Thursday, January 19, 2017

Chapter 26

Chapter 26 is about examining our financial system and its relationship with saving and investment. Financial markets are places where a person can provide money to some who needs to borrow it. Two financial markets are the bond market and the stock market. There are three characteristics of ds that are most important: a bond's term, its credit risk, and its tax treatment. In the stock market, equity finance is the sale of a stock to rise money. Debt finance is the sale of bonds. Financial intermediaries are institutions where savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers. Two important financial intermediaries are banks and mutual funds  The interest rate in the economy adjusts its itself to balance the supply and demand for loanable funds. Saving is the source of supply, while investment is the source of demand. A closed economy is one that doesn't interact with other economies. Its equation is Y=C+I+G. This equation shows that GDP is the sum of consumption, investment, and government purchases. Imports and exports are zero because a closed economy isn't involved in trade. The interest rate in the economy adjusts to balance the supply and demand for loanable funds. Saving is the source of supply, meanwhile investment is the source of demand for loanable funds. The interest rate is the price of the loan. If a reform of tax laws encouraged greater saving, the result would be lower interest rates and greater investment. If a reform of tax laws encouraged more investment, the result would be higher interest rates and greater saving. A budget surplus increases the supply of loanable funds, reduces the interest rate, and encourages investment. I thought the section of this chapter on the history of the US government debt was interesting and informative.   

Monday, January 16, 2017

Chapter 24

Chapter 24 is about calculating the cost of living. The consumer price index (CPI) is used to observe changes in the cost of living over time. CPI is a measure of the overall cost of goods purchased  by an average consumer. The inflation rate is the percentage change in the prices from previous levels. The Bureau of Labor produces only reports on the consumer price index. These are the steps in calculating consumer price index: 1. Survey consumers to get a fixed basket of goods. 2. Find the rice of each good per year. 3. Compute the basket's cost. 4. Choose a base year and compute the index. 5. Compute the inflation rate. Three problems with the consumer price index are substitution bias, the introduction of new goods, and unmeasured quality change. The producer price index is a measure of how much an average producer pays for a good or service rather than a consumer. One difference between GDP deflator and CPI is that GDP deflator reflects all the prices of goods/services domestically produced, meanwhile CPI reflects the prices of goods/services bought by consumers. The second difference is that the CPI compares the price of a fixed basket of goods/services to the price of the basket in the base year. Meanwhile, the GDP deflator compares the price of currently produced goods/services to the price of the same goods/services in the base year. Real interest rate equals the nominal interest rate minus the inflation rate. The real interest rate tells you how fast the purchasing power of your bank account rises over time.

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Chapter 23

Chapter 23 introduces GDP (gross domestic product). It's a part of macroeconomics, which studies the economy as a whole. Meanwhile, microeconomics, studies single firms and how they behave with one another. GDP is meant to judge a how well a country's economy is doing based on its total income earned as a nation. For an economy as a whole, income must equal expenditure. It's true because every expenditure has a buyer and a seller. The GDP's identity is denoted in the equation Y=C+I+G+NX. GPD(Y) is divided into four parts: consumption (C), investment (I), government purchases (G), and net exports (NX). Consumption is what households spend for goods and services. Investment is purchasing goods that'll be used later to make even more goods. Government purchases is what state, local, and federal governments spend on goods and services. Net exports is buying domestically produced goods from foreigners minus the domestic purchases of foreign goods. In short, it's the exports minus the imports. The GDP deflator is calculated from the ratio of the nominal to real GDP. The equation is GDP deflator= (Nominal GDP)/(Real GDP) * 100. The nominal GDP is the production of services and goods valued at current prices. The real GDP is the production of services and goods valued at constant prices. The goal in calculating GDP is to see how well the economy is performing overall. The gross domestic product seen as a good but not perfect measure of economic well-being. This is because GDP excludes the value of leisure, clean Earth, and volunteer work.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Chapter 18

Chapter 18 talks about the factors of production, which include land, capital, and labor. To make a hiring decision, a firm must consider how the size of its work force affects the amount of output produced. The diminishing marginal product is that as the numbers of workers increases, the marginal product of labor declines. The theory of neoclassical production is that the amount paid to each factor of production depends on the supply and demand for that factor. The marginal revenue product is the extra revenue the firm gets from hiring an additional unit of a factor of production. The value of the marginal product curve is the labor-demand curve for a competitive profit maximizing firm. A competitive profit-maximizing firm hires workers up to the point where the value of the marginal product of labor equals the wage. Changes in taste, changes in alternative opportunities, and immigration causes the shifts to the labor supply curve. Any event that changes the supply or demand for labor must change the equilibrium wage and the value of the marginal product by the same amount. This is because these must always be equal. Capital is used to refer to the stock of equipment and structures used for production. The economy's capital represents the building up of goods produced in the past that are being used now to produce new goods and services. Labor, land, and capital each earn the value of their marginal contribution to the production process. Since the factors of production are used together, the marginal product of any factor depends on the total quantities available. I thought that the case study of the Black Death was helping in understanding the topics covered in this chapter.  

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Chapter 17

Chapter 17 is about oligopolies and their behavior in the market. Oligopolistic firms are interdependent on each other, unlike competitive firms. An oligopolistic market has few sellers that impact each other's profits with their behaviors. It is part of imperfect competition in which firms have competitors but do not face as much competition because they are price takers not price makers. An oligopoly with only two members is called a duopoly, which is the simplest type of oligopoly. When firms in an oligopoly individually choose to produce at maximum profit, they produce at a quantity greater than the level of a monopoly and less than the level produced by competitive. An oligopoly's price is less than the monopoly price but more than the competitive price. The output effect is that selling one more quantity at the price (as above marginal cost) would raise profit. The price effect is that raising production would increase the total quantity sold, which would lower the price of water and its profit on the other products sold. As the number of sellers in an oligopoly increases, it begins to look more like a competitive market. In return, the price begins to reach marginal cost and the quantity would start to reach the socially efficient level. Policymakers use antitrust laws to prevent oligopolies from reducing competition with their behavior. Controversies have arisen over the types of behavior antitrust laws should prohibit. Three examples of controversial business practices are resale price maintenance, predatory pricing, and tying. I thought this chapter was informative in its comparison of oligopolies, competitive, and monopolistic markets. It helped clarify the differences between the different markets.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Chapter 16

Chapter 16 is about monopolistic competitive markets. They are markets that contain elements of competitive markets and some elements of monopolies. A monopolistic competitive market is defined by having many sellers, product differentiation, and free entry. Similar to monopolies, monopolistic competitive markets produce at the quantity where marginal revenue equals marginal costs. It then uses the demand curve to set the price at that quantity. In the long run equilibrium of a monopolistic competitive market, price equals average total cost, like a competitive market. Also, price exceeds marginal cost, as in a monopoly. There are positive and negative externalities from the entry of new firms. The product-variety externality is where an entry of a new firm creates a positive externality on consumers because consumers get some consumer surplus. The business-stealing externality is where the entry of a new firm creates a negative externality on existing firms because a new competitor causes other firms to lose customers and profits. The product differentiation apparent in monopolistic competitive markets leads to the use of brand names and advertising. This leads to critics and defenders of advertising. Like monopolies, monopolistic competitive markets don't produce at the welfare-maximizing level of output. Similar to monopolies, monopolistic competitive markets have price exceeds marginal costs and are not price takers. Like competitive markets, monopolistic competitive markets contain many firms in the market and can have entry in the long run. Monopolistic competitive, monopolies, and perfectly competitive markets all have the goal to maximize profits. I thought this chapter was interesting in its comparison of the different types of markets and how monopolistic competitive markets are hybrids of monopolies and perfectly competitive markets.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Chapter 15

Chapter 15 is about monopolies and their role in the market. They are the sole producers of a product, and are given exclusive rights by the government to produce their good through patents and copyright laws. A natural monopoly is a firm that is the sole producer of a product and supplies the market at a lower cost than multiple firms could. Since a competitive firm is a price taker, their demand curve is a horizontal line. However, since monopolies are sole producers of a product, its demand curve is downward-sloping This is because as the monopoly reduces its quantity of output it sells, the price of its output increases. A monopoly's MR<P. For a competitive firm: P=MR=MC. However, for a monopoly: P>MR=MC. The socially efficient quantity is where the demand curve and marginal-cost curve intersect. However, monopolies produce less than the socially efficient quantity and produce a deadweight loss. A monopoly causes deadweight losses similar to the deadweight losses produced by taxes. The deadweight losses of a monopoly are eliminated only in extreme cases of perfect price discrimination. Monopolists try to raise their profits by charging different prices for the same item based on a buyer's willingness to pay. Policymakers respond to the problems of monopolies by: trying to make the monopolized industries more competitive, regulating the behaviors of monopolies, turning some private monopolies into public enterprises, or by doing nothing at all. Overall, I thought this chapter was dense in information. I thought that Table 2 on page 338 was very helpful in summarizing the similarities and differences between monopolies and competitive firms.