1. For economics, the "movements" and "shifts" in relation to the supply and demand curves represent very different market phenomena:
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1. For economics, the "movements" and "shifts" in relation to the supply and demand curves represent very different market phenomena:
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1. Disequilibrium
occurs whenever the price or quantity is
not equal to P* or Q*.
1. Excess Supply
If the price is set too high, excess supply will be created within the economy
and there will be allocative inefficiency.
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2.
At price P1 the quantity of goods that the producers wish to supply is
indicated by Q2. At P1, however, the quantity that the consumers want to
consume is at Q1, a quantity much less than Q2. Because Q2 is greater than Q1,
too much is being produced and too little is being consumed. The suppliers are
trying to produce more goods, which they hope to sell to increase profits, but
those consuming the goods will find the product less attractive and purchase
less because the price is too high.
2. Excess Demand
Excess demand is created when price is set below the equilibrium price. Because
the price is so low, too many consumers want the good while producers are not
making enough of it.
1. When supply and demand are equal (i.e. when the supply function and demand function intersect) the economy is said to be at equilibrium. At this point, the allocation of goods is at its most efficient because the amount of goods being supplied is exactly the same as the amount of goods being demanded. Thus, everyone (individuals, firms, or countries) is satisfied with the current economic condition. At the given price, suppliers are selling all the goods that they have produced and consumers are getting all the goods that they are demanding.
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Now that we know the laws of supply and demand, let's turn to an example to show how supply and demand affect price.
Unlike the demand relationship, however, the supply relationship is a factor of time. Time is important to supply because suppliers must, but cannot always, react quickly to a change in demand or price. So it is important to try and determine whether a price change that is caused by demand will be temporary or permanent.
Like the law of demand, the law of supply demonstrates the quantities that will be sold at a certain price. But unlike the law of demand, the supply relationship shows an upward slope. This means that the higher the price, the higher the quantity supplied. Producers supply more at a higher price because selling a higher quantity at a higher price increases revenue.
The law of demand states that, if all other factors remain equal, the higher the price of a good, the less people will demand that good. In other words, the higher the price, the lower the quantity demanded. The amount of a good that buyers purchase at a higher price is less because as the price of a good goes up, so does the opportunity cost of buying that good. As a result, people will naturally avoid buying a product that will force them to forgo the consumption of something else they value more. The chart below shows that the curve is a downward slope.
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The production possibilities schedule indicates that the opportunity cost of shed production increases as more sheds are produced. At the top of the schedule, the opportunity cost of the first shed is 5 dozen crab puffs. At the bottom of the schedule the opportunity cost of the tenth shed is 200 dozen crab puffs.
The reason for this pattern rests with the law of increasing opportunity cost, one of
the more important principles studied in economics. The law of increasing
opportunity cost states that the opportunity cost of producing a good increases
as more of the good is produced.
The law of increasing opportunity cost results
due to the third rule of inequality, which in this
case means that all resources are not created equal.
Opportunity cost is measured by the slope of the production possibilities curve. In particular, the slope of the production possibilities curve is the opportunity cost of the good measured on the horizontal axis, which in this example is storage sheds. This production possibilities curve presents opportunity cost values for segments between each pair of points. The opportunity cost of producing the first shed, moving from point A to point B is the schedule is 5 dozen crab puffs (or -5). The slope of the production possibilities curve between points A and B is also -5.
Alfred Marshall provides a still widely-cited definition in his textbook Principles of Economics (1890) that extends analysis beyond wealth and from the societal to the macroeconomic level:
"Economics
is a study of man's action in the ordinary business of life it inquires how he
gets his income and how he uses it. It examines that part of individual and
social actions which is mostly closely connected with the attainment and with
the use of material requisites of well being. Thus economics is on one side a
study of wealth and on the other and important side a part of the study of man
".
From
the definition of economics by Alfred Marshall, we see that he lays emphasizes
on the below points.
1.
Study of an ordinary man: According to Alfred Marshall, economics is that
study of an ordinary man who lives in society. It is not concerned with the
lives of only rich persons or who is cut away from the society. Its subject
matter is a particular aspect of human behaviour i.e. earning and spending of
incomes for the normal material needs of human beings.
2. Economics is not a useless study
of wealth:
Economics does not regard wealth as the be-all and end-all of economics
activities wealth is not of primary importance. It is earned only for promoting
human welfare economics is studied to analyze the causes of material prosperity
of individuals and nations.
3. Economics is a social science: It does not study the behaviour of
isolated individuals but the actions of persons living in society. When people
live together they interact and cooperate to work at firms, factories, shop and
offices to produce and exchange goods or services. The problems about these
activities are studied in economics.
4. Study of material welfare: According to Alfred Marshall,
economics studies only material requisites of well being or causes of material
welfare. It is cleared from this definition that it is materialistic aspect and
ignores non-material aspects. Alfred Marshall stressed that the man’s behaviour
and activities to produce and consume maximum number of goods and services are
the main object of study wealth is not an end or final aim, but only a means to
achieve a higher objective of welfare.
The Difference between Perfectly Competitive market & monopoly Market are given Below:
Perfectly Competitive market |
Monopoly Market |
1. Perfectly Competitive market is the market in
which there is a large number of buyers and sellers. The goods sold in this
market are identical. A single price prevails in the market |
1. Monopoly is a type of imperfect market.
The number of sellers is one but the number of buyers is many. A monopolist
is a price-maker. In fact monopoly is the opposite of perfect competition. |
2. The average revenue (price) curve under
perfect competition is a horizontal straight line parallel to
OX-axis |
2. The average revenue curve under monopoly
slopes downward and its corresponding marginal revenue curve lie below the
average revenue curve |
3.under perfect competition price
equals marginal cost at the equilibrium output |
3. under monopoly equilibrium price is greater
than marginal cost |
4. Under perfect competition marginal revenue is
the same as average revenue at all levels of output |
4. Under monopoly both the AR and MR curve slope
downward and MR curve lies below AR curve. Thus average revenue is greater
than marginal revenue at all levels of output |
5. A competitive firm makes only normal profit in
the long run |
5. monopolist can make super normal profits even
in the long run |
6. a competitive firm earns only normal profit |
6. monopoly firm continues earning
supernormal profits |
7. A perfectly competitive Market Cannot
discriminate prices for his product. |
7. A monopolist can discriminate prices for
his product. |
8. a competitive firm cannot change
different prices from different buyers . |
8. Elastic ties of demand are different in
different markets. |
An economy can focus on producing all of the goods and services it needs to function, but this may lead to an inefficient allocation of resources and hinder future growth. By using specialization, a country can concentrate on the production of one thing that it can do best, rather than dividing up its resources.
For example, let's look at a hypothetical world that has only two countries (Country
A and Country B) and two products (cars and cotton). Each country can make cars
and/or cotton. Now suppose that Country A has very little fertile land and an
abundance of steel for car production. Country B, on the other hand, has an
abundance of fertile land but very little steel. If Country A were to try to
produce both cars and cotton, it would need to divide up its resources. Because
it requires a lot of effort to produce cotton by irrigating the land, Country A
would have to sacrifice producing cars. The opportunity cost of producing both
cars and cotton is high for Country A, which will have to give up a lot of
capital in order to produce both. Similarly, for Country B, the opportunity
cost of producing both products is high because the effort required to produce
cars is greater than that of producing cotton.
Each country can produce one of the products more efficiently (at a lower cost)
than the other. Country A, which has an abundance of steel, would need to give
up more cars than Country B would to produce the same amount of cotton. Country
B would need to give up more cotton than Country A to produce the same amount
of cars. Therefore, County A has a comparative
advantage over Country B in the production of cars, and Country B has a
comparative advantage over Country A in the production of cotton.
Now let's say that both countries (A and B) specialize in producing the goods
with which they have a comparative advantage. If they trade the goods that they
produce for other goods in which they don't have a comparative advantage, both
countries will be able to enjoy both products at a lower opportunity cost.
Furthermore, each country will be exchanging the best product it can make for
another good or service that is the best that the other country can produce.
Specialization and trade also works when several different countries are
involved. For example, if Country C specializes in the production of corn, it
can trade its corn for cars from Country A and cotton from Country B.
Determining how countries exchange goods produced by a comparative advantage
("the best for the best") is the backbone of international trade
theory. This method of exchange is considered an optimal allocation of
resources, whereby economies, in theory, will no longer be lacking anything
that they need. Like opportunity cost, specialization and comparative advantage
also apply to the way in which individuals interact within an economy.
Absolute Advantage
Sometimes a country or an
individual can produce more than another country, even though countries both
have the same amount of inputs. For example, Country A may have a technological
advantage that, with the same amount of inputs (arable land, steel, labor),
enables the country to manufacture more of both cars and cotton than Country B.
A country that can produce more of both goods is said to have an absolute
advantage. Better quality resources can give a country an absolute
advantage as can a higher level of education and overall technological
advancement. It is not possible, however, for a country to have a comparative
advantage in everything that it produces, so it will always be able to benefit
from trade.
Opportunity cost is the value of what is foregone in order to have something else. This value is unique for each individual. You may, for instance, forgo ice cream in order to have an extra helping of mashed potatoes. For you, the mashed potatoes have a greater value than dessert. But you can always change your mind in the future because there may be some instances when the mashed potatoes are just not as attractive as the ice cream. The opportunity cost of an individual's decisions, therefore, is determined by his or her needs, wants, time and resources (income).
Opportunity cost refers to the
value forgone in order to make one particular investment instead of another.For
example, let's assume you have $15,000 that you could either invest in Company
XYZ stock or put toward a graduate degree. You choose
the stock. The opportunity cost in this situation is the increased lifetime earnings that may have resulted from
getting the graduate degree -- that is, you choose to forgo the increase in
earnings when you use the money to buy stock instead.
Here's another example. Let's say you have
$15,000 and your choice is to either buy shares of Company XYZ or leave the money
in a CD that earns only 5% per year. If the Company XYZ stock returns
10%, you've benefited from your decision because the alternative would have
been less profitable. However, if Company XYZ returns 2% when you could have
had 5% from the CD, then your opportunity cost is (5% - 2% = 3%).
Under the field of macroeconomics, the production possibility frontier (PPF) represents the point at which an economy is most efficiently producing its goods and services and, therefore, allocating its resources in the best way possible. If the economy is not producing the quantities indicated by the PPF, resources are being managed inefficiently and the production of society will dwindle. The production possibility frontier shows there are limits to production, so an economy, to achieve efficiency, must decide what combination of goods and services can be produced.
The monetary value of finished goods and services produced by a country's citizens, whether overseas or resident, in the time period being measured (i.e., the gross national product, or GNP) minus the amount of GNP required to purchase new goods to maintain existing stock (i.e., depreciation).
Alternatively, net national product (NNP) can be calculated as total payroll compensation + net indirect tax on current production + operating surpluses.
In other words, NNP is the amount of goods that can be consumed within a nation each year without reducing the amount that can be consumed in following years.
The Gross national income (GNI) consists of: the personal consumption expenditure, the gross private investment, the government consumption expenditures, the net income from assets abroad (net income receipts), and the gross exports of goods and services, after deducting two components: the gross imports of goods and services, and the indirect business taxes. The GNI is similar to the gross national product (GNP), except that in measuring the GNP one does not deduct the indirect business taxes.
A measure of the wealth earned by nations through
economic activites all around the world.
Gross National Income comprises the total value
of goods and services produced within a country (i.e. its Gross Domestic
Product), together with its income received from other countries (notably
interest and dividends), less similar payments made to other countries. Also known
as GNP.
It can be calculated as follows :
GNI = Gross Domestic Product + Net property
income from abroad.
GDP |
GNP |
|
Stands
for: |
Gross
Domestic Product |
Gross
National Product |
Definition: |
An
estimated value of the total worth of a country’s production and services, on
its land, by its nationals and foreigners, calculated over the course on one
year |
An
estimated value of the total worth of production and services, by citizens of
a country, on its land or on foreign land, calculated over the course on one
year |
Formula
for Calculation: |
GDP
= consumption + investment + (government spending) +
(exports − imports) |
GNP
= GDP + NR (Net income inflow from assets abroad or Net Income Receipts) - NP
(Net payment outflow to foreign assets) |
Uses: |
Business,
Economic Forecasting |
Business,
Economic Forecasting |
Application
(Context in which these terms are used): |
To
see the strength of a country’s local economy |
To
see how the nationals of a country are doing economically |
Layman
Usage: |
Total
value of products & Services produced within the territorial
boundary of a country |
Total
value of Goods and Services produced by all nationals of a country (whether
within or outside the country) |
Country
with Highest Per Capita (US$): |
Luxembourg
($87,400) |
Luxembourg
($45,360) |
Country
with Lowest Per Capita (US$): |
Liberia
($16) |
Mozambique
($80) |
Country
with Highest (Cumulative): |
USA
($13.06 Trillion in 2006) |
USA
(~ $11.5 Trillion in 2005) |
Supply is the amount of commodity that is offered for sale. Supply schedule shows the amounts of a product that producers are willing and able to make available for sale at each of a series of possible prices during a specific period.
Supply
depends on technology, the prices of the inputs necessary to produce the
commodity, tax and subsidy, and for agricultural commodities, climate and
weather conditions.