econ exam

Questions (en-US)

Answers (en-US)

Perfect competition characteristics

many firms, identical products, no barriers, perfect information, price takers, horizontal demand curve (P=D=MR=AR)

Profit rule in perfect competition

MR = MC

Short-run condition in perfect competition

firm produces where P = MC

Long-run condition in perfect competition

P = MC and P = AC (zero economic profit)

Technical efficiency in perfect competition

P = minimum AC

Allocative efficiency in perfect competition

MU = MC

Shutdown rule (short run)

shut down when P < AVC

Shutdown rule (long run)

exit market when P < AC

Monopoly characteristics

one firm, unique product, very high barriers, downward-sloping demand, price maker

Examples of monopoly barriers

patents, licensing, predatory pricing, price discrimination, economies of scale, tech superiority, exclusive inputs

Natural monopoly definition

a firm where long-run economies of scale make one producer cheapest for society

Monopoly profit rule

MR = MC, then price chosen from demand curve

Can monopolies earn long-run profit?

yes, because barriers block entry

Dynamic efficiency in monopoly

P > AC allows R&D investment

First-degree price discrimination

charging each consumer their maximum willingness to pay

Second-degree price discrimination

charging different prices based on quantity or product versioning

Third-degree price discrimination

charging different groups different prices

Costs of monopoly

higher price, lower output, deadweight loss, no allocative/technical efficiency

Benefits of monopoly

economies of scale and increased innovation from long-run profit

Monopolistic competition characteristics

many firms, differentiated products, easy entry/exit, downward-sloping demand

Short run in monopolistic competition

firms may earn profits or losses

Long run in monopolistic competition

entry erodes profit until economic profit = 0

Excess capacity in monopolistic competition

firms do not produce at minimum AC; operate below efficient scale

Benefit of monopolistic competition

product variety and differentiation

Oligopoly characteristics

few large firms, mutual interdependence, barriers, similar or differentiated products

Concentration ratio definition

sum of market shares of top 4 or 8 firms (CR4, CR8)

HHI definition

sum of squared market shares; measures concentration

Kinked demand curve idea

firms match price cuts but not price increases; price rigidity

Game theory definition

strategic decision-making with payoff matrices and interdependent outcomes

Nash equilibrium definition

no player can improve by changing strategy alone

Cartel definition

explicit collusion to fix prices or output

Tacit collusion definition

unspoken understanding to avoid competition

Price leadership

one firm sets price, others follow

Sherman Act purpose

bans price fixing, collusion, and monopolization

Clayton Act purpose

blocks actions reducing competition (price discrimination, tying, exclusive dealing, anti-competitive mergers)

Horizontal merger

same industry merger

Vertical merger

different production-stage merger

Conglomerate merger

merger between unrelated industries

Market failure examples

externalities, public goods, moral hazard, asymmetric information, monopoly power, inequality

Negative externality definition

MSC > MPC; overproduction in free markets

Positive externality definition

MSB > MPB; underproduction in free markets

Pigouvian tax

tax used to reduce negative externality

Pigouvian subsidy

subsidy used to increase positive externality

Public good characteristics

non-rival and non-excludable

Common resource definition

rival but non-excludable good

Tragedy of the commons overuse

individual incentives cause overuse of shared resources

Lorenz curve definition

graph showing income distribution compared to perfect equality

Gini coefficient meaning

0 = equality; 1 = inequality

US Gini index range

about 0.41 to 0.49

Economic rent

payment above what is needed to keep a resource employed

Backward-bending labor supply

at high wages, workers supply less labor

Monopsony definition

single buyer of labor; minimum wage can increase employment

Union definition

worker group bargaining for wages and conditions

Human capital

investments in education and skills

Signaling (labor markets)

education used to signal worker ability

Present value

value today of future money discounted over time

Environmental economics

focus on pollution, sustainability, and resource use