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Micro Economic Theory

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Cannot do comparative statics due to changes in endogenous variables ... Comparative Statics procedures. Solve for the optimal x ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Micro Economic Theory


1
Micro Economic Theory
  • What does it do?

2
Introduction to class
  • What is Micro Economic Theory?
  • The scientific method
  • Assertions, Test conditions, Predictions
  • The neo-classical marginalist paradigm

3
What is Micro Economic Theory?
  • Framework for predicting and analysing effects on
    market prices, market quantities, and efficiency
    of markets
  • Elements of the theories
  • Consumers, Producers, Markets and Institutions
    Markets
  • Consumers
  • Theory of Choice
  • Predicting how consumer choices vary with changes
    in markets
  • Producers
  • Theory of the Firm
  • Predicting how producer choices (how much inputs
    to buy and how much output to sell) vary with
    changes in markets
  • Markets and Institutions
  • Rules of interaction between consumers and
    producers
  • Perfectly competitive markets, less than perfect
    competition, small group interactions,
    contracting rules and legal frameworks, social
    norms and voluntary compliance

4
Most basic model
P
  • Perfect Competition
  • Law of Supply
  • Law of Demand
  • Convergence

S
D
Q
5
Moving away from the basic model
  • Less than perfect competition
  • Oligopoly, Monopolistic Competition, Monopoly
  • Require more careful modeling of the firms
  • The firm reacts to other things than just market
    price
  • Expectations of reactions by other firms
  • Interactive strategic situations game theory

6
Models of Consumer Choice
  • Fundamental elements of consumer choice theory
  • Opportunity sets
  • Income, prices
  • Preference axioms
  • Mixed baskets of good are preferred to baskets
    with heavy reliance of one good
  • Transititivity.

7
What questions can be asked in Micro Economics?
  • What are the effects on markets from taxes or
    subsidies?
  • What are the effects on global CO2 emissions from
    the Kyoto Agreement?
  • Are there better ways of solving the global CO2
    emissions problem?
  • If two firms are competing for the same limited
    market demand which institutional rules will
    maximize market efficiency?

8
This course and beyond
  • In this course you will learn the details of
  • The theory of the firm
  • The theory of consumer choice
  • Assuming
  • Perfect Competition
  • Monopoly
  • Micro II
  • Market Equilibrium (General Equilibrium)
  • Oligopoly and Monopolistic Competition (Game
    Theory)
  • Social Welfare and Efficiency

9
The Scientific Method
  • Purpose of Theory
  • Derive hypotheses that are logically valid and
    empirically refutable
  • Empirical testing of the hypotheses
  • Reject or not reject the theory
  • Consistent failure to reject
  • Use theory to predict events
  • Scientists need to have good grounding in all
    three parts

10
Theories and Models
  • A set of assertions or postulates (A)
  • Not observable
  • Can only be tested if using proper scientific
    method
  • Example Consumers maximize utility
  • A set of assumptions or test conditions (C)
  • Must be observable or theory cannot be tested
  • Example income and goods prices change in
    certain ways
  • Predictions of events (E)
  • Consumer adjusts consumption basket

11
Logical structure
  • A (C E)
  • A implies that C implies E
  • Utility maximization implies that a higher price
    reduces consumption of that good
  • Profit maximization implies that increasing taxes
    implies reduced output
  • (A C) E
  • Assertion A and assumption C together imply E
  • Joint hypothesis

12
Scientific statement
  • The postulates (A) are refutable only through
    making
  • logically valid prediction
  • about real, observable events
  • based on these postulates
  • under assumed test conditions
  • and then discovering that the predictions are
    false

13
  • We can never prove a theory
  • We can only reject invalid theories
  • Concluding that A is true if C and E are both
    true
  • Affirming the consequent (logical error)
  • Discuss
  • What is knowledge?
  • What increases our knowledge most rejecting a
    theory or not?
  • Deductive vs. inductive reasoning
  • Empirical support for a theory can be growing
    over time
  • Caution empirical tests can suffer from
    measurement and specification errors

14
The neo-classical marginalist paradigm
  • Consumer choice determined by
  • Opportunity sets
  • Preferences
  • Producer choice determined by
  • Opportunity sets
  • Technology
  • Predictions are formulated using Comparative
    Statics exercises
  • Changes at the margin

15
Consumer choice
  • Assertions (A)
  • Preference axioms
  • Test conditions (assumptions) (C)
  • Marginal changes in opportunity sets
  • Predictions of events (E)
  • Preferences are unobservable
  • Opportunity sets are observable
  • Should we formulate theories that explain choices
    based on changing preferences?
  • How could such a theory be refuted?
  • Homework problem 1.

16
Theory of the Firm
  • Assertions (A)
  • Profit maximization
  • Cost minimization
  • Test Conditions
  • Technology, Input prices, Output prices
  • Predicted Events
  • Input demand
  • Output supply

17
Comparative Statics
  • x f(a)
  • x is endogenous
  • a is exogenous
  • No predictions about magnitudes, either levels or
    changes
  • Only prediction about direction
  • Cannot do comparative statics due to changes in
    endogenous variables

18
Comparative statics of the firm
  • Assertion (A) Firm maximizes profits
  • Test condition (C) Tax is levied in proportion
    to output, controlling for technology and prices
  • Event (E) Change in quantity supplied
  • Objective function
  • Modelling the assertion and the initial state of
    test conditions

19
Objective function and comparative statics
statement
  • Max p R(x) C(x) tx
  • Find

20
Comparative Statics procedures
  • Solve for the optimal x
  • Perform comparative statics at this point
  • Restrictions on objective function
  • Has to have a stationary point that is a maximum

21
  • Step 1 Find x as the stationary point
  • Step 2 Verify that this point is a maximum
  • Step 3 Solve for xx(t)
  • The explicit choice function
  • Requires an inversion apply Implicit Function
    Theorem
  • Step 4 Substitute x for x in FONC that is now
    an identity
  • Step 5 Differentiate the identity and set to 0
  • Step 6 Solve for
  • Step 7 Determine the sign by referring to SOSC
    plt0

22
Objective Functions
  • Specify the objective function if
  • Firm operates in perfectly competitive markets
  • Firm is a monopolist
  • Firm maximizes total revenues
  • Firm maximizes utility

23
Lecture Plan
  • Homework 1 based on SS chapter 1, due Sept 4
  • Applications
  • Vernon Smith on theory testing
  • James Cox on social preferences in choice theory
    and the problem of confounds
  • McDaniel and Rutström, and Cummings, Harrison and
    Rutström on assertions in consumer choice theory
    and the effect of incentives
  • Theory of the Firm Unconstrained profit
    maximization in two input variables and one
    output
  • Homogeneity, Le Chatelier principles and relaxing
    constraints, Constant Returns to Scale, Refutable
    hypotheses
  • Homework 2 based on ch 4, due Sep 18
  • Extending to NxM
  • Duality of profit maximization
  • Profit function (indirect objective function),
  • Homework 3 based on ch 6 and 7, due Oct 1
  • TEST 1 October 2
  • Constrained cost minimization and its duality
    formulation
  • Homework 4 based on cost minimization
  • Consumer Choice
  • Preference axioms
  • Constrained utility maximization
  • Constrained expenditure minimization
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