Sustainable Economics
lecture notes and slides
lecture notes and slides
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 119 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Agriculture |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 05.01.2022 / 15.01.2022 |
Lien de web |
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differences in willingness to pay are due to
- preferences and taste
- busget constraint
equation consumer surplus
consumer surplus = willigness to pay - price actually paid
the effect of a decrease in price on the consumer surplus
- additional consumer surplus for initial consumers
- consumer surplus to new consumers
equation producer surplus
producer surplus = price - cost
what is producer surplus
- economic welfare of seller
- relative to supply curve
effect of an increase in price on producer surplus
- additional producer surplus to initial producers
- producer surplus to new producers
total surplus: 2 equations
- consumer surplus + producer surplus
- value to buyer - value to seller
efficient market and total surplus
- efficiency is the resource allocation that maximizes the surplus of all society members
- equilibrium quantity: for same price, consumers have higher utility than what they pay and producer's production cost are lower than the sellin price
3 insights on market outcomes
- free market allocate goods to buyers who value them the most (measured by willigness to pay)
- free markets allocate demand to sellers who produce at least costs
- free markets produce quantity of goods maximizing the sum of consumer and producer surplus
equilibrium quantity and total surplus
euqilibrium quantity: when the additional gain of utility (value to buyers) is as high as the production costs (cost to sellers)
critics to efficiency of equilibrium quantity
- some people cannot afford certain goods
- some producers cannot afford such low production prices
- neglects social benefits of some production activities
- neglects environmental and social cost
- relies on perfect competition
tax revenue
size of tax multiplied by quantity sold
effect of tax on welfare
- taxation on buyers reduces producer surplus
- less quantity, lower price
- taxation on sellers reduces consumer surplus
- less quantity, higher price
deadweight loss
- the tax revenue is not lost (spent on society), but a part of the tax is lost
- triangle btw tax revenue and equilibrium
objections to deadweight loss
- can be compensated by social benefits from the tax spending
- if social externalities were considered in supply curve, the equilibrium would shift left -> no loss
- tax corrects market signal to a social optimal one
budget constraint
limit on consumption bundels that a consumer can afford
depends on income and prices of goods
rate at which consumer can trade on good for the other
represented on slope of budget constraint line
relative price of two goods
equation for slope of budget contraint
- price of good 1 ÷ price of good 2
steep slope: you need to give up less of good 1 for good 2/ flatter slope: you need to give up more
changes in budget constraint
- change in income: parallel shift
- change in price: line rotates around axis intercept
indifference curve
shows consumption bundels that give the consumer the same level of satisfaction (utility)
rate at whcih consumer is willing to trade a good for another
marginal rate of substitution
slope of the indifference curve
bend depends on substituability of the goods
(amount of a good that consumer requires as compensation to give up a good for another)
4 properties of indifference curves
- higher indifference curves are preferred to lower ones
- indifference curves are downward sloping
- indifference curves do not cross
- indifference curves are convex and non-linear
indifference curves of substitutes and perfect complements
- substitutes: curve is linear (a line)
- complements: vertical and horizontal line, parallel to both axis ex. 1 car and 4 tires
consumer optimum
point where the highest indifference curve and budget constraint are tangent
relative price = marginal rate of substitution
how does change in income affect consumer's choice?
an increase in income shifts budget contraint outward. the consumer can choose combination of goods on a higher indifference curve
not necessarily same increase for both goods, depends on shape of curve
how does change in income affect consumer's choice? for normal goods
- consumer buys more of good 1 and 2 when income rises
how does change in income affect consumer's choice? for inferior goods
- consumers buys more of good 1 (normal good) when income rises, but less of good 2 (inferior good)
how changes in price affect consumer's choice
- fall in price of good 1 rotates budget constraint outward and changes its slope
- steeper slope for a increase in price, flatter slope for an decrease in price
- reach higher indifference curve for decrease in price
- increases consumption of good 1 (which got cheaper) but decreases consumption of good 2 (became relatively more expensive)
income effect
moves consumer to a higher or lower indifference curve
positive when the indifference curve is higher
substitution effect
moves consumer along the indifference curve to a point with a different marginal rate of substitution
negative when the consumption of a good 2 decreases because the price of good 1 decreases
can be compensated by positive income effect to some degree
what has the demand curve to do with the budget constraint and indifference curve?
the demand curve is derived from these 2 more complex curves
it is a summary of the optimal decisions resulting from budget constraint and indifference curve
how to bring more sustainable consumer choices (4)?
- changes in relative prices (taxing or subsidizing)
- ban dirty goods
- tax income
- change preferences
limitations of indifference curve
- saturation effect: additional utility decreases the more you consume
- possible disutility
- basic needs are not substituable, utility stays the same
- limits to rationality
- concept of utility is highly subjective and hard to measure
- environmental and social costs are not reflected in prices
- affordability concerns
REMM hypothesis
- resourceful evaluating maximizing man
- homo oeconomicus: acts rationally on basis of available information for utility maximization
- rational
- self interested
- acts according to restrictions and incentives
- has fixed preferences
- has full information
- not a normative but a descriptive model
3 critics to REMM
- bounded rationality: limited cognitive capacity
- emotions: decisions influences by envy, fear, greed etc
- moral values: normative conceptions about good and bad, fair and unfair
maximizing utility vs satisficing
- maximizing utility: keep on searching until reaching option w highest utility
- satisficing: stop searching for options once your goal is reached
8 anomalies
- utility maximization leads to wrong decisions
- framing (presentation of data)
- overestimation of abilities
- opportunity cost anomaly (cost of not chosing option)
- hindsight bias (overestimate ability to foresee outcome)
- anchoring (rely on 1st info or benchmark)
- prospect theory (gains and losses valued differently)
- sunk costs (cannot be recovered)
neuroeconomics
emotions and reward system of brain influence our behavior
ex advertisement, brands, investment, auction
experimental economics
human behavior tested in lab experiments
ECR theory
- equity, reciprocity, competition theory
- people don't only derive utility from material goods but also from fair shares