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Department Store Model -- pay for purchases in the department' ... Most Americans believe the story of the Little Red Hen represents equity! Are markets moral? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Continuation of Lecture 2


1
Continuation of Lecture 2
2
Checking Out
  • Supermarket Model -- gather all of your purchases
    into your cart and selecting which line (in front
    of store) to pay for purchases
  • Department Store Model -- pay for purchases in
    the department where the goods are located
  • Snake Line Model -- Enter a single line and when
    at head of line go to first available clerk
  • What do the stores have in common?
  • Why do certain stores adopt one method and not
    the other?

3
7) Resources should be used efficiently to
achieve societys goals
  • Efficiency -- the inability to improve one
    persons well being without hurting someone else
    (Pareto Optimality)
  • If we are inefficient in our use of resources, we
    are wasting them. We could increase well-being
    (produce more) by reallocating them.
  • Why would you want to deny someone additional
    welfare if it didnt hurt anyone elses welfare?
  • This is a normative (value) statement in contrast
    to positive statements (statements of fact).
    What can economists say about other goals for
    society such as fairness or equity in the
    distribution of societys wealth?

4
8) Markets usually lead to efficiency
  • This statement is often taken to mean that
    society (a collective decision perhaps taken by
    government) should not interfere with individual
    choice. A positive statement leading to a
    normative conclusion.
  • But markets can fail to achieve an efficient
    result-- for example, congestion on the highways.

5
9) When markets are not efficient, government
intervention can lead to improvement in social
welfare
  • Yet there isnt a guarantee that governments will
    improve upon the market outcome. Rather they
    hold out the possibility to improve upon the
    efficiency of the outcomes of individual choice.
  • Important to remember -- it is not that
    individuals make bad choices rather the market
    has failed to coordinate their decisions

6
How is equity related to efficiency?
  • There is a tradeoff between equity and efficiency
  • As markets become more efficient, they are
    perceived as less equitable.
  • Markets generate inequality in earnings
  • Markets reward winners and punish losers
  • Losing firms exit from the market
  • In labor markets, the most able/talented are
    hired others accept low wage jobs or are
    unemployed

7
Equity
  • What is equity?
  • Equity is a value judgment that means different
    things to different people
  • Equity in the distribution of income often means
    that income was earned fairly

8
Equity and Equality
  • Equity is not the same thing as Equality
  • A equal distribution of income means that all
    units have exactly the same income.
  • Some people may define an equitable distribution
    of income as one in which all incomes are equal,
    but most Americans would not!!!
  • To most Americans, incomes in an equitable
    distribution of income would vary according to
    individuals contributions to the market.
  • Most Americans believe the story of the Little
    Red Hen represents equity!

9
Are markets moral?
  • If markets generate distributions of income that
    are unequal, are markets moral?
  • Markets are neither moral or immoral.
  • Markets are amoral.
  • They are simply the interactions among
    individuals
  • They move toward equilibrium and
  • They promise efficient use of resources.

10
Are markets moral, cont.
  • The issue of morality enters the discussion of
    markets in two ways
  • Did the market participants behavior morally?
  • Was there a level playing field?
  • Did firms collude? Fix prices? Restrict supply?
  • Were individuals given equal opportunity to
    prepare themselves for market activity?

11
Are markets moral, cont.
  • 2. How did society react to the situation of the
    losers?
  • Were the losers supported in ways consistent with
    their dignity as human beings? (alternate
    definition of equity)
  • Examine redistributive policies
  • Tax policies
  • Social insurance and public welfare

12
Is the market moral, cont.
  • Additional reading
  • Chapter 21, Taxes, Social Insurance and Income
    Distribution
  • Rebecca Blank and William McGurn, Is the Market
    Moral? A Dialogue on Religion, Economics, and
    Justice. The Brookings Institution, 2003.
  • National Conference of Catholic Bishops, Economic
    Justice for All Pastoral Letter on Catholic
    Social Teaching and the US Economy, 1986.

13
Summary Nine Principles
  1. Resources are scarce
  2. Every Choice has an Opportunity Cost
  3. Choices are made at the margin
  4. Individuals seek their self interest
  5. There are gains from trade
  6. Markets move toward equilibrium
  7. Resources should be used efficiently
  8. Markets usually lead to efficiency
  9. When markets dont achieve efficiency, government
    intervention can improve social welfare

14
Trade-Offs and Trading
  • Lecture 3

15
In Lecture 3
  • Models
  • Trade-Offs (Production Possibility Frontiers and
    Opportunity Cost)
  • Implication for Trading and Production
    (Specialization and Comparative Advantage)

16
To Understand the Complex World, We Construct a
Simplified Model
  • Models are abstractions of reality, capturing
    what is believed to be the important
    relationships
  • Expressed in words, graphs, or mathematical
    equations
  • Will imply a path of causation and relationship
    between variables
  • Holding Everything Else Constant

17
David Ricardo (1772-1823)
  • Credited with creation of the ideas of absolute
    and comparative advantage to understand trade
  • Examined taxation and government spending
  • Was successful in his own investing

18
What Can I Produce?
  • I could produce only Wool (specialization in
    Wool)
  • I could produce only Wine (specialization in
    Wine)
  • Or combinations of both (efficient combinations)
  • Why is the production possibility frontier (PPF)
    bowed outward?

19
A Word About Slopes
  • Let Y f(X) denoted by the red line
  • From the initial point (Xo,Yo)
  • Consider a change in X ?X and consequently a
    change in Y ?Y
  • The ratio ?Y/?X is the slope of the blue line
    drawn through the two points (Arc Method)
  • For small (marginal) changes in X, the slope of
    the line tangent to the function represents the
    slope of the function (Point Method)

Y
X
20
Opportunity Cost
  • The slope of the PPF tells us how much Wine we
    would have to give up to get more Wool --
    Opportunity Cost of Wool
  • Assume we are producing small amounts of Wool
    (W0). The slope of the red tangency tells us the
    Opportunity Cost of Wool (how much Wine we have
    to give up). The relatively flat slope indicates
    small sacrifices of wine are required to obtain
    additional units of wool.
  • Now assume we have produced more Wool (W1). The
    relatively tangency line tells us that larger
    amounts of wine must be sacrificed to obtain more
    wool than W1.
  • The Opportunity Cost of Wool in terms of Wine has
    risen as we move along the PPF from A to B
  • The bowing out of the PPF reflects increasing
    opportunity costs

Slope?Wine/?Wool
A
B
W0
W1
21
Alternative PPFs
Wine
Increasing Opportunity Costs
Wool
22
Economic Growth
Why would the PPF shift outward? -- more
resources land, labor, capital, and human
capital -- technological progress
23
Production and Consumption
  • Assume that there are Constant Opportunity Costs
    in Wool and Wine Production in two Countries
  • Britain is currently producing both wool and wine
    without trade (current production levels are
    marked)
  • Consider a potential trading partners PPF,
    Portugal and their current production (neither
    country has an absolute advantage)
  • Will trade between Britain and Portugal improve
    the well being in both countries?

24
Specialization and Trading
  • Assume Britain decides to specialize in Wool and
    use some of their surplus wool to purchase wine
    from Portugal -- is this possible?
  • If Portugal reduces its wool production by the
    same amount that Britain has increased
  • Will the gain in their wine production exceed the
    loss in wine production in Britain?
  • If Portugal trades their increased wine
    production for Britains increased wool
    production then Portugal continues to be able to
    consume exactly what it did prior to the
    specialization and trading but Britain can
    increase its wine consumption and still consume
    the same amount of wool -- they are better off.

25
Efficiency
  • While Portugal has not gain, Britain has and so
    there has been a gain in efficiency. On this
    figure, how can we show wine and wool consumption
    that would represent both countries being made
    better off?
  • Draw quadrants through each countries initial
    consumption points
  • The areas in the northeast quadrants represent
    where both countries would be better off
  • Less aggressive trading terms with Portugal would
    allow both countries to be made better off.
  • Why do these trading patterns emerge (Portugal
    trades wine for wool)? Countries specialize in
    activities they have a comparative advantage --
    relatively lower opportunity cost of producing.

26
Adjustment Costs
  • What is happening in both Britain and Portugal?
  • In Britain, workers who used to work in the
    vineyards are working in wool. In Portugal,
    workers in the woolen industry will migrate to
    the vineyards.
  • Is there a cost to this adjustment? There is a
    one time adjustment costs as workers have to find
    employment in other sectors of the economy but
    the benefits of trade are on going. How can a
    democratic society make these adjustments and
    impose these costs on some in order to reap the
    gains?

27
Additional Reading
  • In handouts folder on web site, read the New York
    Times op-ed by Senator Schumer and Paul Craig
    Roberts and the speech by Ben Bernanke (Chair of
    the Fed) on globalization

28
The Story over Time
  • Woolen manufacturing is more likely to benefit
    from technical progress compared to wine
    production
  • Consequently the PPF of the country specializing
    in wool will shift out faster than the country
    specializing in wine
  • Britain became wealthier while Portugal became
    relatively poorer

29
Trade and Specialization
  • As individuals and countries specialize, they
    will trade for goods and services they do not
    produce. Consequently they will become dependent
    upon others for their consumption. Is this good
    or bad for countries? Can they trust each other?

30
On the Homefront
  • In 1950, women made less in the paid market but
    were more productive in home production. What
    would the PPFs for males and females look like?
    Does this suggest that women would specialize in
    home production while males went to work? What
    gave women their comparative advantage?
  • Over the last decades of the 1900s,
    discrimination against women in the labor force
    lessened (let us assume that our couple would
    earn the same amount if they devoted their entire
    time to market work). Would women stop cleaning
    homes?
  • While women would have an absolute advantage over
    men, we would expect men to continue to devote
    themselves exclusively to market work (not to
    engage in home production). Women may engage in
    more market work using the extra income to hire
    someone to clean the home or do two shifts (at
    the home and at the office). Sharing the home
    production is not consistent with the theory of
    comparative advantage and specialization.

31
Assignment for Next Lecture
  • Do Homework 2 on Homework Assignment by
    Wednesday at 5 pm
  • Read Chapter 3
  • Topics Next Time
  • Concept of Demand and Supply
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