Section 7 A Level
Section 7 A Level
Micro economy
Chapter 30-Utility
• Utility: is the satisfaction gained from consumption of a product.
• Total utility: is the satisfaction gained from the consumption of all units of a product
• Marginal utility: is the satisfaction gained from one more unit of a product consumed
• Law of diminishing marginal utility: states that as the quantity consumed of a product
o Diminishing marginal utility assumes that consumers are always rational. However, in
some cases like buy 1 get 1 free or when payment can be deferred using credit card,
• Equi-marginal principle: Consumers maximize their utility where their marginal valuation
to give up in order to obtain an additional unit of another leaving the individual at same
utility. It is diminishing.
• Indifference curve: this shows the different combinations of two goods that give a
• Indifference curve
\n
o A change in the prices of one or both products with nominal income (budget) remaining
the same.
o A change in the level of nominal income with the relative prices of the two products
on the indifference curve (IC) I1. The point moves on the curve from E1 To E2 or vice
versa. This causes the budget line to change from B1 to the dotted budget line. The
income effect causes point to move from E2 to E3 causing a shift in IC from I1 to I2. The
table below shows how price change affects different types of goods.
• Giffen/Veblen good: are goods whose price and demand are directly related as they
are necessary/luxurious.
PRICE
EFFECTS
Good Demand
Price change Price effect (on demand)
type change
Fall Normal Both effects ↑ Rise
Sub. effect ↑ > In. effect
Fall Inferior Rise
↓
Sub. effect ↑ > In. effect
Fall G/V Fall
↓
Rise Normal Both effects ↓ Fall
Sub. effect ↓ > In. effect
Rise Inferior Fall
↑
PRICE
EFFECTS
Sub. effect ↓ > In. effect
Rise G/V Rise
↑
Costs
• Production function- this shows the maximum possible output from the given set of
factor inputs.
• Marginal product - the in the change output arising from the use of one or more units of
a FOP
• The minimum efficient scale (MES) is the balance point at which a company can
average cost curve where economies of scale have been exhausted, and constant
• Diminishing returns - where the output from an additional unit of input leads to a fall in
• Fixed costs - those costs that are independent of output in the short run so that is a
• Variable costs - those that vary directly with output; all costs are variable in the long run
It is similar to the indifference curve. Output refers to the total physical product.
The points x, y and z on the graph below shows the same output.
when the curve is sloping down there are increasing economies of scale. The lowest
point on the curve has constant economies and as the curve starts rising there are
Profit
There are 3 types of profit:
• Normal profit- a cost of production that is just sufficient for the firm to keep running in
• Subnormal profit- any profit less than the normal profit. If the problem persists then the
firm will leave the industry and go into one that will make a profit. This is where p<ac
• Supernormal profit- is any profit in excess of normal profit. It only exists in the short term
Revenue
• Total revenue (TR) = price x quantity
Revenue:
When TR is maximum, MR is 0
• Decreasing returns to scale- Where factor input increase at a proportionally faster rate
• Economies of scale - the benefits gained from falling long-run average costs as the
• External economies of scale: cost saving accruals to all firms in an industry as the scale
increases
• Diseconomies of Scale - where long-run average cost increase as the scale of output
increases
Economies of scale
Internal External
Technical Transport
Financial Concentration
Managerial Knowledge
Marketing Ancillary industries
Purchasing Specialised labour
Risk-bearing Reputation
Increased dimensions
Economies of scope
Diseconomies of scale
Internal External
Lack of communication Competition for inputs
Demotivation Congestion
Alienation Pollution
Slack management (X-inefficiency)
Non-flexibility
Labour disputes & turnover
• MNC- A multinational corporation (MNC) is one that has business operations in two or
more countries.
• Industry- group of productive enterprises or organisations that produce or supply goods,
• Barriers to entry- any restriction that prevents new firms from entering an industry.
• Perfect competition an ideal market structure that has many buyers and sellers,
• Monopoly - a pure monopoly is Just 1 firm in an industry with very high barriers of entry.
• Monopolistic competition a market structure where there are many firms, differentiated
• Oligopoly- a market structure with few firms and high barriers to entry.
• Types of objectives:
o Loss minimizing
o Ethical objectives
Perfect Competition
Perfect competition occurs when all companies sell identical products, market share
does not influence price, companies are able to enter or exit without barrier, buyers
Characteristics:
• All consumers have complete info about the product, prices, means of production
The graph above is called the
perfect competition model. In the industry in the short run a new firm enters
Monopolistic competition
Characteristics:
• Ads and brand name with a high degree of customer loyalty is difficult to overcome
• Market conditions
Pricing strategy:
Limit pricing- where firms will deliberately lower the prices and abandon a policy
market thereby exploit monopoly power by setting prices well below average cost.
Price leadership- a situation in a market whereby a particular firm has the power to
change prices, the result of which is that competitors follow this lead.
Price discrimination- Price
discrimination is when identical or largely similar goods or services are sold at different
existence of consumer surplus. This shows that the consumers are willing to pay more
consumer surplus, this means that the firm leaves no room for the consumers to be able
to pay extra rather they charge the highest price the consumers are willing to pay. The
two diagrams show how the same firm charges different prices in 2 different industries
to increase profit. The firm may do this because of different elasticities in 2 markets or
Oligopoly
Characteristics:
• Uncertainty and risks associated with price competition may lead to price rigidity
output or fixing prices. They decide prices in the industry & long term survival of a cartel
Threats to a cartel
• possibility of a price war - 1 firm breaks rank to gain higher market share
Non-price competition
• physical characteristics
• location
• service level
• advertising
Kinked demand curve- a means of analysing the behaviour of firm in oligopoly where
there is no collusion.
curve is based on
• A few firms dominate the industry
• If a firm increases the price, then it becomes more expensive than rivals and therefore,
• Therefore for a price rise, there is likely to be a significant fall in demand. Demand is,
• In this case, of increasing price firms will lose revenue because the percentage fall in
• If a firm cut its price, it is likely to lead to a different effect. In the short term, if a firm cuts
price it would cause a big increase in demand and therefore would lead to a rise in
• However, other firms will not want to see this fall in market share and so they will
respond by also cutting price to follow the first firm. The net effect is that if all firms cut
price – the individual firm will only see a small increase in demand.
• Because there is a ‘price war’ demand for a firm is price inelastic – there is a smaller
Monopoly
Characteristics of a monopoly
• A single seller
• No close substitutes
• High barriers to entry
Positives of monopoly
• competitive market has uncertainty of profits - monopolist can invest this and provide
X inefficiency - where the typical costs In a competitive market above those experienced
in a more competitive market. This happens when the firm lacks the incentives to lower
the costs.
Natural monopoly- A natural monopoly is a type of monopoly that exists typically due to
specific industry which can result in significant barriers to entry for potential competitors.
This can also be made by government for example utilities because private firms may
Note: Only the monopoly can make abnormal profit in the short run. A monopoly is the
only firm in the market which means there is one buyer and several sellers who sell to
the monopoly firm. Due to this the monopoly can ask the firms to reduce the prices
therefore increasing profits since the average cost has reduced. The monopoly firm can
also charge quite high prices to the consumers since the consumers have no choice but
to buy from the monopoly firm. This increases revenue and therefore profits as well.
• the firm in perfect competition is productively efficient, producing the optimum output. It
• The monopoly firm captures consumer surplus and turn it into abnormal profit
• The monopoly firm is productively inefficient, producing less than the optimum output in
the search for extra profit. The price change is well above marginal cost and so is not
allocatively efficient.
• If a perfectly competitive industry was turned into a monopoly, there would be a welfare
• free entry
• all firms are subject to the same regulations and gov. control.
AC can fall, when MC is rising when MC is less than AC. AC cannot rise, when MC is
falling.
Why do small firms exists?
Why so many small firms exist in a world where the power lies with the monopolies
• the entrepreneur may not always have expansion as the objective of firm
goods it produces
Internal growth - firm decides to retain profits and invest it in the business for it to grow
• Diversification- where the firm grows through the production or sale of a wide range of
different products
• Vertical integration- where a firm grows by producing backward or forwards in its supply
chain.
• Horizontal integration: where a firm merges or acquires another in the same line of
business.
Game theory
Prisoner’s dilemma- The prisoner's dilemma is a standard example of a game analyzed
in game theory that shows why two completely rational individuals might not cooperate,
The prisoner’s dilemma presents a situation where two parties, separated and unable to
communicate, must each choose between co-operating with the other or not. The
highest reward for each party occurs when both parties choose to co-operate.
Principal agent problem- a principal hires an agent to own the business but there is a
case of info. failure since the principal is unable to ensure that the appointed agent is
taking the necessary decisions to run the firm in the best interests of shareholders. For
ex. agent is following objective of satisficing whereas the principal believes he or she is