition to Lecture 7. Return to scale
- •Lecture 8. Costs and Cost Curves
- •The treatment of costs in Accounting and Economic theory
- •2. Fixed and Variable Costs
- •3. Average Costs. Marginal Cost
- •4. Long Run Cost. Returns to Scale
- •Envelope Curve
- •Long Run Average Cost in General
- •Returns to Scale
- •The lrac Curve
- •Lecture 9. Competition
- •1) Many buyers and sellers
- •2) A homogenous product
- •3) Sufficient knowledge
- •4) Free Entry
- •3. Economic profit in trtc-model and in mrmc-model
- •4. The Competitive Firm and Industry Demand
- •Figure 4
- •4.1. Economic strategies of the firm at p- Competition
- •Profitableness and losses conditions for perfect competitor according to mrmc-model:
- •4.2. Long run equilibrium
- •Lecture 10 Monopoly
- •Definition of Monopoly Market. Causes of monopoly.
- •Patents and Other Forms of Intellectual Property
- •Control of an Input Resource
- •Capital-consuming technologies
- •Decreasing Costs
- •Government Grants of Monopoly
- •2. Monopoly Demand and Marginal Revenue
- •3. Monopoly Profit Maximization
- •4. Monopoly Inefficiency
- •Negative consequences of Monopoly
- •5. "Natural" Monopoly
- •Government Ownership
- •Regulation
- •Lecture 11. Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
- •1. Imperfect competition and Monopolistic competition
- •2. Profit Maximization in Monopolistic Competition
- •3. Oligopoly
- •3.1. Firms behavior in Oligopoly
- •3.2. Kinked Demand Model
- •Duopolies
- •Cournot Duopoly
- •Stackelberg duopoly
- •Bertrand Duopoly
- •Collusion
- •Extension of the Cournot Model
Lecture 6. Changes in consumer choice. Consumer Behavior Simulation
1. Income Consumption Curve. Engel Curves
2. Price Consumption Curve and Individual Demand curve
3. Income and Substitution Effects
1. Income Consumption Curve. Engel Curves
Holding the price of all goods constant, the income consumption curve for a good is the set of optimal bundles as income varies.
With the help of Income Consumption Curve we can plot Engel curve – the curve that shows the relationship between the quantity of a good consumed and income.
There are several configuration of Engel curve according to categories of goods it represents.
Inferior goods
2. Price Consumption Curve and Individual Demand curve
Holding income and the prices of other goods constant, the price consumption curve for a good is the set of optimal bundles as the price of the good varies.
A
s
we can see on the graphs the Price
Consumption curve for
compliments looks
like the curve with positive slope which shows the direct
relationship between consumption quantity of one good (X) and another
good (Y). The opposite situation with the Price Consumption curve for
substitutes: the
relationship between consumption quantity of one good (X) and another
good (Y) is inverse and the curve has negative slope.
3. Income and Substitution Effects
Economists often separate the impact of a price change into two components: the substitution effect; and the income effect.
The substitution effect involves the substitution of good x1 for good x2 or vice-versa due to a change in relative prices of the two goods. It is the component of the total effect of a price change that results from the associated change in the relative attractiveness of other goods. Even if the individual remained on the same indifference curve when the price changes, his optimal choice will change because the MRS must equal the new price ratio.
The income effect results from an increase or decrease in the consumer’s real income or purchasing power as a result of the price change. The price change alters the individual’s “real” income and therefore he must move to a new indifference curve. So this component of the total effect of a price change results from the associated change in real purchasing power.
The sum of these two effects is called the price effect.
The decomposition of the price effect into the income and substitution effect can be done in several ways. There are two main methods:
– The Hicksian method (Sir John R.Hicks (1904-1989) was awarded the Nobel Laureate in Economics (with Kenneth J. Arrow) in 1972 for work on general equilibrium theory and welfare economics);
The Slutsky method (Eugene Slutsky (1880-1948) – Russian economist expelled from the University of Kiev for participating in student revolts. In his 1915 paper, “On the theory of the Budget of the Consumer” he introduced “Slutsky Decomposition”).
According to The Hicksian method:
I
n
the case of decreasing price of X-good
the decomposition of price effect can be illustrated with the help of
the following graph:
In the case of increasing of the H-good price the Substitution and income effects can be shown like following graph:
If a good is normal (as in both cases), substitution and income effects reinforce one another:
– when price falls, both effects lead to a rise in quantity demanded;
– when price rises, both effects lead to a drop in quantity demanded.
If a good is inferior, substitution and income effects move in opposite directions. The combined effect is indeterminate:
– when price rises, the substitution effect leads to a drop in quantity demanded, but the income effect is opposite;
– when price falls, the substitution effect leads to a rise in quantity demanded, but the income effect is opposite.
If the income effect of a price change is strong enough, there could be a positive relationship between price and quantity demanded:
– an increase in price leads to a drop in real income;
– since the good is inferior, a drop in income causes quantity demanded to rise.
This is the issue of Giffen’s Paradox.
Addition to Lecture 6.
