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level: Level 1

Questions and Answers List

level questions: Level 1

QuestionAnswer
consumer surplusthe difference between what the consumer is willing to pay for a product and what the consumer actually pays when buying it
learning curvesdisplays the relation between average cost for a given output and cumulative past production
monopolistic competitiona market structure that is hybrid between competition and monopoly. there are multiple firms that product similar products
network effectsdemand for a product increases even more because more people are using the product
adverse selectionthe tendency of individuals, with private information about something that affects a potential trading partner's cost or benefits, to make offers that are detrimental to the trading partner. e.g. quality uncertainty (health insurance, market for lemons (second hand cars), bank credit rationing)
oligopolistic marketa market structure where the market is dominated by a few large firms which account for most of the products within the market. products may of may not be differentiated. firms CAN EARN ECONOMIC PROFITS
price discriminationprice discrimination is when a firm charges customers (or different sub groups) different prices for the same product of service.
sunk costssunk costs are non recoverable costs that already have been incurred and the resources have no alternative use
marginal revenuemarginal revenue is the change in revenue by the one-unit change in quantity
law of demandlaw of demand states that normal demand curves slope downwards to the right. the higher the price, the lower the demand. why? consumer's opportunity costs increases of that product/service, so more trade offs need to be made.
inferior gooda good for which the quantity purchased declines when income increases.
economic profitan above competitive (or extra normal) rate of return on assets
cartelconsists of formal agreements among a set of firms to cooperate in setting prices and output levels
monitoring coststhe costs to oversee whether the obligations of another party have been met
marginal coststhe change in total costs associated with one-unit change in output
marginal utilityincrease or decrease in utility when one additional product is gained
externalitieseffects or actions outside an exchange relationship
price discriminationcharge different prices (to different subgroups or customers) for the same product, not related to differences in production of distribution costs
free rider problemoccurs in team efforts. a person who obtains something without effort or cost.
law of diminishing returnsstates the marginal product of a variable factor will eventually decline as the use of the factor is increased.
indifference curveGraphical tool to show the combination of two particular goods which yield one level utility