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Summary Introduction to Microeconomics

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Summary Introduction to Microeconomics. Prof: Bruno Heydels, Stijn van Puyvelde

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  • February 17, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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Business Economics Bachelor 1: Introduction to microeconomics

Introduction to microeconomics
1. Definition
 Economics is the science which studies human behaviour as a relationship between ends and scarce means
that have alternative uses.
 Economic activity -> how much buying and selling goes on in economy over period of time.
 Land -> natural resources of earth, labour -> human effort (mental/physical) that goes in production. Capital
-> equipment/structure to produce goods/services.
 Conflict -> Scarce resources = limited nature society’s resources (Labour, kapital, land) <-> unlimited wants.
Make choices!
 Microeconomics -> How people make decisions, how they interact. Studies the way in which
households/firms make decisions, how they interact in markets. Macroeconomics -> How economy as a
whole works, economic reality (inflation, economic growth, unemployment).

2. M & T principles
1. People face trade-offs -> make choices, you can’t do 2 things at the same time -> compare marginal benefits
(= additional satisfaction costumer receives when good/service is purchases) <-> marginal costs (= change in
production cost when making extra unit). The loss of benefits from a decision <-> benefits occurred from
choice made.
 Equity -> property of distributing economic prosperity fairly among members society.
2. The cost of something is what you give up to get it
- Opportunity cost -> what you have to give up ( explicit + implicit cost)
- Explicit cost -> amount of money that you pay if you choose x
- Implicit cost -> value of best alternative that you forgo.
3. Rational people think at the margin -> you decide at the moment ex. You attend this class, but don’t know if
you’re gonna attend the next one.
4. People respond to incentives -> Rational actors change their behaviour if costs and/or benefits change.
5. Trade can make everyone better off -> every country can specialize in what they are best at and with that
income they can trade with other country’s who specialize -> improve standard of living as a result.
6. Markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity -> market economy = economy addresses the
3 key questions of economic problem are addressed through decisions of many firms. Planned economic
systems = economic activity organised by central planners who decided answers to economic questions.
7. Governments can sometimes improve market outcomes -> for the promotion of efficiency and equality. They
can improve market outcomes. Most useful when there’s a market failure.

3. Market & market structure
 Market -> group of buyers (demand )/sellers (supply ) of a particular good/service.
 Competitive market -> many buyers/sellers -> each negligible impact on market price.
 Monopoly -> 1 firm, price setter. Model does not exist -> Most “monopolies” don’t dominate entire global
industry but major assents in 1 country.
 Oligopoly -> few firms, homogeneous (= exactly the same with every supplier)/heterogeneous (= differs with
every supplier ) products.
 Monopolistic competition -> many firms/ heterogeneous products
 Perfection competition -> many buyers & sellers, perfect information, homogeneous goods, price takers
(price set by market), buyers & sellers act independently, buyers & sellers consider all costs & benefits.
Model does not exist -> products are never fully identical, theoretical model.

4. Demand
 Individual demand = how much a consumer is willing (and able) to buy at different prices <-> Inverse
Demand = how much consumer is willing to pay (per unit) for different qD. Demand equation -> p = a – b.
qD.
- Higher p -> 2 effects  Income effect: purchasing power falls -> qD falls. Substitution effect: Good
becomes less attractive compared to alternatives -> qD falls. Law of demand: qD falls as price increases.
 Market demand = how much all consumers are willing (and able) to buy at different prices. qD = f ( p ) ->
how many goods (qD) consumers are willing to buy at given p <-> inverse market demand: p = f (qD ) -> what
price are consumers willing to pay for given qD
- Market Demand is obtained through horizontal summation of individual Demand curves.

, - Market demand curve: Gives the quantity demanded at different prices assuming that other factors that
affect Demand are constant -> ceteris paribus.
- Market demand -> (qD)n = f (Pn , P1 , P2 , …, Pn-1 , Y, T, PLS, A, E) -> P1,P2 = prices of other goods, Y =
income, T= tastes/preferences (if you like milk -> you buy more of it) , PLS= level/structure population,
A= advertising, E= expectations <-> inverse market demand -> (qD)n = f (Pn , given [P1 , P2 , …, Pn-1 , Y,
T, PLS, A, E])
 Change in Pn  change in quantity demanded qD-> movement along demand curve
 Change in other determent of D -> change in demand -> movement of demand curve
- Changes in prices of other goods: ex. P of coffee -> (qD)n sugar = complements/ (qD)n thee =
substitutes
- Consumers income: ex. Y -> (qD)n appels = normal goods/ (qD)n spaghetti = inferior goods.
- Expectations costumers -> expectations affect demand for good/service ex. If price milk will rise next
month -> costumers will buy more milk at todays price.
- Size/structure population -> higher the population -> higher the demand



5. Supply
 Individual supply = how much units a producer is willing to sell at different prices. Supply equation: p = a +
b.qS
 Market supply = how much all producers are willing to sell at different prices -> qS = f ( p ) = how much qS is
supplies as a function of p. <-> inverse supply function p= f( qS)
- Market supply is obtained by horizontal summation of the individual supply curves
- Law of supply: quantity supplied increases as p
- Market supply curve: Considers the quantity supplied at different prices … assuming that other factors
that affect supply are constant -> ceteris paribus.
- Market supply -> (qS )n = f (Pn , P1 , ..,Pn-1 , H, N/S, F1 ,F2 , ..,Fm ,E , Sq ) -> P1, P2: profitability other
goods, H: technology, N/S= natural shocks, social events, Fi: Cost factors of production, Sq= number of
suppliers, E= expectations <-> inverse market supply -> (qS )n = f (Pn , given [P1 , ..,Pn-1 , H, N/S,
F1 ,F2 , ..,Fm ,E , Sq ])
 Change in Pn -> change in quantity supplied qS -> movement along supply curve
 Change in other determent of qS -> movement of supply curve
- change in profitability other goods  ex. P wooden toys -> (qS)n wooden chairs or P lamb ->
(qS)n wool = goods in joint supply
- Advances in Technology increase productivity -> more produced with fewer factor inputs. Ex.
Fertilizers/milking parlours -> increase milk yield/cow.
- Social/natural facors -> weather affecting crops, natural disasters
- Input prices: prices of factor of production -> ex. When the price of fertilizer, feed, farm building ->
producing milk less profitable for farmers.

6. Market equilibrium
 Point where consumers/producers are happy. q* = qD = qS
 Situation where price is such that quantity demanded equals quantity supplied -> how many good will be on
the market and at what price? Demand gives what consumers want/ supply what producers want.
 Law of demand and supply: Price adjusts until quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal.
 Disequilibrium = equilibrium disturbed if demand/supply curves move. Quantity supplied not equal to
quantity demanded -> Surplus & Shortage
 Prices as signal: allocate resources -> buyers: Price tells them how much they have to give up to obtain a
good or service. Sellers: Price tells them what they can obtain if they produce a good or service
 Rising prices in a competitive market -> for sellers -> shortage, signal to expand production because they
know that they will be able to sell what they produce, For buyers -> trade-off , they decide the value of the
benefits.


Introduction to micro economics: Elasticity and its applications
1. Elasticity of demand: definition and size
 Elasticity measures how “sensitive” one variable is to changes in another variable.
 Price-elasticity of demand: How much quantity demanded q changes following a change in p.
 Almost always a negative number.

,  Size -> from 0 to - ∞  -1 = unit elasticity, -1 -> - ∞ = elastic( qD changes more than proportionally when its
price increases, - 1 -> 0 = inelastic (qD changes very little when price fluctuates)
 TR = p * q
 Business decisions making and price elasticity  for business that aren’t price takers -> understanding of
price elastic of demand -> important in decision making. Inverse reaction between price and demand. Ex. ->
if demand is price inelastic -> increase in price -> increase in total expenditure -> quantity falls -> fall in Q is
smaller than rise in P. or if demand is price elastic -> increase in price -> decrease in total expenditure -
>quantity falls -> fall in Q is greater than rise in P.




2. General rule
 When demand is price inelastic, price and total expenditure move in same direction.
 When demand is price elastic, price and total expenditure move in opposite directions
 If demand is unit price elastic, total expenditure remains constant when price changes.

3. Price-elasticity of demand: determinants
- Reasons why the prices of products change.
 Availability of substitutes  goods with close substitutes have more elastic demand -> easier for
consumers to switch from that good to others. ex. Eggs don’t have good substitutes, demand inelastic/
butter has a good substitute -> elastic.
 Time horizon  Goods have more price elastic demand over longer time horizons
 Necessities vs. Luxury goods  Necessities have price inelastic demands, luxuries have price elastic
demands. Ex. -> When the price of gas/electricity rises -> people will reduce demand a little but still need
warm houses or When the price of boats rises -> the quantity demanded falls substantially.
 Definition market  elasticity market depends on how we draw boundaries of the market. Narrowly defined
markets -> more price elastic demand than broadly defined markets -> easier to find substitutes to Narrowly
defined markets. Ex. -> Food -> price inelastic -> no good substitutes or Vanilla ice cream -> price elastic ->
very close substitutes.
 Share of income  The higher the proportion of income devoted to the product the greater the price
elasticity is likely to be.

4. Price-elasticity: calculate and Arc elasticity – midpoint method
 Calculate  price-elasticity of demand would differ depending on the “starting point”. Need for
method/convention to avoid this




 Arc Elasticity elasticity midpoint method ->



5. Price-elasticity: point elasticity
 Δ 𝑄 = 𝑄2 − 𝑄1 / Δ 𝑃 = 𝑃2 − 𝑃1.
 In point -> -> ->




6. Price-elasticity: shapes of the demand curve

,  Rule of Thumb -> Flatter demand curve -> more price elastic demand (absolute value of price elasticity is




larger) for given p & q.
 The rule of thumb only applies if both the scales of the graph and prices are identical. An identical slope ->
different elasticity if scale and or price differ!
 Different scale: midpoint method/ Different price: Point elasticity -> For a linear D function elasticity ranges
between 0 en -∞

7. Price-elasticity: Linear demand
 Linear demand -> relation between elasticity and total revenue (TR) -> TR = p . q
 Midpoint method. An increase in price leads to an increase in TR if demand is p-inelastic; it leads to a
decrease in TR if demand is p-elastic. An increase in q leads to an increase in TR if demand is p-elastic; it leads
to a decrease in TR if demand is p-inelastic
 Graphics ppt p8

8. Income-elasticity and Cross-price- elasticity of demand
 Income- elasticity definition -> How much quantity demanded q changes following a change in Y.
- q,y < 0 = inferior goods ( higher income -> lowers quantity demanded) -> negative income elasticities or q,y ≥
0 = Normal goods( higher income -> raises quantity demanded) -> positive income elasticities -> 0 ≤ .. < 1 =
necessary goods and ≥ 1 = luxury goods;
 Cross-price-elasticity definition -> How much quantity demanded q1 changes following a change in price p2
(price of a different good):

-  q,p2 > 0 = Substitutes ( cross-price elasticity is positive) or  q,p2 < 0 = complements ( cross-price elasticity is
negative).

9. Price-elasticity of supply: Definition/magnitude
 How much quantity supplied q changes following a change in p




 TR = P X Q. If supply is price inelastic -> increase in p -> increase in TR. If supply is price elastic -> increase in p
-> larger than proportionate increase in supply -> large increase in TR.

10. Price-elasticity of supply: determinants
- Price elasticity of supply depends on flexibility of sellers to change the amount of the good they produce in
response to changes in price. Ex. Seafront property -> price inelastic supply -> difficult to produce more
quickly -> supply is not sensitive to changes in price or books have high price elasticity -> easy to produce
more quickly -> Supply is sensitive to changes in price.
 Time  supply is more price elastic in the long run ( over longer periods, firms can build new factories,
employ new staff, buy more capital and equipment ) than in the short run ( firms cannot easily change the
size of factories or productive capacity to make more or less of a good.
 Production capacity utilization  if firms operate near full capacity -> supply price inelastic but if firm
operate below full capacity -> supply price elastic. How they use capacity depends on state of economy.
 Size Firm/industry  supply more price elastic in smaller firms and supply more price inelastic in larger
firms. Ex. A small furniture man -> when demand rises -> able to but raw materials to meet increase in
demand -> unit cost material won’t increase substantially or a steel manufacturer -> when demand rises ->
increases purchase of raw materials -> buying large quantities drive up unit price.

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