Difference between revisions of "Economics Lecture Thirteen"

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{{Economics_Lectures}}
 
{{Economics_Lectures}}
We’ve covered nearly all of the issues concerning individual decisions by companies (firms) and consumers (the public)We’ve discussed supply and demand. We’ve addressed marginal revenue and marginal costWe've discussed numerous other concepts of the free market, including substitutes, complements, consumer surplus, price controls (ceilings and floors), the Law of Demand, normal goods, inferior goods, elasticity, cost measures, utility and indifference curves.
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This lecture is the final review for this course, in preparation for the final examA student who took this class in 2007 sent me the following feedback from college:
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{{cquote|My microeconomics class has been almost all review for me, because of the similar class I took from Mr. Andy Schlafly ....  Although other students who attended public schools may have taken 'economics' before, they have struggled with microeconomics this semester, because their high school classes completely ignored the free-market and Austrian economics<ref>"Austrian economics" is an approach to economics that emphasizes the free markets, minimizing governmental interference, respecting private property rights, and promoting gold as a monetary standard.  Beware, however, that Austrian economics organizations are often more libertarian than conservative on social issues, and Austrian economics itself has been slow in incorporating new economic insights such as the Coase theorem.</ref> which are taught [in college].}}
  
Television host Stephen Colbert, when interviewing your instructor on the Colbert Report on Tuesday, asked if we learn about "Keynesian economics." Your instructor answered "no", we learn "free market economics." What is the difference?
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Let's begin this lecture by summarizing the percentages the CLEP exam devoted to particular topicsThis will help organize the material we have covered in this courseOur online final exam next week will use a similar distribution in topics as the CLEP exam, but without over-emphasizing government policy.
  
Keynesian economics is a theory that began with a British economist named John Maynard Keynes (1883-1946).  He became a favorite of liberals and his theories of economics were one reason England declined from being the greatest power in the world in the 19th century to a weak nation that could not fully defend itself against Germany in World War II (1940-1945).
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== Topics on Exam ==
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Here is a list of the topics on the CLEP exam, along with how many questions are asked about each topic (as a percentage of the overall exam), plus tips about each concept:
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{| class="wikitable"
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|-
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|cost measures (e.g., ATC, AFC, AVC) || 10% || FC is total cost when output is zero; convert to average costs by dividing by outputRemember that ATC=AFC+AVC, and know when a firm should shut down.
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|-
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|Government policy || 10% || price ceilings cause shortages and taxes cause social (deadweight) loss; but beware of CLEP questions designed to make government regulation appear beneficial, as in reducing pollution
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|-
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|Inputs to a Firm (espec. labor) || 10% || key here is applying logic and other concepts to reason back from product demand to a firm's need for labor (workers); know effects of minimum wage laws; might also be asked about capital
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|-
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|Perfect Competition || 6% || costs and profits and price are lowest for this type of market. P=MC=ATC and "economic profits" are squeezed to zero. If price falls, shut down in short run when P<AVC; shut down in long run when P<ATC.
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|-
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|Monopolistic Competition || 6% || can set its price above MC, but the low barrier to entry allows competitive forces that prevent long run profits and require P=ATC
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|-
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|Production Possibilities ||6% || trade-off among goods made by a nation; to reach points beyond the "frontier" (curve), it requires a technological advance or other big change
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|-
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|Price Elasticity || 5% || measures how demand responds to price changes; "elastic" means big change in demand for a small change in price of good
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|-
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|Monopoly || 4% || the firm sets its price above marginal cost, but not higher than where MR=MC; economic profits are greater than zero; economic rent exists. P>MC. P>ATC.
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|-
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|Demand Curve || 4% || what the public will pay; all firms in all kinds of markets are restrained by the Law of Demand
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|-
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|MR || 4% || marginal revenue is the ''increase'' in total revenue due to selling one more unit; profit maximized where MR=MC
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|-
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|MC || 4% || marginal cost, which equals price in perfect competition.  For a monopoly P>MC but equals MR=MC
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|-
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|Public Goods || 3% || know the difference between these and private goods: public goods cannot exclude people from using the good without paying for it.
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|-
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|Returns to Scale || 2% || think of Wal-Mart for increasing returns to scale; think of a kitchen for decreasing returns to scale ("too many cooks spoil the broth")
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|-
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|Consumer Surplus || 2% || what someone was willing to pay above what the good actually cost
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|-
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|Comparative Advantage || 2% || nation with lower production costs should do what it does best
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|-
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|Oligopoly || 2% || only a few firms, like two gas stations at an intersection far away from any others; usually one Nash Equilibrium-type exam question
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|-
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|Imperfect Competition || 2% || P>MC for this market, which is "allocatively '''in'''efficient" (is not efficient in the allocation of resources); it takes perfect competition to drive P down to MC
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|-
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|Utility || 2% || overall satisfaction; recall our problem about hiking and reading.  Marginal utility is your next bit of utility.  Indifference curve shows trade-off in utility.
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|-
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|Cross-Price Elasticity || 2% || Comparing change in demand for one good due to change in price for a ''different'' good
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|-
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|Opportunity Cost || 2% || keep in mind that "economic costs" include opportunity costs in addition to actual out-of-pocket (accounting) costs
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|-
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|Substitutes || 2% || think Coke versus Pepsi
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|-
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|Complements || 2% || think ketchup with French fries
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|-
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|Long Run v. Short Run || 2% || in the long run all costs are variable and can be minimized; short and long run mentioned in 20% of questions, to distinguish between quick changes and permanent ones
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|-
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|Externalities || 2% || two types: positive (music in an open-air park) and negative (pollution)
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|-
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|Inferior v. Normal Goods || 1% || when income goes up, demand for an inferior good or service goes down (e.g., demand for bankruptcy services)
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|-
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|substitution and income effects || 1% || increase in price means less demand because public uses substitutes (substitution effect of price increase) and becomes poorer (income effect of price increase)
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|-
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|Cartel || 1% || an oligopoly that illegally agrees to fix (set) prices, as OPEC does
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|-
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|Price discrimination || 1% || charging different prices for the exact same good; only possible if the market allows the firm to set its own price
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|}
  
His theory was the opposite of free-market or classical economicsKeynes insisted that government interference with the market was desirable and necessary. Keynes claimed that government spending was needed to reduce unemployment and stimulate economic growthUnder Keynesian economics, "bigger is better" with respect to governmentKeynes argued that big deficits (excess of government spending over revenue) were actually a good thing to bring an economy out of a recession.
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Some important topics are missing from the CLEP exam, such as the invisible hand, free market, charity, transaction costs, the time value of money, interest rates, the Coase theorem and Gresham's LawThe reason is exam bias. For example, once a student realizes how inefficient transaction costs are, he or she will probably not like government regulations much! Instead of these concepts, the CLEP exam adds lots of questions about government regulation to try to make regulation look goodBut other than bias in the '''''selection''''' of question, bias is rare in answers to economics questionsPick the answer that you think is correct, without worrying about bias.
  
This course focuses on Microeconomics, while Keynesian economics is a topic in Macroeconomics, which is the study of national economies rather than individual firms and consumer decisions.  So there will not be any questions on a CLEP Microeconomics exam about Keynesian economics.  But you will see this term used in debates about the federal budget and overall economy, and its basic meaning is this:  increase government spending to stimulate the economy and reduce unemployment.  This did not work well for England in the 20th century, as it went from being one of the very strongest economies to a distant second behind other world powers.  Does it work any better for the United States today?  The "stimulus bill" passed earlier this year is based on Keynesian economics, and provides a test for its validity.
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=== Test-taking Tips ===
  
== Banking and the Federal Reserve System ==
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As always, be sure you fully understand the question before you answer it, and use common sense and logic.  In fact, many economics questions can be answered correctly with patience and basic reasoning skills.
  
On the same Colbert Report, Stephen Colbert discussed the "Federal Reserve Bank" and interviewed Senator Bernie Sanders, who calls himself a Democratic Socialist (which generated a humorous question about whether "Democratic Socialist" is an oxymoron).  Senator Sanders called for the resignation or removal of Bernard Bernanke as Chairman of the Federal Reserve.  What, you might ask, is the Federal Reserve?
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== Maximizing Marginal Utility in Studying for Exam ==
  
Created in 1913, the Federal Reserve system is a network of 12 banks (one for each Federal Reserve district around the country) that serve as a "bank for banks." In each district, hundreds of banks (and thousands of bank branches or offices) belong to the local Federal Reserve Bank and rely on it for loans and depositsThe vast majority of all bank deposits in the United States are with banks that belong to the Federal Reserve system.
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Let's put our knowledge from this course to good use in studying for our final exam, and preparing for the CLEP exam.  We maximize our utility by scoring as high as possible on these examsTo do so, we need to maximize our marginal utility in allocating our time towards the exam topics listed aboveIf we spend all our studying time on "price discrimination," which is only 1% of the exam, then we are not maximizing our marginal utility and will not reach our full potential.
  
Long ago the economy relied on "commodity monies," which consisted of a commodity (such as silver or gold) serving the function of money.  To buy food or pay rent, someone would pay with silver or gold piecesBut now we use "bank-debt money," such as paper dollars.  Special markings on each dollar bill signify which of the 12 Federal Reserve banks issued that dollar bill.
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This is similar to our homework problem earlier in the course about maximizing our marginal utility with respect to hiking and readingThis time, however, the decision each student must make is which topic to focus on first in the above list, and how much time to spend on it before moving on to another topic in the list.  The answer may be different for each student.
  
The Federal Reserve is supposed to protect the banking system against collapse, while also managing the system in an optimal mannerIt has three basic tools for doing this.  First, the "Fed" can modify the required percentage of deposits that banks must hold in reserves, in case many depositors wanted to withdraw their money at the same timeThis may surprise you but banks ordinarily keep only a small percentage of customer deposits on hand; the vast majority of the deposits are loaned by banks to other people at a higher interest rate than what they are paying the depositors.  This is how a bank makes money and can still pay interest to depositors. To guard against a "run on the bank" (when many depositors panic and demand to withdraw all their money at once), the Federal Reserve (the "Fed") can increase the percentage that banks must keep on reserves.  Such an increase has the effect of "tightening the money supply," or making money more scarce.
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This same challenge in optimizing strategy could be expressed as a problem of "allocative efficency": allocating resources (time and information) in the most efficient way.  Just as efficiency is essential to successful businesses, efficiency is also important to becoming a successful studentSpending your time efficiently in preparing for the final exam, and preparing for the CLEP, is crucial to your ability to do well on themLook at the above list of topics and how often they appear, and ask yourself: where should you focus first in order to pick up the most points in the shortest amount of time?
  
The second policy tool -- and the one that attracts the most attention -- is when the Fed changes the interest rate it charges (its "discount rate") to banks. The higher that rate, the higher the interest becomes for many other types of borrowing, from mortgages to deposit ratesIncreasing interest rates also reduces the supply of money, making it harder to obtain mortgages and business loans.
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Should you simply start reviewing at the top of the list and work your way down to the bottom? That strategy has the advantage of focusing on the most important topics first.  If you run out of time in reviewing, then you will miss only the less important topicsBut you might improve further on that strategy by moving more quickly through topics that you already understand well.  Alternative, there may be topics that you find too difficult to understand, and you might give up some points there in order to focus better on topics where you can pick up more points.
  
Finally, the third way that the Fed affects the economy is in its market operations: it buys and sells U.S. government securities, the instruments the government uses to finance itselfBuying these securities is the same as loaning the federal government itself money.  Keep in mind that the Federal Reserve is not the government itself, but operates as an independent agency set up by the governmentOn its website, as Stephen Colbert humorously observed on his show, the Fed states that it "is not owned by anyone"!
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For the rest of this class this lecture will focus on topics which might provide the greatest marginal increase in your exam scoresThis takes into consideration the topics we have already reviewed (you have the materials for those), and avoids duplication of that reviewYou may, however, decide for yourself that you can benefit most from reviewing those prior topics.
  
So why are politicians calling for Bernard Bernanke to resign as Chairman of the Federal Reserve? Operating with virtually no oversight or accountability, Chairman Bernanke does not seem to have helped the economy muchNational unemployment is 10% (as of December 2009) and many businesses are failingIn addition, American taxpayers were socked with nearly a trillion dollar bailout package to save many banks from collapse, which is what the Fed was supposed to be making sure did not happen.
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Your instructor emphasizes studying strategy for a reason. The biggest reason why some students do not succeed is a lack of effortBut the second biggest reason is poor studying and test-taking strategies, like a football team that runs ill-advised playsEducation, like business and perhaps even life itself, rewards good strategies and punishes misguided ones.
  
Undeterred, however, students from Rutgers University just won second place in the annual College Fed Challenge, which requires acting like the Fed in analyzing about 40 economic indicators like unemployment, inflation, and gross national product (GNP), which is the total market value of all goods and services produced by a nation's economic during the year.  
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==Review: Inputs to a Firm (Espec. Labor)==
  
== Review: Short and Long Run ==
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For many students, the most additional points can be obtained by reviewing the "Inputs to a Firm" category.  It will be on 10% of the questions on the final exam and the CLEP exam.  That's a significant chunk of these exams.  Without review, these questions look hard and are easy to miss.  But with some extra preparation, you should be able to answer nearly all of them correctly.  In maximizing your score and making the best use of your time, this category may result in the biggest increase in correct answers with the least amount of effort.  That's what maximizing marginal utility is all about.
  
On the CLEP exam, at least 20% of the questions mention the "short run" or the "long run," or bothThat is a big chunk of the exam.  Do we fully understand the differences, and what they signify? Let's review this so you can feel comfortable when these terms pop up on exams.
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Accordingly, in economic terms, the greatest marginal utility from studying for the exam is probably obtaining by focusing on this topic firstWe've already covered the other two topics comprising 10% apiece of the exam (cost measures and government regulation), so there may not be many more points to pick up thereRealize that you will probably get some exam questions right without additional studying, and other questions you may get wrong no matter how much you study. But in this category of "inputs to a firm," you can pick up some points that you would otherwise miss.  Let's review it now.
  
The dictionary definitions for "short run" and "long run" are simple.  The "short run" is a time period so brief that a firm is stuck with the resources it has.  It cannot change its plant size or its workforce.  Instead, it must use more expensive options to make changes in its output, since as paying for nightly overtime (when wages are 50% higher per hour), or buying airplane tickets at the last minute when they are more expensiveIf you are traveling in a car and you notice you need gas soon, then you're stuck with the prices charged by the next one or two gas stations, which may not be the lowest price available.  Your short run costs are higher than your long run costs.  '''Short run costs are usually higher than long run costs''', because the short run decisions are not optimal.
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Questions about inputs to a firm focus on what a firm will do with its inputs (typically labor, but sometimes capital) in order to maximize its profitsThe questions usually concern the following:
  
In the long run, the opposite is true.  The long run is a period long enough that a firm can optimize its costs as it changes its level of output.  The firm can change the size of its production facility.  Put another way, '''in the long run all costs are variable'''.
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#impact of improvement in technology on the production by a firm
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#adjusting inputs to minimize the overall cost at a constant level of output
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#the effect of minimum wage on the competition for labor
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#comparing the cost of an input (usually labor) relative to the additional revenue that results
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#why a firm's "demand for labor" is called a "derived demand"
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#what causes an increase in demand for labor
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#the relation between hiring additional workers and the marginal cost
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#calculating overall costs (total cost and average variable cost) based on wages
  
The above definitions are good to know, but it is important to learn how to apply them correctly. When an exam question asks about "long-run equilibrium," then immediately think about how all costs are minimized in the long run.
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Review the above list now.  How many of the above 8 topics do you know well enough to answer a question about them correctly? Let's briefly review each of these concepts so you can maximize your score on this big part of the exam.
  
''Example'':  The price charged by a perfectly competitive firm in the long run or the short run equals marginal cost, because that is always true when there is perfect competitionBut the relation between that price and the firm's overall costs depends on whether it is in the long run or the short run.  In the long run, the firm's costs are minimized, and thus the price will be equal to the firm's average total cost for a perfectly competitive firm.  This is because the perfect competition drives the price down to its lowest possible level: average total cost.  (On an exam question, assume that costs are "economic costs" that include everything from the owner's salary to the investors' profits to the opportunity costs.)
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1"the impact of an improvement in technology on the production by a firm"
  
A question probing the difference between the short and long run might ask what the basic difference is.  We learned that in the long run all costs are variable.  What about the short run?  '''In the short run some costs of a firm are fixed and unchangeable'''.  For example, the night before our bus trip to D.C., decisions about the bus must be made on a short-run basis.  It is too late then to change the number of buses.  The cost of the buses is fixed, not variable, in the short run.
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:If technology improves, as in helpful new inventions or advances in communication (like the internet), then this helps shift the Production Possibilities Frontier (Curve) ''outward''.  A firm can produce more output now. So an improvement in technology enables a firm ''to increase its output or its supply to the market''.
  
== Review: Monopolistic Competition ==
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2.  "adjusting inputs to minimize the overall cost at a constant level of output"
  
We have thoroughly covered monopolies at one end of the economic spectrum, and we have also thoroughly covered perfect competition at the other end of the economic spectrumBut how well do we know "monopolistic competition," which is somewhere in the middle?
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:How does a firm adjust its inputs (e.g., workers or equipment) so that the firm reaches its lowest possible overall cost?  By making sure that the firm is getting the most '''''for each input'''''.  In other words, the firm makes sure that each input is producing the most marginal product per dollar spent on that input.  If one worker is producing more than another worker, and both are being paid the same, then the owner has not lowered his costs to a minimumHe could fire the lazy worker and hire a part-time worker like his good one, and then produce the same output at less cost.
  
In the real world, monopolistic competition is very commonIt is more common than a pure monopoly, and also more common than perfect competitionAs its name suggestions, "monopolistic competition" has characteristics of both monopolies and competition.
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:Summarizing the above, a firm minimizes its overall costs '''''by making sure the marginal product per cost for each input is equal'''''If one input (e.g., one worker) is producing more marginal product per cost than another, then the overall costs are not minimizedThe unproductive worker is wasting the firm's money.
  
Recall that monopolistic competition is characterized by:
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3.  "the effect of the minimum wage on the competition for labor"
  
*many firms, unlike a monopoly, which is only one firm
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:Increasing the minimum wage has the effect of increasing unemployment.  Workers who have jobs make more money when the minimum wage is increased, but firms can afford to hire fewer people.  The number of the unemployed (the people who cannot get jobs) increases when the minimum wage is increased. 
*the firms sell slightly differentiated goods that are not perfect substitutes
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*no (or low) barriers to entry (new firms can easily enter the market)
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*firms have some "market power," meaning that they can raise the price and still have lots of buyers at the higher price
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How does monopolistic competition different from perfect competition?  In monopolistic competition, the sales price is not the lowest possible cost.  Instead, the firm is able to raise the price of sale above his marginal cost to earn an extra profit.  Firms in monopolistic competition maximize their profits this way.
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:Also, although this will never be asked on a CLEP exam, raising the minimum wage causes more high school students to drop out and pursue jobs rather than stay in school, which would enable them to obtain higher-paying jobs in the future.
  
How is monopolistic competition created?  Firms engage in "product differentiation," as in Wendy's advertising that its hamburger is better than McDonald'sThat type of advertising differentiates Wendy's product from its competitors, and gives Wendy's the benefits of monopolistic competitionIt can then raise its price and earn more profits, because its customers cannot just switch to McDonald's and expect to obtain the exact same hamburger.
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:Sometimes the CLEP exam will twist the question about minimum wage to obscure its harmful effect, by asking what happens when the labor supply increases when there already is a minimum wageThis makes it look like the fault is an increase in the labor supply rather than the minimum wage lawThe correct answer is the same in both cases:  unemployment increases.
  
Another example of monopolistic competition is a sports team, like the New York YankeesHowever, it may be closer to a true monopoly, due to the extremely loyalty of its fans!
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4"comparing the cost of an input (usually labor) relative to the additional revenue that results"
  
Inefficiencies exist in any market that is not perfectly competitive, so there are inefficiencies in markets that consist of monopolistic competition.  The sales price is higher than it would be under perfect competitionSpecifically, in perfect competition the price equals marginal cost, but in monopolistic competition the firms raise the price above marginal cost and take the excess as marginal profit.
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:This type of question probes how a firm increases its inputs in relation to the additional revenue that results from such an increase.  The key here is to be very careful and very logicalA firm will increase an input (such as labor) until the ''value'' of the marginal product of that input equals the marginal cost of that input.  Read that sentence over and over until you understand it.  It simply means that the firm will equate the marginal cost of the additional input (such as an additional worker) to the marginal revenue that the additional input produces.
  
''Here is a challenging question'': where is the long run equilibrium of a firm in monopolistic competition?  To answer this, recall the conditions for this type of market.  In monopolistic competition there are no (or low) barriers to entrySo if there are any profits, then other firms would rush into the market and undersell the existing firms.  In the long run, there must not be any (economic) profit, due to this condition of no (or low) barriers to entry.  Likewise, there must not be any long run losses for this type of market (or any other type of market in the long run), or else firms would exit the market.  Thus the long run equilibrium of a firm in monopolistic competition is when price equals average total cost.
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:Often students miss this type of question because they are not careful to compare dollars to dollarsIf you have the marginal cost in terms of dollars (such as a wage rage for the additional worker), then you need to equate it to the marginal value of the marginal product of the labor (value is in dollar units), not the marginal product itself (which is a unit quantity).
  
How can that be, you might askRecall that "economic cost" includes everything:  salaries for everyone, interest on loans and the equivalent of interest on investments, and even opportunity cost.  So zero profit while paying all those costs is still successful for the owners, investors, and workers connected with the firm.
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5.  "why a firm's "demand for labor" is called a "derived demand"
  
Note also that a firm in monopolistic competition has some market power, and can increase his price above his marginal costSo even in the long run, P exceeds MC for monopolistic competitionIn contrast, price equals MC in a perfectly competitive market.
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:This is an easy point to pick up on an examA firm's demand for an input (such as labor) is called a "derived demand" because it depends on the demand for the goods produced by that inputFor example, a restaurant's demand for waitresses is entirely dependent on the public's demand to be served at the restaurant. If there is no public demand to be waited on at the restaurant, then the restaurant (the firm) has no demand for waitresses!
  
==Trade==
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6.  "what causes an increase in demand for labor"
  
What is “trade”?  It is an exchange of goods or services or money by one person for goods or services or money from anotherWhen I give you an Alex (“A-Rod”) Rodriguez baseball card in exchange for your giving me a Derek Jeter card in return, this is called a trade.  We would not make the exchange unless each of us felt we would be better off as a resultMaybe I have two “A-Rod” cards and the second one doesn’t mean as much to me as it would to you, for example.
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:This is another easy issue, similar to the prior one aboveIf the public demand for the product of the labor increases, then there is an increase in demand for the labor itselfIf more people want to eat McDonald's hamburgers, then there is more demand for workers to make McDonald's hamburgers.
  
When Pokeman cards were the big fad for children, they quickly learned to trade cards to improve their collectionsNote that both sides must perceive a benefit for a trade to occur.
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:How do we know when the demand by the public for the product of certain labor increases?  When the price of the good or service produced by the labor increasesWhen that price goes up, then there is an increase in demand for the workers who make that good or service.
  
Dutch traders supposedly bought the island of Manhattan from Native Americans for only $24 in beads and trinkets over 300 years agoAt the time, Manhattan did not appear to be worth much.  Land was plentiful, and it was difficult to get to Manhattan from the New Jersey side.  If the story is true, then both sides felt they were better off from the trade.  In the 1970s, New York City nearly went bankrupt.  Would the Indians have taken it back?!
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7"the relation between hiring additional workers and the marginal cost"
  
Trade benefits both sides to the dealIt appears “win-win” for both parties, or one would not do it (assuming there is not any trickery involved).  Generally, economists favor “free” trade, which means trade without government interference.
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:This is a more challenging issue that requires two steps rather than one in order to answer correctlyMarginal cost is additional cost to a firm for making one more unit.  It is measured in dollars, not in units.  Making sure you have the right measure (dollars or units) for your answer will help you reduce mistakes''The answer for any question about marginal cost must be in dollars (or cents) per unit''.
  
Now move to the big picture.  Consider the massive amounts of trade that occurs between companies and people located in different countries.  “Exports” are the goods that companies in one country make to be sold in another country.  Those goods exit the country of origin and are purchased by foreigners“Imports” are the opposite: they are goods that are made in a foreign country but purchased here.
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:Accordingly, if you are told how many additional units are produced by each additional worker, then calculating the marginal cost requires dividing the cost of the additional worker by the additional number of units he producesThe more units an additional worker produces, the lower the marginal cost that results from adding that worker.
  
Whenever you hear new economic concepts, try to think of examples yourselfWhat are some imports that you buyLook at where your clothes are madeLabels disclose this information when you buy the clothes.  Clothes are usually imports, often made in Mexico or China (if inexpensive) or Italy (if expensive)What are some cars that are imported?  Examples are Toyota (made in Japan), Hyundai (made in Korea), BMW (made in Germany), and Jaguar (made in England).
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:''Example'':  suppose a firm hires Tom and sees the output increase by 20 units, and then hires Mary at the same wage and sees the output increase by 15 unitsWhen is the marginal cost of the firm the lowestAfter it hires Tom, but ''before'' it hires MaryThat's because the marginal cost of hiring Tom is his wages divided by 20, while the marginal cost of hiring Mary is the same wage divided by 15A wage divided by 20 is less than the same wage divided by 15, so the marginal cost to the firm after hiring Tom is less than after hiring Mary.
  
More difficult is to imagine goods that we exportYou do not purchase any of those.  Those are goods made in the United States for sale in a foreign country.  Can you think of any examples?  Music and movies are examples, as people around the world like to buy what Hollywood produces.  Computer software is an other example, as the Microsoft monopoly exports its products to the rest of the world.
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8"calculating overall costs (total cost and average variable cost) based on wages"
  
Here is something we export that is controversial: we export jobs.  Called “outsourcing”, this consists of a company firing an employee in the United States and then hiring a replacement at much lower wages in a foreign country, such as IndiaThe foreign employee can be hired free of many government regulations that make jobs costly here, such as social security taxes, health benefits, taxes, risk of lawsuits, pensions, and so onAn employee hired at a wage of $30,000 in the United States may cost the employer $60,000 when all the regulatory costs are addedNot so if the company can hire a similar employee in a foreign country.
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:The key here is simply to be careful in doing the calculations, and then double-check your answer'''''You need to be sure you are using the correct level of output before you calculate the total cost (TC) and average variable cost (AVC) at that level of output'''''To find the total cost, add the fixed cost (FC) to the variable cost (the variable cost is usually the labor cost: total wages times the number of workers), '''''for a given level of output'''''Then, to find the average variable cost, find the total variable cost (TVC=TC-FC) and divide by that level of output.
  
Do we ever import jobs from foreign countries? Not manyThe Japanese car company Toyota did build some car manufacturing facilities here in response to complaints that it was hurting our automobile industryGenerally, however, it is more expensive for foreign countries to hire workers here than it would be to hire them elsewhere in the world.
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:''Example'': a firm can produce 100 units with 5 workers and 200 units with 10 workersIts fixed cost is $50 and its wage rate is $20 per workerWhat is its total cost and average variable cost to produce 100 units?
  
China is the fastest growing exporter of goods in the world, and India is secondIn 1980, China exported $18.2 billion in goods to other countries.  By 2000, China exported $249.3 billion in goodsWhy?  Because China has very cheap labor.  But it is also a Communist country.  Some of those profits go into building up its military, and menacing its democratic neighbors.  It points nuclear missiles at our western cities, like Los Angeles.
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::''Answer'':  notice first that the question asks about the costs at 100 units in output, not 200 unitsTotal cost at 100 units is the fixed cost ($50) plus the labor cost ($20 times 5 workers, or $100), for a total of $150The average variable cost is the total cost ($150) minus the fixed cost ($50), divided by the output (100), for a total of $1 per unit.
  
You can export or import cash itselfWe export dollars to pay for imported goods.  More generally, exports are what we sell in exchange for imports.
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Master the above eight issues, and you'll convert 10% of the exam from wrong answers to correct onesThat could enable you to earn college credit.
  
Sometimes you will read on the news a mention of the “balance of payments” or “trade deficits.”  These terms apply to the difference between how much we import versus how much we export.  Because goods are made more cheaply in foreign countries, we typically import far more than we export.  That means the United States has a large trade deficit (amount that total exports exceed total imports). 
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== Review: Different Types of Markets ==
  
The “balance of payment account” consists of two accounts that keep track of the goods and services entering and leaving a country: the “capital account” and the “current account.”  The capital account monitors physical and financial assets; the current account monitors goods and servicesFamiliarity with these terms suffices, and do not worry if you do not fully understand them.
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You instructor wonders what topic will maximize our marginal utility next.  About 20% of the exam is devoted to questions about different types of markets, ranging from the most advantageous for the public (perfect competition) to the least advantageous for the public (monopoly)That's a large chunk of questions, and with some extra review here students can convert potentially wrong answers into correct ones.
  
==“Free Trade” versus “Protectionism”==
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The key to answering these questions correctly is to realize that the more competition there is, the lower the price of the goods and services and the lower the profits for the firms.  Some of these questions are special cases and should simply be memorized:  a cartel is an oligopoly that illegally agrees to fix (set) its prices, and an oligopoly is an industry where just a few firms dominate the market.  When given a grid about where an oligopoly ends up selling its goods (its Nash Equilibrium), the answer is always symmetric (all firms sell at the same price) and usually not the highest price that a monopoly could sell at.
  
One of the oldest political issues is the debate between “free trade” and “protectionism”This has been debated in American politics for over 200 years.  What is the controversy?
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The monopoly questions look harder than they really are.  The monopolist sets his price higher than marginal cost, which would be the optimal price from the standpoint of the public (or government).  Instead, the monopolist price sets his price where marginal revenue equals marginal cost (MR=MC).  If shown a graph, you may have to find the quantity where MR=MC, and then find the corresponding price on the demand curveNotice that a monopolist has no supply curve, because a supply curve represents many firms in an industry and a monopolist is the only firm in the industry.
  
Supporters of “free trade” oppose government interference in trade between foreign countriesThey feel that we should be able to import as many goods as possible from China, and export as many jobs as desired to ChinaThey argue that trade makes both sides better off, so it should be allowed.  
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There can be general questions about these markets.  A perfectly competitive market uses resources in a perfectly efficient wayAt the other end of the spectrum, a monopoly uses resources the least efficiently of allIts high pricing causes a huge social loss ("deadweight loss") by eliminating consumer surplus.  The monopoly reduces output in order to cause a scarcity that increases the price to an artificially high level.  This is bad for everyone, except the owner of the monopoly, who enriches himself.  This is how Bill Gates became the wealthiest person in the world.
  
But what about the jobs that are lost in the United States due to the shift to foreign producers of goods and the outsourcing of the workAdvocates of “free trade” point out that the people who buy the imports are better off, and they save money by obtaining goods at a lower price.  They do not need to make as much money from jobs because their expenses are decreasing.
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Here is a puzzle to leave you with.  What is the impact on quantity of a price ceiling in a competitive industry compared to a price ceiling in a monopolyIn which one (competitive v. monopoly) might a clever price ceiling actually increase quantity?  Think about it, and learn to ask yourself questions like this in order to master economics.  The answer is in this footnote.<ref>A price ceiling is a maximum price limitation, just as a real ceiling in a house limits the height.  A perfectly competitive industry is already selling at its maximum output, so a price ceiling can't help thereBut a monopoly increases its price by reducing its output.  If a price ceiling is imposed against a monopoly, then it must reduce its price and increase its output, which benefits the public.</ref>
  
The free trade advocates also argue that our economy becomes stronger due to the imports, and new jobs will be created for those who lost their prior jobs.  When jobs were lost in the steel industry due to cheaper imports, new jobs were created in the services industry.  The dot-com internet boom created many new jobs in the 1990s.  There are temporary dislocations, but these are like growing pains until better jobs arise.  That’s the argument in favor of free trade.
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Be sure to spend time on the review sections in the prior lectures for more information about this and other topics on the exams.
  
Free traders cite the Law of Comparative Advantage: nations are better off by exporting goods it produces at a lower relative price than others, and importing goods that it cannot make as cheaply.  If China makes trinkets more cheaply than we can, then let’s save money by buying them from China and let’s focus our work on what we do best.
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== Review: Public Goods ==
  
Opportunity cost supports this view.  You lower your opportunity cost by spending your time most efficiently working on what you do best.  Ford Motor can make a car more efficiently than you can.  But perhaps you can provide medical or legal services more efficiently than Ford Motor can.  So spend your time making money as a doctor or lawyer, and buy your cars from Ford Motor. You’ll have extra money that way.  If you spend all your time trying to build a car, then you’d go broke and incur enormous opportunity costs.
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A public good is a good which is nonexcludable and nondepletable. The first condition means that it is impossible to exclude consumers from partaking in the good, and the second condition means that one consumer's consumption of the good does not prevent others from consuming it.
  
For the purposes of economics courses and the CLEP exam, “free trade” and the above arguments are the correct answers.  There is much to be said in their favor.  The free traders also think they are promoting peace. “If goods cannot cross borders, then soldiers will” is one of their favorite sayings.
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Explained another way, a public good is available to all such that consumption by one person does not reduce its availability to others. An example of a public good is national defense, as it protects everyone and its benefits to one person do not diminish its benefits to others.  
  
However, there are many smart people who would be considered “protectionists” (though they would dislike the pejorative label).  Can you think of reasons to oppose “free trade”?
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Other examples of public goods are law enforcement (protection by the police), public fireworks, clear air, street lights, radio and television transmissions, lighthouses, and some inventionsSome of these examples, such as lighthouses, are contested as to whether they must be a public good, as it is possible to charge ships port fees to pay for them.  Also, while radio and television transmissions are available to all to receive them, it does cost money to buy radios and television sets, so these are not truly public goods either.
  
The first argument is the simplest: money isn’t everything.  Put another way, overall utility is about more than money.  Even if free trade makes me wealthier, I may still not want to do it if it helps wrongdoing or promotes evil.  Someone may choose not to buy lottery tickets even if he thinks he will win, if he is morally opposed to gambling.  Many of us oppose how China persecutes Christians, promotes abortion, and points nuclear weapons at our cities.  Even if we benefit from trading with China, we don’t want them to benefit and continue the activities we opposeBut you won’t hear economists making this argument.
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[[Liberals]] like to emphasize the concept of [[public good]]s on exams in order to support the argument for more governmentUnder this view [[public good]]s represent market failure and the need for government services supported by taxes.
  
The second argument for “protectionism” questions whether the foreign trade is really “free”.  China is a Communist country.  What is “free” about trading with it?  It does not have free enterprise.  Neither does India.  Why should we let these government-controlled economies take jobs away from ours?  With great risk and many failures through trial and error, we developed successful industries.  Why should we allow foreign governments to be copycats for our successes, at our expense in siphoning away jobs?  Let them promote free enterprise in their countries first.  Perhaps less trade with government-controlled economies will encourage them internally to embrace free enterprise first, for their own benefit.
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==Final Tips on Test-taking in Economics==
  
The third argument for “protectionism” is as followsWorkers facing the loss of jobs due to the outsourcing to other countries ask this: why aren’t the executive jobs exported in addition to the jobs of the employees?  Sure, workers are cheaper in China and India than American counterpartsBut moving the highly paid executive jobs to those countries would save even more money (per worker)!  The advocates of free trade appear to be selective about which jobs they support moving offshoreWhy not start with moving their job to a foreign country first?  They do not seem to be volunteering for that.
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Good test-taking techniques are particularly important to doing well on an economics exam.  Simple questions are often intentionally disguised as something more complicatedIt is easy to become confused and misguided in analyzing economic issues.  99% of the public would say that we would be better off if Congress put a price ceiling or cap on gasoline at $1 a gallonIt takes a bit more thought to realize that massive shortages would result, and we would all have to waste hours each week waiting in line for gasolineSome who really need gas in hurry, such as people trying to take someone to a hospital, may not be able to obtain gas in time.
  
==Tariffs==
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The ability to eliminate wrong answers can helpLet’s try the elimination technique on these questions:
 
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Recall that a tariff is a tax on imports.  A tariff raises the price of imported goods, and the supplier must then reduce its received price to attain the same level where supply meets demandThis has the effect of reducing supply, which is exactly what the protectionists want.  A tariff on Toyota cars, for example, would reduce the supply of Toyota cars in the market.  Ford and GM like that.
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But our government used ''quotas'' rather than a tariff to appease Ford and GM.  Instead of imposing a tariff on Toyota’s imports, our government negotiated an agreement with it so that it would not sell more than a fixed quota of certain types of cars each year.  This reduces supply also, but without any revenue to the government.  Many criticize these import quotas by observing that the effect is the same as a tariff, but without the benefits of the revenue that government would receive from a tariff.
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''Question'': Consider the poverty-level of income for a family of four in America. Which of the following can be said about ''how'' the government defines this specific income level?
  
For most of our country’s history (until the Sixteenth Amendment legalized the income tax), our federal government’s major source of revenue was tariffs. The issue of the tariff was a recurrent controversy that divided the pro-tariff North from the anti-tariff South and was a major cause of the Civil War.
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:(A) It helps determine who is eligible for Social Security benefits.
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:(B) It decreases when there is an increase in welfare benefits.
 +
:(C) It proves that 50% of Americans live in poverty.
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:(D) It is determined by tripling the cost of a nutritionally adequate diet by three.
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:(E) Government does not adjust this number due to changes in the cost of living (inflation).
  
==General Review==
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Virtually none of you would know the answer to this question at first glance.  This question is not really appropriate for a "micro"-economics exam ("micro"-economics concerns individual buying and selling decisions), but CLEP asks it anyway.  Questions about poverty, gaps between the rich and poor, and government programs are always favorites among liberal educators.  You will see many more questions about these issues than about the invisible hand or the creation of wealth.
  
The key to mastering economics is to learn to quiz yourself on the principles to make sure you understand them fully.  
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So what do we do when faced with this question?  Simply give up?  Move to the next question and hope it is easier?  Blindly guess at an answer?  None of the above.
  
What is the most important concept of the course?  Perhaps it is the obvious desire of companies to maximize their profits.  Whether it is a monopoly or a perfectly competitive firm, each firm shares this common goal with all other firms: it wants to make more profits.  You can answer 20% or more of the questions on any microeconomics exam simply by applying that basic ruleAnd at what point does any company maximize its profits?  Where marginal revenue (MR) declines to the point where it equals marginal cost (MC).  When marginal revenue declines further (or marginal cost increases more), then the company is losing profits.  It won’t do that.
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We can narrow the choices, and thereby reduce our risk of error, by eliminating wrong answersBasic economic principles (or common sense) serve as our guide.
  
You need to understand the supply and demand curves thoroughlyKnow what elasticity is, in all its forms. Appreciate what substitutes and complements are.
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Let’s start with choice (C)Think about it: is half of our nation living in poverty? What would that mean for elections?  Who would pay to run government?  If we called half of us "poor", then what word would be use for the really poor?  Choice (C) can't be true.  Using common sense, we can eliminate this answer.
  
Know the difference between the “short run” and the “long run,” as discussed aboveIn the “short run,” inefficient changes to inputs and outputs are madeFor example, an employee is asked to work overtime at wages 1.5 times ordinary wages.  But in the “long run,” inefficiencies are eliminated by better planningOvertime is avoided.
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Let’s turn to choice (E)Why wouldn’t it be adjusted?  Poverty must be relative to the cost of livingIf the cost of living doubled, then the numbers in poverty would increase greatly.  But failure to adjust for the cost of living would miss that effectAgain, common sense leads us to eliminate this answer.
  
==Assignment==
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Next we can turn to choice (A).  That doesn't work either, because everyone who pays into Social Security has a right to receive benefits when they grow old, regardless of whether they are rich or poor.  “Social security” is not “security only if you’re poor.”  We can eliminate this choice.
  
Please read and, if necessary, reread the above lectureThen complete 5 out of the following 7 questions (leave TWO blank):
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We’re left with only two possibilities: (B) and (D)Realize that has increased our odds of choosing the right answer to 50% now.  If you took the CLEP and at least narrowed every difficult question down to two choices, then you would likely pass the test.  How do we next make our best choice among these final two options?
  
1Which is true about the average fixed costs (AFC) of a firm?
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Option (D) seems to have the right amount of detail, and fits the question well grammaticallyIn contrast, Option (B) does not fit the question as well or make as much sense (definition of what the poverty level is should not change based on distributing some benefits).  Even if you had no idea between (B) and (D), (D) is a better fit.  It’s our best guess.  (D), indeed, is correct.
  
(a)a firm can eliminate these costs by shutting down in the short run.
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It helps to choose an answer that gives the most meaning to the purpose of the question.  The purpose of this question is to ask about how poverty-level income is calculated. Answer (D) most directly furthers that goal.  It makes for a good guess if you did not otherwise know.  You won’t always be able to guess the right answers, but by increasing your chances you can significantly increase your overall score.
<br>(b) as output increases, AFC decreases
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<br>(c) as output increases, AFC increases
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<br>(d) AFC is part of average variable costs
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Briefly explain your answer.
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Let’s try one more CLEP-inspired question, this time relating to labor:
  
2Some politicians complain about how people are losing their jobs to workers in China.  Is this problem the result of "free trade" or "protectionism"?
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''Question'': Assume a perfectly competitive market for both inputs and outputIf capital is fixed and the price for the output increases, then a firm in the short run will increase its production by which of the following ways:
  
3.  What is one of the primary responsibilities of the Federal Reserve Bank?
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:(A) increase capital until P=MR
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:(B) increase labor until the value of the marginal product for workers equals the wage rate
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:(C) increase capital until its average product equals the price of the additional capital
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:(D) increase labor until its marginal product equals the wage rate
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:(E) increase labor until the ratio of the price of the output to labor's marginal product equals the wage rate
  
4Review:  Suppose that after completing this course, you start a new companyIn your first year, you "broke even" (had zero profits), and in your second year you want to increase your revenue and profitsAfter careful study of your market, you decide that you can increase your revenue by increasing your priceTherefore your good must be price elastic/inelastic (choose one).
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This type of question benefits from being reread“Capital is fixed,” according to the questionSo capital cannot be increased.  Answers (A) and (C) can be eliminated that easilyMany students sometimes miss the obvious on economics examsThey fail to read and understand the question.
  
5A monopolistic competitive firm has the following characteristic that ''is lacking'' for a perfectly competitive firm:
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Only labor can be increased, which is possible under answers (B), (D) and (E)We've improved our odds of success to a 33% chance.  Those are good odds on a difficult question like this.  But we can improve our chances even more.
  
(a) There are low barriers to entry
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(B) and (D) look similar so let’s turn to (E) first. The “marginal product of labor” is the additional units (“product”) produced due to an additional unit of labor.  Remember “MP”?  The term does not include “revenue” or “price”, so it only gives you the quantity.  We need to multiply that quantity by product price to obtain revenue, what the firm owner cares the most about.  Choice (E) makes no sense by dividing terms that should be multiplied together.  We can eliminate it.
<br>(b) MR = MC in the long run.
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<br>(c) P > MC
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<br>(d) There are many competitors.
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Choose one of the above and explain your answer.
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Back to (B) and (D).  The only difference between the two is the term “value of” in (B).  Think about what “marginal product” is.  It is a quantity, not a dollar amount.  Yet we are comparing it to “wage rate,” which would be in dollars.  We need to insert “value of” to convert a quantity into equivalent dollars.  (B) is must be the correct choice because it compares dollars to dollars, while choice (D) does not.
  
6.  You can go on www.orbitz.com and watch the price of airline tickets change from day-to-day.  If you pick fixed dates of travel, such as Jan. 15 to fly somewhere and Jan. 18 to return, then you will 9notice that the closer you get to those dates, the higher the price of the ticket usually is.  In other words, the earlier in advance that you can buy a ticket, the cheaper it usually is.  Explain how this illustrates a basic difference between long run and short run costs.
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The key to good test-taking, particularly on economics exams, '''''is to make sure you fully understand each question before trying to answer it'''''.
  
7.  Pick any aspect of monopolistic competition (other than problem 5 if you answered that) and explain it.
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=== CLEP Exam Bias Concerning Regulation and Efficiency===
  
===Honors:===
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There are only two or three questions (out of nearly 100) on the CLEP exam that have biased answers.  They concern regulation and efficiency.  You can expect to see one or two CLEP questions where the correct answer is to support government regulation against pollution.  The best way to think about pollution is in terms of its "negative externality," but the CLEP exam writers cast the issue in terms of an efficient use of resources.  Under this view, pollution is inefficient because it results in inefficient harm to the environment.  Laws against pollution supposedly increase efficiency by preventing harm to the "resource" of the environment.  These regulations that prohibit pollution cause less output but supposedly ensure a more efficient use of environmental resources. 
  
Answer question 8, and then 2 out of the following 3 questions:
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While most of us support a cleaner environment, efficiency is usually associated with ''greater'' output, not ''less'' output.  Government regulations almost never ''improve'' efficiency; the free market does that best without government interference.  That said, you can pick up one or two easy points on the CLEP exam '''''by assuming that environmental regulation increases efficiency by protecting the "resource" of the environment for its better uses'''''.
  
8Explain why in long-run equilibrium the price charged in monopolistic competition is greater than marginal cost but equal to average total cost.
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When companies are allowed to pollute without paying for it, their marginal cost (MC) is artificially lower than it should beThese companies are avoiding the cost of their own pollution.  A lower MC means they will produce more goods than if their MC were higher.  The term “marginal social cost” is used by economists to represent the true cost of their activities, including the cost of their pollution.  Because companies produce ''more'' than they would if they had to pay for the cost of their pollution, some consider this to be '''''inefficient'''''.  On the CLEP exam, it takes regulation to make it efficient by preventing the companies from putting out the pollution.
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You might wonder what a conservative, free market approach to reducing negative externalities (like pollution) would be.  One approach would be to require full disclosure to the public by companies of their negative externalities, so that the public could stop buying the companies' products if the public were concerned about the negative externalities.  This would enable the free market to solve this problem in an efficient way.
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'''''Outside the topic of government regulation on the CLEP exam, there are no biased answers.  Do not choose one answer instead of another for reasons of bias except in one or two rare cases.'''''
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===Other Questions Concerning Government===
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In areas unrelated to pollution, government establishes price floors, supports and ceilings.  Do we all recall the differences?  Price “ceilings” (or controls) are the easiest: the government says that the good cannot be sold for a higher price.  Just as you cannot reach above your ceiling, the price is prohibited from rising above the ceiling that the government sets for it.  It would be requiring gas to be sold for no more than $1.50, for example.  The quantity supplied will decrease (move down the supply curve), while the quantity demanded will increase (move up the demand curve).  '''''Shortages result from price ceilings'''''.
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What is a price floor?  Just the opposite of a ceiling.  We cannot reach below the floor, and a price floor prevents the price from falling below a certain level.  It would be a government law that prohibited milk from selling for less than $2 a gallon, for example.  It would be intended to help the suppliers, such as dairy farmers.  What happens when government imposes a price floor?  There is a surplus of the good, as supply exceeds demand.
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Now, how about a price support?  That occurs when the government buys large quantities of good, such food, at prices higher than the competitive equilibrium.  The government does this to “support” a higher price, instead of passing a law to require a higher price.  A price support is designed to help the firms producing the goods, such as farmers.  The rationale is that farmers are politically important and that pure competition is too brutal on their business and their lives, and also that foreign countries engage in the same practices.  The effect of a “price support” is similar to a price floor: it creates a surplus of the good when the support is above the equilibrium price
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When government regulates labor, the analysis is similar to its regulation of price.  A “price floor” is created by the minimum wage: the buyer (an employer) must pay at least a certain amount for a service (labor).  The minimum wage creates an oversupply of the service: too many workers.  Not all of them will be able to obtain jobs at a wage higher than equilibrium.  Unemployment results from a minimum wage that is higher than the equilibrium wage.
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== Final Comments ==
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You have all learned a great deal of material in this course, information that will help you the rest of your lives.  The insights and powerful concepts covered by this course can yield greater and greater benefits the more you think about them.  Every week I see still something new and helpful in concepts taught in this course.  Many students say that this is the best course they took from me, among other helpful courses.  Use this course for your benefit.
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If there is one unifying theme to this course, then I suggest it is summarized in Jesus's Parable of the Talents.  Be productive, and God can multiply the benefits of your work.  If you reach out, if you do more, if you make good use of your time, if you maximize your efficiency, if you consider the opportunity costs, and if you increase your output, then you give God more to work with.  But if you bury your talents in the ground or if you are like the tree that does not bear fruit, then you give God less for His purpose.
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'''''Carpe diem'''''.  And be the good that drives out the bad as we discussed in connection with Gresham's Law.
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==Assignment==
  
9.  Economics is sometimes called the “dismal science” because economists predicted population to grow faster than the food supply, marginal returns to diminish, and profits to vanishBut, in fact, there is an abundance of food and profits have not vanished. Why is economics not so dismal after all?
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Read this lecture and study for the final exam, which will be the first week in JuneIt will be 30 multiple-choice questions, similar in format to the quizzes.
  
10.  "Protectionism" is a pejorative (negative) word.  Can you think of a more positive, flattering word to express the same concept in a supportive way?
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== References ==
  
11.  What is "Keynesian economics" and what is your view of it?
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<references/>
<br><br><br>
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[[Category:Economics lectures]]
 
[[Category:Economics lectures]]
 
{{DEFAULTSORT: Economics Lecture 13}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT: Economics Lecture 13}}

Latest revision as of 14:34, May 28, 2013

Economics Lectures - [1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12 - 13 - 14]

This lecture is the final review for this course, in preparation for the final exam. A student who took this class in 2007 sent me the following feedback from college:

My microeconomics class has been almost all review for me, because of the similar class I took from Mr. Andy Schlafly .... Although other students who attended public schools may have taken 'economics' before, they have struggled with microeconomics this semester, because their high school classes completely ignored the free-market and Austrian economics[1] which are taught [in college].

Let's begin this lecture by summarizing the percentages the CLEP exam devoted to particular topics. This will help organize the material we have covered in this course. Our online final exam next week will use a similar distribution in topics as the CLEP exam, but without over-emphasizing government policy.

Topics on Exam

Here is a list of the topics on the CLEP exam, along with how many questions are asked about each topic (as a percentage of the overall exam), plus tips about each concept:

cost measures (e.g., ATC, AFC, AVC) 10% FC is total cost when output is zero; convert to average costs by dividing by output. Remember that ATC=AFC+AVC, and know when a firm should shut down.
Government policy 10% price ceilings cause shortages and taxes cause social (deadweight) loss; but beware of CLEP questions designed to make government regulation appear beneficial, as in reducing pollution
Inputs to a Firm (espec. labor) 10% key here is applying logic and other concepts to reason back from product demand to a firm's need for labor (workers); know effects of minimum wage laws; might also be asked about capital
Perfect Competition 6% costs and profits and price are lowest for this type of market. P=MC=ATC and "economic profits" are squeezed to zero. If price falls, shut down in short run when P<AVC; shut down in long run when P<ATC.
Monopolistic Competition 6% can set its price above MC, but the low barrier to entry allows competitive forces that prevent long run profits and require P=ATC
Production Possibilities 6% trade-off among goods made by a nation; to reach points beyond the "frontier" (curve), it requires a technological advance or other big change
Price Elasticity 5% measures how demand responds to price changes; "elastic" means big change in demand for a small change in price of good
Monopoly 4% the firm sets its price above marginal cost, but not higher than where MR=MC; economic profits are greater than zero; economic rent exists. P>MC. P>ATC.
Demand Curve 4% what the public will pay; all firms in all kinds of markets are restrained by the Law of Demand
MR 4% marginal revenue is the increase in total revenue due to selling one more unit; profit maximized where MR=MC
MC 4% marginal cost, which equals price in perfect competition. For a monopoly P>MC but equals MR=MC
Public Goods 3% know the difference between these and private goods: public goods cannot exclude people from using the good without paying for it.
Returns to Scale 2% think of Wal-Mart for increasing returns to scale; think of a kitchen for decreasing returns to scale ("too many cooks spoil the broth")
Consumer Surplus 2% what someone was willing to pay above what the good actually cost
Comparative Advantage 2% nation with lower production costs should do what it does best
Oligopoly 2% only a few firms, like two gas stations at an intersection far away from any others; usually one Nash Equilibrium-type exam question
Imperfect Competition 2% P>MC for this market, which is "allocatively inefficient" (is not efficient in the allocation of resources); it takes perfect competition to drive P down to MC
Utility 2% overall satisfaction; recall our problem about hiking and reading. Marginal utility is your next bit of utility. Indifference curve shows trade-off in utility.
Cross-Price Elasticity 2% Comparing change in demand for one good due to change in price for a different good
Opportunity Cost 2% keep in mind that "economic costs" include opportunity costs in addition to actual out-of-pocket (accounting) costs
Substitutes 2% think Coke versus Pepsi
Complements 2% think ketchup with French fries
Long Run v. Short Run 2% in the long run all costs are variable and can be minimized; short and long run mentioned in 20% of questions, to distinguish between quick changes and permanent ones
Externalities 2% two types: positive (music in an open-air park) and negative (pollution)
Inferior v. Normal Goods 1% when income goes up, demand for an inferior good or service goes down (e.g., demand for bankruptcy services)
substitution and income effects 1% increase in price means less demand because public uses substitutes (substitution effect of price increase) and becomes poorer (income effect of price increase)
Cartel 1% an oligopoly that illegally agrees to fix (set) prices, as OPEC does
Price discrimination 1% charging different prices for the exact same good; only possible if the market allows the firm to set its own price

Some important topics are missing from the CLEP exam, such as the invisible hand, free market, charity, transaction costs, the time value of money, interest rates, the Coase theorem and Gresham's Law. The reason is exam bias. For example, once a student realizes how inefficient transaction costs are, he or she will probably not like government regulations much! Instead of these concepts, the CLEP exam adds lots of questions about government regulation to try to make regulation look good. But other than bias in the selection of question, bias is rare in answers to economics questions. Pick the answer that you think is correct, without worrying about bias.

Test-taking Tips

As always, be sure you fully understand the question before you answer it, and use common sense and logic. In fact, many economics questions can be answered correctly with patience and basic reasoning skills.

Maximizing Marginal Utility in Studying for Exam

Let's put our knowledge from this course to good use in studying for our final exam, and preparing for the CLEP exam. We maximize our utility by scoring as high as possible on these exams. To do so, we need to maximize our marginal utility in allocating our time towards the exam topics listed above. If we spend all our studying time on "price discrimination," which is only 1% of the exam, then we are not maximizing our marginal utility and will not reach our full potential.

This is similar to our homework problem earlier in the course about maximizing our marginal utility with respect to hiking and reading. This time, however, the decision each student must make is which topic to focus on first in the above list, and how much time to spend on it before moving on to another topic in the list. The answer may be different for each student.

This same challenge in optimizing strategy could be expressed as a problem of "allocative efficency": allocating resources (time and information) in the most efficient way. Just as efficiency is essential to successful businesses, efficiency is also important to becoming a successful student. Spending your time efficiently in preparing for the final exam, and preparing for the CLEP, is crucial to your ability to do well on them. Look at the above list of topics and how often they appear, and ask yourself: where should you focus first in order to pick up the most points in the shortest amount of time?

Should you simply start reviewing at the top of the list and work your way down to the bottom? That strategy has the advantage of focusing on the most important topics first. If you run out of time in reviewing, then you will miss only the less important topics. But you might improve further on that strategy by moving more quickly through topics that you already understand well. Alternative, there may be topics that you find too difficult to understand, and you might give up some points there in order to focus better on topics where you can pick up more points.

For the rest of this class this lecture will focus on topics which might provide the greatest marginal increase in your exam scores. This takes into consideration the topics we have already reviewed (you have the materials for those), and avoids duplication of that review. You may, however, decide for yourself that you can benefit most from reviewing those prior topics.

Your instructor emphasizes studying strategy for a reason. The biggest reason why some students do not succeed is a lack of effort. But the second biggest reason is poor studying and test-taking strategies, like a football team that runs ill-advised plays. Education, like business and perhaps even life itself, rewards good strategies and punishes misguided ones.

Review: Inputs to a Firm (Espec. Labor)

For many students, the most additional points can be obtained by reviewing the "Inputs to a Firm" category. It will be on 10% of the questions on the final exam and the CLEP exam. That's a significant chunk of these exams. Without review, these questions look hard and are easy to miss. But with some extra preparation, you should be able to answer nearly all of them correctly. In maximizing your score and making the best use of your time, this category may result in the biggest increase in correct answers with the least amount of effort. That's what maximizing marginal utility is all about.

Accordingly, in economic terms, the greatest marginal utility from studying for the exam is probably obtaining by focusing on this topic first. We've already covered the other two topics comprising 10% apiece of the exam (cost measures and government regulation), so there may not be many more points to pick up there. Realize that you will probably get some exam questions right without additional studying, and other questions you may get wrong no matter how much you study. But in this category of "inputs to a firm," you can pick up some points that you would otherwise miss. Let's review it now.

Questions about inputs to a firm focus on what a firm will do with its inputs (typically labor, but sometimes capital) in order to maximize its profits. The questions usually concern the following:

  1. impact of improvement in technology on the production by a firm
  2. adjusting inputs to minimize the overall cost at a constant level of output
  3. the effect of minimum wage on the competition for labor
  4. comparing the cost of an input (usually labor) relative to the additional revenue that results
  5. why a firm's "demand for labor" is called a "derived demand"
  6. what causes an increase in demand for labor
  7. the relation between hiring additional workers and the marginal cost
  8. calculating overall costs (total cost and average variable cost) based on wages

Review the above list now. How many of the above 8 topics do you know well enough to answer a question about them correctly? Let's briefly review each of these concepts so you can maximize your score on this big part of the exam.

1. "the impact of an improvement in technology on the production by a firm"

If technology improves, as in helpful new inventions or advances in communication (like the internet), then this helps shift the Production Possibilities Frontier (Curve) outward. A firm can produce more output now. So an improvement in technology enables a firm to increase its output or its supply to the market.

2. "adjusting inputs to minimize the overall cost at a constant level of output"

How does a firm adjust its inputs (e.g., workers or equipment) so that the firm reaches its lowest possible overall cost? By making sure that the firm is getting the most for each input. In other words, the firm makes sure that each input is producing the most marginal product per dollar spent on that input. If one worker is producing more than another worker, and both are being paid the same, then the owner has not lowered his costs to a minimum. He could fire the lazy worker and hire a part-time worker like his good one, and then produce the same output at less cost.
Summarizing the above, a firm minimizes its overall costs by making sure the marginal product per cost for each input is equal. If one input (e.g., one worker) is producing more marginal product per cost than another, then the overall costs are not minimized. The unproductive worker is wasting the firm's money.

3. "the effect of the minimum wage on the competition for labor"

Increasing the minimum wage has the effect of increasing unemployment. Workers who have jobs make more money when the minimum wage is increased, but firms can afford to hire fewer people. The number of the unemployed (the people who cannot get jobs) increases when the minimum wage is increased.
Also, although this will never be asked on a CLEP exam, raising the minimum wage causes more high school students to drop out and pursue jobs rather than stay in school, which would enable them to obtain higher-paying jobs in the future.
Sometimes the CLEP exam will twist the question about minimum wage to obscure its harmful effect, by asking what happens when the labor supply increases when there already is a minimum wage. This makes it look like the fault is an increase in the labor supply rather than the minimum wage law. The correct answer is the same in both cases: unemployment increases.

4. "comparing the cost of an input (usually labor) relative to the additional revenue that results"

This type of question probes how a firm increases its inputs in relation to the additional revenue that results from such an increase. The key here is to be very careful and very logical. A firm will increase an input (such as labor) until the value of the marginal product of that input equals the marginal cost of that input. Read that sentence over and over until you understand it. It simply means that the firm will equate the marginal cost of the additional input (such as an additional worker) to the marginal revenue that the additional input produces.
Often students miss this type of question because they are not careful to compare dollars to dollars. If you have the marginal cost in terms of dollars (such as a wage rage for the additional worker), then you need to equate it to the marginal value of the marginal product of the labor (value is in dollar units), not the marginal product itself (which is a unit quantity).

5. "why a firm's "demand for labor" is called a "derived demand"

This is an easy point to pick up on an exam. A firm's demand for an input (such as labor) is called a "derived demand" because it depends on the demand for the goods produced by that input. For example, a restaurant's demand for waitresses is entirely dependent on the public's demand to be served at the restaurant. If there is no public demand to be waited on at the restaurant, then the restaurant (the firm) has no demand for waitresses!

6. "what causes an increase in demand for labor"

This is another easy issue, similar to the prior one above. If the public demand for the product of the labor increases, then there is an increase in demand for the labor itself. If more people want to eat McDonald's hamburgers, then there is more demand for workers to make McDonald's hamburgers.
How do we know when the demand by the public for the product of certain labor increases? When the price of the good or service produced by the labor increases. When that price goes up, then there is an increase in demand for the workers who make that good or service.

7. "the relation between hiring additional workers and the marginal cost"

This is a more challenging issue that requires two steps rather than one in order to answer correctly. Marginal cost is additional cost to a firm for making one more unit. It is measured in dollars, not in units. Making sure you have the right measure (dollars or units) for your answer will help you reduce mistakes. The answer for any question about marginal cost must be in dollars (or cents) per unit.
Accordingly, if you are told how many additional units are produced by each additional worker, then calculating the marginal cost requires dividing the cost of the additional worker by the additional number of units he produces. The more units an additional worker produces, the lower the marginal cost that results from adding that worker.
Example: suppose a firm hires Tom and sees the output increase by 20 units, and then hires Mary at the same wage and sees the output increase by 15 units. When is the marginal cost of the firm the lowest? After it hires Tom, but before it hires Mary. That's because the marginal cost of hiring Tom is his wages divided by 20, while the marginal cost of hiring Mary is the same wage divided by 15. A wage divided by 20 is less than the same wage divided by 15, so the marginal cost to the firm after hiring Tom is less than after hiring Mary.

8. "calculating overall costs (total cost and average variable cost) based on wages"

The key here is simply to be careful in doing the calculations, and then double-check your answer. You need to be sure you are using the correct level of output before you calculate the total cost (TC) and average variable cost (AVC) at that level of output. To find the total cost, add the fixed cost (FC) to the variable cost (the variable cost is usually the labor cost: total wages times the number of workers), for a given level of output. Then, to find the average variable cost, find the total variable cost (TVC=TC-FC) and divide by that level of output.
Example: a firm can produce 100 units with 5 workers and 200 units with 10 workers. Its fixed cost is $50 and its wage rate is $20 per worker. What is its total cost and average variable cost to produce 100 units?
Answer: notice first that the question asks about the costs at 100 units in output, not 200 units. Total cost at 100 units is the fixed cost ($50) plus the labor cost ($20 times 5 workers, or $100), for a total of $150. The average variable cost is the total cost ($150) minus the fixed cost ($50), divided by the output (100), for a total of $1 per unit.

Master the above eight issues, and you'll convert 10% of the exam from wrong answers to correct ones. That could enable you to earn college credit.

Review: Different Types of Markets

You instructor wonders what topic will maximize our marginal utility next. About 20% of the exam is devoted to questions about different types of markets, ranging from the most advantageous for the public (perfect competition) to the least advantageous for the public (monopoly). That's a large chunk of questions, and with some extra review here students can convert potentially wrong answers into correct ones.

The key to answering these questions correctly is to realize that the more competition there is, the lower the price of the goods and services and the lower the profits for the firms. Some of these questions are special cases and should simply be memorized: a cartel is an oligopoly that illegally agrees to fix (set) its prices, and an oligopoly is an industry where just a few firms dominate the market. When given a grid about where an oligopoly ends up selling its goods (its Nash Equilibrium), the answer is always symmetric (all firms sell at the same price) and usually not the highest price that a monopoly could sell at.

The monopoly questions look harder than they really are. The monopolist sets his price higher than marginal cost, which would be the optimal price from the standpoint of the public (or government). Instead, the monopolist price sets his price where marginal revenue equals marginal cost (MR=MC). If shown a graph, you may have to find the quantity where MR=MC, and then find the corresponding price on the demand curve. Notice that a monopolist has no supply curve, because a supply curve represents many firms in an industry and a monopolist is the only firm in the industry.

There can be general questions about these markets. A perfectly competitive market uses resources in a perfectly efficient way. At the other end of the spectrum, a monopoly uses resources the least efficiently of all. Its high pricing causes a huge social loss ("deadweight loss") by eliminating consumer surplus. The monopoly reduces output in order to cause a scarcity that increases the price to an artificially high level. This is bad for everyone, except the owner of the monopoly, who enriches himself. This is how Bill Gates became the wealthiest person in the world.

Here is a puzzle to leave you with. What is the impact on quantity of a price ceiling in a competitive industry compared to a price ceiling in a monopoly? In which one (competitive v. monopoly) might a clever price ceiling actually increase quantity? Think about it, and learn to ask yourself questions like this in order to master economics. The answer is in this footnote.[2]

Be sure to spend time on the review sections in the prior lectures for more information about this and other topics on the exams.

Review: Public Goods

A public good is a good which is nonexcludable and nondepletable. The first condition means that it is impossible to exclude consumers from partaking in the good, and the second condition means that one consumer's consumption of the good does not prevent others from consuming it.

Explained another way, a public good is available to all such that consumption by one person does not reduce its availability to others. An example of a public good is national defense, as it protects everyone and its benefits to one person do not diminish its benefits to others.

Other examples of public goods are law enforcement (protection by the police), public fireworks, clear air, street lights, radio and television transmissions, lighthouses, and some inventions. Some of these examples, such as lighthouses, are contested as to whether they must be a public good, as it is possible to charge ships port fees to pay for them. Also, while radio and television transmissions are available to all to receive them, it does cost money to buy radios and television sets, so these are not truly public goods either.

Liberals like to emphasize the concept of public goods on exams in order to support the argument for more government. Under this view public goods represent market failure and the need for government services supported by taxes.

Final Tips on Test-taking in Economics

Good test-taking techniques are particularly important to doing well on an economics exam. Simple questions are often intentionally disguised as something more complicated. It is easy to become confused and misguided in analyzing economic issues. 99% of the public would say that we would be better off if Congress put a price ceiling or cap on gasoline at $1 a gallon. It takes a bit more thought to realize that massive shortages would result, and we would all have to waste hours each week waiting in line for gasoline. Some who really need gas in hurry, such as people trying to take someone to a hospital, may not be able to obtain gas in time.

The ability to eliminate wrong answers can help. Let’s try the elimination technique on these questions:

Question: Consider the poverty-level of income for a family of four in America. Which of the following can be said about how the government defines this specific income level?

(A) It helps determine who is eligible for Social Security benefits.
(B) It decreases when there is an increase in welfare benefits.
(C) It proves that 50% of Americans live in poverty.
(D) It is determined by tripling the cost of a nutritionally adequate diet by three.
(E) Government does not adjust this number due to changes in the cost of living (inflation).

Virtually none of you would know the answer to this question at first glance. This question is not really appropriate for a "micro"-economics exam ("micro"-economics concerns individual buying and selling decisions), but CLEP asks it anyway. Questions about poverty, gaps between the rich and poor, and government programs are always favorites among liberal educators. You will see many more questions about these issues than about the invisible hand or the creation of wealth.

So what do we do when faced with this question? Simply give up? Move to the next question and hope it is easier? Blindly guess at an answer? None of the above.

We can narrow the choices, and thereby reduce our risk of error, by eliminating wrong answers. Basic economic principles (or common sense) serve as our guide.

Let’s start with choice (C). Think about it: is half of our nation living in poverty? What would that mean for elections? Who would pay to run government? If we called half of us "poor", then what word would be use for the really poor? Choice (C) can't be true. Using common sense, we can eliminate this answer.

Let’s turn to choice (E). Why wouldn’t it be adjusted? Poverty must be relative to the cost of living. If the cost of living doubled, then the numbers in poverty would increase greatly. But failure to adjust for the cost of living would miss that effect. Again, common sense leads us to eliminate this answer.

Next we can turn to choice (A). That doesn't work either, because everyone who pays into Social Security has a right to receive benefits when they grow old, regardless of whether they are rich or poor. “Social security” is not “security only if you’re poor.” We can eliminate this choice.

We’re left with only two possibilities: (B) and (D). Realize that has increased our odds of choosing the right answer to 50% now. If you took the CLEP and at least narrowed every difficult question down to two choices, then you would likely pass the test. How do we next make our best choice among these final two options?

Option (D) seems to have the right amount of detail, and fits the question well grammatically. In contrast, Option (B) does not fit the question as well or make as much sense (definition of what the poverty level is should not change based on distributing some benefits). Even if you had no idea between (B) and (D), (D) is a better fit. It’s our best guess. (D), indeed, is correct.

It helps to choose an answer that gives the most meaning to the purpose of the question. The purpose of this question is to ask about how poverty-level income is calculated. Answer (D) most directly furthers that goal. It makes for a good guess if you did not otherwise know. You won’t always be able to guess the right answers, but by increasing your chances you can significantly increase your overall score.

Let’s try one more CLEP-inspired question, this time relating to labor:

Question: Assume a perfectly competitive market for both inputs and output. If capital is fixed and the price for the output increases, then a firm in the short run will increase its production by which of the following ways:

(A) increase capital until P=MR
(B) increase labor until the value of the marginal product for workers equals the wage rate
(C) increase capital until its average product equals the price of the additional capital
(D) increase labor until its marginal product equals the wage rate
(E) increase labor until the ratio of the price of the output to labor's marginal product equals the wage rate

This type of question benefits from being reread. “Capital is fixed,” according to the question. So capital cannot be increased. Answers (A) and (C) can be eliminated that easily. Many students sometimes miss the obvious on economics exams. They fail to read and understand the question.

Only labor can be increased, which is possible under answers (B), (D) and (E). We've improved our odds of success to a 33% chance. Those are good odds on a difficult question like this. But we can improve our chances even more.

(B) and (D) look similar so let’s turn to (E) first. The “marginal product of labor” is the additional units (“product”) produced due to an additional unit of labor. Remember “MP”? The term does not include “revenue” or “price”, so it only gives you the quantity. We need to multiply that quantity by product price to obtain revenue, what the firm owner cares the most about. Choice (E) makes no sense by dividing terms that should be multiplied together. We can eliminate it.

Back to (B) and (D). The only difference between the two is the term “value of” in (B). Think about what “marginal product” is. It is a quantity, not a dollar amount. Yet we are comparing it to “wage rate,” which would be in dollars. We need to insert “value of” to convert a quantity into equivalent dollars. (B) is must be the correct choice because it compares dollars to dollars, while choice (D) does not.

The key to good test-taking, particularly on economics exams, is to make sure you fully understand each question before trying to answer it.

CLEP Exam Bias Concerning Regulation and Efficiency

There are only two or three questions (out of nearly 100) on the CLEP exam that have biased answers. They concern regulation and efficiency. You can expect to see one or two CLEP questions where the correct answer is to support government regulation against pollution. The best way to think about pollution is in terms of its "negative externality," but the CLEP exam writers cast the issue in terms of an efficient use of resources. Under this view, pollution is inefficient because it results in inefficient harm to the environment. Laws against pollution supposedly increase efficiency by preventing harm to the "resource" of the environment. These regulations that prohibit pollution cause less output but supposedly ensure a more efficient use of environmental resources.

While most of us support a cleaner environment, efficiency is usually associated with greater output, not less output. Government regulations almost never improve efficiency; the free market does that best without government interference. That said, you can pick up one or two easy points on the CLEP exam by assuming that environmental regulation increases efficiency by protecting the "resource" of the environment for its better uses.

When companies are allowed to pollute without paying for it, their marginal cost (MC) is artificially lower than it should be. These companies are avoiding the cost of their own pollution. A lower MC means they will produce more goods than if their MC were higher. The term “marginal social cost” is used by economists to represent the true cost of their activities, including the cost of their pollution. Because companies produce more than they would if they had to pay for the cost of their pollution, some consider this to be inefficient. On the CLEP exam, it takes regulation to make it efficient by preventing the companies from putting out the pollution.

You might wonder what a conservative, free market approach to reducing negative externalities (like pollution) would be. One approach would be to require full disclosure to the public by companies of their negative externalities, so that the public could stop buying the companies' products if the public were concerned about the negative externalities. This would enable the free market to solve this problem in an efficient way.

Outside the topic of government regulation on the CLEP exam, there are no biased answers. Do not choose one answer instead of another for reasons of bias except in one or two rare cases.

Other Questions Concerning Government

In areas unrelated to pollution, government establishes price floors, supports and ceilings. Do we all recall the differences? Price “ceilings” (or controls) are the easiest: the government says that the good cannot be sold for a higher price. Just as you cannot reach above your ceiling, the price is prohibited from rising above the ceiling that the government sets for it. It would be requiring gas to be sold for no more than $1.50, for example. The quantity supplied will decrease (move down the supply curve), while the quantity demanded will increase (move up the demand curve). Shortages result from price ceilings.

What is a price floor? Just the opposite of a ceiling. We cannot reach below the floor, and a price floor prevents the price from falling below a certain level. It would be a government law that prohibited milk from selling for less than $2 a gallon, for example. It would be intended to help the suppliers, such as dairy farmers. What happens when government imposes a price floor? There is a surplus of the good, as supply exceeds demand.

Now, how about a price support? That occurs when the government buys large quantities of good, such food, at prices higher than the competitive equilibrium. The government does this to “support” a higher price, instead of passing a law to require a higher price. A price support is designed to help the firms producing the goods, such as farmers. The rationale is that farmers are politically important and that pure competition is too brutal on their business and their lives, and also that foreign countries engage in the same practices. The effect of a “price support” is similar to a price floor: it creates a surplus of the good when the support is above the equilibrium price

When government regulates labor, the analysis is similar to its regulation of price. A “price floor” is created by the minimum wage: the buyer (an employer) must pay at least a certain amount for a service (labor). The minimum wage creates an oversupply of the service: too many workers. Not all of them will be able to obtain jobs at a wage higher than equilibrium. Unemployment results from a minimum wage that is higher than the equilibrium wage.

Final Comments

You have all learned a great deal of material in this course, information that will help you the rest of your lives. The insights and powerful concepts covered by this course can yield greater and greater benefits the more you think about them. Every week I see still something new and helpful in concepts taught in this course. Many students say that this is the best course they took from me, among other helpful courses. Use this course for your benefit.

If there is one unifying theme to this course, then I suggest it is summarized in Jesus's Parable of the Talents. Be productive, and God can multiply the benefits of your work. If you reach out, if you do more, if you make good use of your time, if you maximize your efficiency, if you consider the opportunity costs, and if you increase your output, then you give God more to work with. But if you bury your talents in the ground or if you are like the tree that does not bear fruit, then you give God less for His purpose.

Carpe diem. And be the good that drives out the bad as we discussed in connection with Gresham's Law.

Assignment

Read this lecture and study for the final exam, which will be the first week in June. It will be 30 multiple-choice questions, similar in format to the quizzes.

References

  1. "Austrian economics" is an approach to economics that emphasizes the free markets, minimizing governmental interference, respecting private property rights, and promoting gold as a monetary standard. Beware, however, that Austrian economics organizations are often more libertarian than conservative on social issues, and Austrian economics itself has been slow in incorporating new economic insights such as the Coase theorem.
  2. A price ceiling is a maximum price limitation, just as a real ceiling in a house limits the height. A perfectly competitive industry is already selling at its maximum output, so a price ceiling can't help there. But a monopoly increases its price by reducing its output. If a price ceiling is imposed against a monopoly, then it must reduce its price and increase its output, which benefits the public.