Principles of Microeconomics (extension)
Extension to register of Roland Schenkel Fall 2019, @D-MTEC, Prof. Filippini
Extension to register of Roland Schenkel Fall 2019, @D-MTEC, Prof. Filippini
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 47 |
---|---|
Language | English |
Category | Micro-Economics |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 29.12.2019 / 29.12.2019 |
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Equity principles of taxation
- Benefits principle: people should pay taxes based on the benefits they receive from government services (e.g. tax on petrol --> used to finance road system)
- Ability-to-pay principle: people should pay taxes based on their ability to shoulder the burden
vertical equity: people with greater ability to pay should pay more
horizontal equity. people with similar ability to pay should pay the same, regardless of their place of residence
How does a monopoly set its quantity and price
- Quantity where MR=MC
- Price according to demand curve
\(P>MR=MC\)
Ways a government can act towards a monopoly
- Classical monopoly: making monopolized industry more competitive (e.g. anti-trust law)
- Natural monopoly: regulating behavior of monopoly (e.g. price regulation)
- Do nothing at all if market failure is small compared to government failure that would arise when introducing a policy
Nash equilibrium
Situation in economy where no competitor can improve its market position by deviating from its strategy. Arises when interacting actors choose their best strategy given the strategies that all other actors have chosen.
Video with ice cream sellers at beach --> both are in the middle of the beach, back on back
Cooporative vs. non-cooperative behavior of oligopolists
- Cooperative behavior: oligopolists may agree on a monopoly outcome by...
Collusion: agreement among firms about quantity & price
Cartel: organization of firms deciding to coordinate their activities explicitly - Non-cooperative behavior: oligopolists do not know exactly how competitors will (re)act --> game theory
Comparative advantage and its assumptions
In a two-good economy, the producer who has the smaller opporunity cost in producing a good is said to have a comparative advantage --> he will produce & export the good
Assumptions:
- free trade
- perfect competition
- no tariffs
- constant costs
- no economies of scale
New trade theory
Theory by Krugman that overcomes assumptions of comparative advantage by including...
- increasing return to scale
- network effects
- product differentiation
- imperfect competition
Welfare conclusion on the effect of trade policies can be different