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Chapter Two: Exchange, Efficiency, and Markets

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Title: Chapter Two: Exchange, Efficiency, and Markets


1
Chapter TwoExchange, Efficiency, and Markets
  • Basic Concepts
  • Overview of the Market System
  • Gains from Trade
  • The Incentive to Innovate
  • Exceptions to the Market
  • Competition and Externalities
  • The Nature of the Firm
  • Market Analysis The Supply and Demand Model

2
Basic Concepts
  • Economics - The study of the choices people make
    with respect to scarcity.
  • Scarcity - the goods available are too few to
    satisfy individuals desires.
  • Marginal Benefits - the additional benefits above
    what have already been derived.
  • Cost Concepts
  • Marginal cost - additional cost above the costs
    already incurred.
  • Sunk cost - costs that have already been incurred
  • Opportunity Cost - the value of the next best
    alternative foregone in making a decision.
  • The economic decision rule If the relevant
    benefits of doing something exceed the relevant
    costs, do it. If the relevant costs of doing
    something exceed the relevant benefits, dont do
    it.

3
Overview of the Market System
  • Why do societies utilize the market system?
  • The market system creates economic growth.
  • Economic growth Transformation of a nations
    inputs into greater and greater amounts of
    output.
  • Extensive growth Growth due to an increase in
    the quantity of a nations factors of production.
  • Intensive growth Growth due to an increase in
    the quality of a nations factors of production.
  • How does the market system create economic growth
  • Gains from Trade
  • The Incentive to Innovate

4
Interdependence and the Gains from Trade
  • David Ricardo (1772-1823) and the Principle of
    Comparative Advantage
  • Absolute advantage - the comparison among
    producers of a good according to their
    productivity.
  • Comparative advantage - the comparison among
    producers of a good according to their
    opportunity cost.

5
England may be so circumstanced, that to produce
the cloth may require the labour of 100 men for
one year and if she attempted to make the wine,
it might require the labour of 120 men for the
same time. England would therefore find it her
interest to import wine, and to purchase it by
the exportation of cloth. To produce wine in
Portugal, might require only the labour of 80 men
for one year, and to produce the cloth in the
same country, might require the labour of 90 men
for the same time. It would therefore be
advantageous for her to export wine in exchange
for cloth. Ricardo (1817) as reprinted in
McCulloch (1888, p. 76-77)
6
This exchange might even take place,
notwithstanding that the commodity imported by
Portugal could be produced with less labour than
in England. Though she could make the cloth with
the labour of 90 men, she would import it from a
country where it required the labour of 100 men
to produce it, because it would be advantageous
to her rather to employ her capital in the
production of wine, for which she would obtain
more cloth from England, than she could produce
by diverting a portion of her capital from the
cultivation of vines to the manufacture of
cloth.(Ricardo (1817) as reprinted in McCulloch
(1888, p. 76-77).
7
Ricardo, the numbers
  • Hours needed to produce each good
  • Nation Wine Cloth
  • England 120 100
  • Portugal 80 90
  • In Ricardos example, Portugal has an absolute
    advantage with respect to both goods. However,
    Portugals comparative advantage only lies in the
    production of wine.

8
Ricardos conclusions
  • Comparative advantage, not absolute advantage,
    determines the pattern of trade.
  • Free trade benefits every nation by expanding
    each nations consumption possibilities beyond
    its production possibilities.
  • What is true for nations is true for individuals.
    The gains from trade is one reason why the
    market system is adopted.

9
Allocation Mechanisms
  • The Price Mechanism Goods are allocated
    according a person being both willing and able to
    purchase the commodity.
  • Government
  • Tradition
  • First-come-first-serve
  • Random draw
  • Other
  • What is the advantage of the price system? It
    allocates goods and services to where these are
    valued the highest. More importantly, it
    provides incentives for people to innovate and
    work harder.
  • Economic growth can occur when a nations
    increases the quantity and/or quality of its
    factors of production. Diminishing returns tells
    us there is a limit to increasing the quantity of
    a nations inputs. Hence, long term growth can
    only occur if a nation increases quality. Only
    with the market system is this likely to occur.
    Why?

10
Exceptions to the Market
  • Competition requires
  • A large number of buyers and sellers
  • Free entry and exit
  • Homogenous goods
  • Perfect information
  • If these conditions are not met, markets will not
    work efficiently.
  • Externalities costs and/or benefits external to
    the buyers and sellers in a given transaction.
  • When negative externality exist the market will
    produce more of a good than is socially optimal.
  • When a positive externality exist the market will
    produce less of a good than is socially optimal.
  • The existence of externalities provide a
    motivation for government intervention.

11
Internalizing MarketsThe Nature of the Firm
  • A Firm An organization formed to minimize the
    costs inherent in certain market transactions.
  • Transaction costs - the expenses of trading with
    others above and beyond the price. i.e. the costs
    of bargaining and negotiating.
  • Transaction costs determine whether markets are
    internalized or allowed to remain external to the
    firm.
  • Types of integration
  • Vertical integration - various stages of
    production of a single product are conducted by a
    single firm.
  • Horizontal integration - merging of the
    production of similar products into a single
    firm.
  • With each merger a firm is arguing that the cost
    of producing via the market exceeds the cost of
    external production.
  • Architecture The firms organization or
    structure. The architecture of a firm is
    determined by efficiency considerations.

12
Market vs. Internal Production
  • Labor theory Wages Marginal Revenue Product
  • Marginal Revenue Product Marginal Revenue of
    Output (MR) Marginal Product of Labor (MP)
  • However, for this to be true for each worker a
    firm would need to measure MP.
  • What if a firm cannot measure MP? Then a worker
    can reduce effort an still maintain the same
    wage. When monitoring costs are high, a firm has
    an incentive to sub-contract work.
  • Why? For independent workers the wage (profit) is
    closer linked to productivity.

13
History of the Supply and Demand Model or the
Marshallian Cross (part 1)
  • The Labor Theory of Value - The price of a good
    is determined by the cost of production, and the
    cost of production is dictated by the quantity
    and quality of labor utilized.
  • What about demand?
  • In the long-run, assuming competition, price will
    equal the cost of production.
  • Marx wished to show that even if capitalism
    worked exactly as Ricardo believed, capitalism
    was still a very poor economic system.
    Consequently, Marx utilized the labor theory of
    value to explain prices. Given this explanation,
    Marx offered the following argument If the value
    of labor determines value, and value mostly is
    given to the owners of capital, is it not the
    case that labor is exploited?
  • Response of mainstream economics Labor is not
    exploited because the labor theory of value is
    not correct.

14
History of the Supply and Demand Model or the
Marshallian Cross (part 2)
  • Utility - the satisfaction one receives from a
    good.
  • The fact is, that labor once spent has no
    influence on the future value of any article it
    is gone and lost forever. In commerce, bygones
    are for ever bygones. W.S. Jevons, 1871
  • W.S. Jevons, Carl Menger, and Leon Walras argued
    the price of a good was dictated by the demand
    for the product. If consumers did not want a
    good, regardless of how much labor it takes to
    produce the good, the price would be very low or
    zero.

15
History of the Supply and Demand Model or the
Marshallian Cross (part 3)
  • Alfred Marshall and the Issue of Time
  • Very Short-run Price determined by demand or
    utility
  • Short-run Price determined by supply and demand
  • Long-run Price determined by the cost of
    production

16
The Law of Demand
  • The quantity of a well-defined good or service
  • that people are willing and able to purchase
  • during a particular period of time
  • decreases as the price of that good or service
    increases
  • everything else held constant.

17
Demand
  • Utility the satisfaction a person derives from
    a particular action.
  • Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility - states that
    for a given time period, the marginal
    (additional) utility or satisfaction gained by
    consuming equal successive units of a good will
    decline as the amount consumed increases.
  • Demand curve - a curve relating how much a good
    is demanded at various prices.
  • Market Demand - the horizontal sum of all
    individual demand curves.
  • Quantity demanded - refers to a specific amount
    that will be demanded per unit of time at a
    specific price, ceteris paribus. This is
    illustrated by a movement along the curve.

18
Demand FactorsA brief list
  • Normal good - a good the demand for which rises
    as income rises.
  • Inferior goods - a good the demand for which
    falls as income rises.
  • Substitutes - two goods that satisfy similar
    needs or desires. If two goods are substitutes
    then as the price of one rises, demand for the
    other good will increase.
  • Complements - two goods that are used jointly in
    consumption. If two goods are complements then
    as the price of one rises, demand for the other
    good will decrease.
  • Other factors
  • Tastes and preferences
  • Population
  • Changes in demand factors will cause the demand
    curve to shift.

19
Supply
  • Supply -To be considered to supply a good you
    must be able and willing to produce (and sell)
    the good in various quantities at various prices.
  • Market Supply - The total quantities of a good
    that sellers are willing and able to produce and
    sell.
  • Supply curve - a curve relating how much a good
    is supplied at various prices.

20
Equilibrium and Disequilibrium
  • Equilibrium Price - The price at which the
    quantity demanded of the good equals the quantity
    supplied.
  • Market Surplus - The amount by which the quantity
    supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at a given
    price.
  • Market Shortage - The amount by which the
    quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied
    at a given price.
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