100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary IBA Economics Block 3

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
153
Uploaded on
29-05-2024
Written in
2021/2022

The document contains all the relevant information from the Microeconomics Book used in the Economics Course at RSM. The notes are color coded and well-structured and include additional explanations. Grade obtained by studying with this material: 10 (maximum)

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
May 29, 2024
Number of pages
153
Written in
2021/2022
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

ECONOMICS NOTES
Full Summary


RSM BT1210
The document contains all the relevant information from the Microeconomics Book used in
the Economics Course at RSM. The notes are color coded and well-structured and include
additional explanations. Grade obtained by studying with this material: 10 (maximum)

,Economics Block 3 RSM
Contents
Chapter 3: Using Supply and Demand to analyse markets ................................................................................. 8
Consumer and Producer Surplus: Who benefits in a market? ................................................................................. 8
Consumer surplus ................................................................................................................................................ 8
Consumer surplus ................................................................................................................................................ 8
Calculate the producer and consumer surplus .................................................................................................... 9
The distribution of gains and losses from changes in market conditions .......................................................... 10
Calculate the shifts in consumer and producer surpluses ................................................................................. 11
Price regulations .................................................................................................................................................... 11
Price ceilings....................................................................................................................................................... 11
Analysing surplus changes due to regulations using equations ......................................................................... 12
Chapter 4: Consumer Behaviour .................................................................................................................... 13
The consumer’s preferences and the concept of utility ........................................................................................ 13
Assumptions about consumer preferences ....................................................................................................... 13
The concept of utility ......................................................................................................................................... 14
Marginal utility ................................................................................................................................................... 14
Utility and comparisons ..................................................................................................................................... 14
Indifference curves................................................................................................................................................. 14
Characteristics of indifference curves ................................................................................................................ 15
The marginal rate of substitution ....................................................................................................................... 16
The marginal rate of substitution and marginal utility....................................................................................... 16
The steepness of indifference curves ................................................................................................................. 17
The curvature of indifference curves: Substitutes and complements ............................................................... 17
Perfect substitutes ............................................................................................................................................. 18
Perfect complements ......................................................................................................................................... 18
The consumer’s income and the budget constraint .............................................................................................. 19
The slope of the budget constraint .................................................................................................................... 20
Factors that affect the budget constraint........................................................................................................... 20
Nonstandard budget constraints ....................................................................................................................... 20
Implications of utility maximization ................................................................................................................... 26
Chapter 5: Individual and Market demand ..................................................................................................... 31
How income changes affect an individual’s consumption choices ........................................................................ 31
Assumptions about consumer preferences ....................................................................................................... 31
Income elasticities and types of goods .............................................................................................................. 31
The income expansion path ............................................................................................................................... 32
The Engel Curve ................................................................................................................................................. 32
How price changes affect consumption choices .................................................................................................... 33

,Economics Block 3 RSM




Deriving a demand curve ................................................................................................................................... 33
Shifts in a demand curve .................................................................................................................................... 34
Consumer responses to price changes: Substitution and income effects ............................................................. 35
Isolating the substitution effect ......................................................................................................................... 36
Isolating the income effect................................................................................................................................. 38
The total effects ................................................................................................................................................. 38
What determines the size of the substitution and income effects? .................................................................. 38
Giffen Goods ...................................................................................................................................................... 39
The impact of changes in another good’s price: substitutes and complements.................................................... 39
A change in the price of a substitute good ........................................................................................................ 39
Indifference curve shapes, revisited .................................................................................................................. 40
Combining individual demand curves to obtain the market demand curve ......................................................... 41
The market demand curve ................................................................................................................................. 42
The market demand curve ................................................................................................................................. 42
Chapter 6: Producer Behaviour ...................................................................................................................... 43
The basics of production ........................................................................................................................................ 43
Simplifying assumptions about firms’ production behaviour ............................................................................ 43
Production functions .......................................................................................................................................... 44
Production in the short run ................................................................................................................................... 44
Marginal product ............................................................................................................................................... 44
Average product ................................................................................................................................................. 45
Production in the long run ..................................................................................................................................... 45
The Long-Run Production Function.................................................................................................................... 45
The firm’s cost-minimizing problem....................................................................................................................... 46
Isoquants ............................................................................................................................................................ 46
Substitutability ................................................................................................................................................... 47
Isocost lines ........................................................................................................................................................ 48
Identifying minimum cost: Combining isoquants and Isocost lines ................................................................... 50
Input price changes ............................................................................................................................................ 51
Returns to scale...................................................................................................................................................... 51
Factors affecting returns to scale ....................................................................................................................... 52
Technological change ............................................................................................................................................. 52
The firm’s expansion path and total cost curve ..................................................................................................... 53
Chapter 7: Costs............................................................................................................................................ 53

, Economics Block 3 RSM
Costs that matter for decision making: Opportunity costs .................................................................................... 53
Costs that do not matter for decision making: Sunk costs..................................................................................... 54
Sunk costs and decisions .................................................................................................................................... 54
Costs and cost curves ............................................................................................................................................. 54
Flexibility and fixed versus variable costs........................................................................................................... 55
Deriving cost curves ........................................................................................................................................... 55
Average and marginal costs ................................................................................................................................... 56
Average cost measures ...................................................................................................................................... 56
Marginal cost...................................................................................................................................................... 56
Relationships between average and marginal costs .......................................................................................... 57
Short-run and long-run cost curves ....................................................................................................................... 57
Short-run production and total cost curves ....................................................................................................... 57
Short-run versus long-run average total cost curves ......................................................................................... 59
Short-run versus long-run marginal cost curves ................................................................................................ 60
Economies in the production process .................................................................................................................... 60
Economies of scale ............................................................................................................................................. 60
Economies of scale versus returns to scale ........................................................................................................ 61
Economies of scope ........................................................................................................................................... 61
Where Economies of scope come from ............................................................................................................. 62
Chapter 8: Supply in a competitive market ..................................................................................................... 63
Market structures and perfect competition in the short run ................................................................................ 63
Perfect competition ........................................................................................................................................... 63
Profit maximization in a perfectly competitive market.......................................................................................... 64
Total revenue, total cost, and profit maximization ............................................................................................ 64
How a perfectly competitive firm maximizes profit ........................................................................................... 65
Measuring a firm’s profit .................................................................................................................................... 66
Perfect competition in the short run ..................................................................................................................... 68
A firm’s short-run supply curve in a perfectly competitive market .................................................................... 68
The short-run supply curve for a perfectly competitive industry ...................................................................... 69
Producer surplus for a competitive firm in the short run .................................................................................. 70
Producer surplus and profit ............................................................................................................................... 71
Producer surplus for a competitive industry...................................................................................................... 71
Perfect competition in the long run ....................................................................................................................... 72
Entry ................................................................................................................................................................... 72
Exit ..................................................................................................................................................................... 73
Graphing the industry long-run supply curve .................................................................................................... 74
Adjustment between Long-run Equilibria .......................................................................................................... 75
$18.57
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
SFConnect

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
SFConnect Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
0
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
2
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions