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Summary Principles of Microeconomics - ECON 201 (economics)

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This document contains comprehensive and well‑explained notes for all the chapters from Principles of Microeconomics by Frank, Bernanke, Antonovics & Heffetz—with clear examples and a practice question bank complete with solutions at the end. chapters covered are as below PART 1: Introduction 1. Thinking Like an Economist 2. Comparative Advantage 3. Supply and Demand PART 2: Competition and the Invisible Hand 4. Elasticity 5. Demand 6. Perfectly Competitive Supply 7. Efficiency, Exchange, and the Invisible Hand in Action PART 3: Market Imperfections 8. Monopoly, Oligopoly, and Monopolistic Competition 9. Games and Strategic Behavior 10. An Introduction to Behavioral Economics 11. Externalities, Property Rights, and the Environment PART 4: Economics of Public Policy 12. The Economics of Information 13. Labor Markets, Poverty, and Income Distribution 14. Public Goods and Tax Policy PART 5: International Trade 15. International Trade and Trade Policy

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Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Principles of Microeconomics
By Robert Frank, Ben Bernanke, Kate Antonovics and Ori Heffetz



Chapter 1: Thinking Like an Economist
1. The Economic Way of Thinking

• Scarcity: Resources (time, money, materials) are limited, so choices must be made.

• Choice & Trade-offs: Every choice involves giving up the next best alternative—this is the
opportunity cost.

• Cost-Benefit Principle: An action is worth taking if its benefits exceed its costs.
Example: If a keyboard is $25 locally but $15 downtown—and you need to walk for
30 minutes—the benefit is $10. If your time costs less than $10, go downtown.

2. Opportunity Cost

• Defined as the value of the next best alternative that is forgone.

• Crucial for smart decision-making—both individuals and firms face opportunity costs.

3. Marginal Analysis

• Most decisions are made at the margin, considering small changes:

o Marginal benefit = additional satisfaction from one more unit.

o Marginal cost = additional cost from one more unit.

• Decision rule: Take the action if marginal benefit ≥ marginal cost.

4. Economic Surplus

• Defined as total benefit minus total cost.

• Optimal decisions maximize economic surplus.

5. Role of Incentives

• People respond to incentives—higher benefits or lower costs influence behavior.

,6. Positive vs. Normative Economics

• Positive: “What is” – objective statements, testable hypotheses.

• Normative: “What ought to be” – value judgments, opinions.

o E.g., “the government should…” is normative.

7. Tools of Economists

• Simple mathematical models, graphs, and logic.

• The Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF) illustrates trade-offs and opportunity cost
(more in Chapter 2).



Key Takeaways

Principle Summary

Scarcity We can’t have everything—choices required

Opportunity Cost The true cost is what you give up

Marginal Thinking Only net benefits matter

Economic Surplus Choose actions with positive surplus

Incentives Changes in rewards affect choices

Positive vs. Normative Fact vs. opinion-based analysis



Examples

• Walking for a cheaper keyboard: Benefit = $10 savings; if time cost < $10, walk.

• Marginal analysis: You’d walk the trip if your willingness-to-pay > cost until they
equalize.

, Practice Questions

Multiple Choice

1. If you buy coffee for ₹100 and miss ₹150 worth of study time, your opportunity cost is:

o A) ₹100

o B) ₹150

o C) ₹250

o D) ₹150 – ₹100
Answer: B) ₹150

2. Which scenario reflects marginal decision-making?

o A) Studying 4 hours instead of 2

o B) Deciding to eat one extra cookie after two

o C) Buying a car instead of renting

o D) Attending a concert
Answer: B) deciding on that one more unit

Short Answer

3. Explain economic surplus

o Surplus = benefit – cost. Take any action only if surplus ≥ 0.

4. Positive vs Normal:

o “Raising taxes will reduce consumption” = positive.

o “Taxes should be lowered” = normative.

Graphing

5. Draw a PPF curve showing the trade-off between two goods. Label opportunity cost and
explain unless the curve is straight (constant OC) or bowed (increasing OC).

Real-World Application

6. Apply Cost-Benefit Principle: Should you stay late studying for an exam or take a night
off?

o Identify extra hours’ benefit (increase in grade) vs costs (lost sleep or leisure).

, o Choose that yields greater surplus.



Practice Question Bank with Solutions

1. Opportunity cost problem

You earn ₹500/hour tutoring. You work 3 extra hours instead of attending a seminar priced at
₹800. What’s your opportunity cost?
Solution: ₹1,500 (forgone tutoring) + ₹800 = ₹2,300.

2. Marginal benefit & marginal cost

Selling lemonade: MB of 100th cup = ₹10; MC = ₹8. Should you sell?
Solution: Yes – MB > MC; increases surplus by ₹2.

3. Normative vs Positive

“Reducing working hours raises happiness.” Identify type.
Solution: Positive (causal prediction).

4. Economic surplus

Attended a workshop: benefit ₹2,000; cost ₹1,200. Surplus = ₹800. Good decision.

5. Graphing opportunity cost

On a PPF between food and clothing, moving from 5 food, 10 clothing to 6 food, 8 clothing: OC
of extra food = 2 clothes.



Key Takeaways

• Always weigh benefits vs costs, including hidden opportunity costs.

• Marginal thinking helps fine-tune choices efficiently.

• Understand the distinction between what is and what ought to be.

• Become an “economic naturalist” by applying these ideas to your daily life.
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