sam.walker@spaldinggrammar.lincs.sch.uk This blog will work better if you send me stuff to include and ask me questions. This involvement helps me work out whether this project is worth the time! Give me some feedback!



Don't forget the Sister Blog: SGS Macro Blog @ http://sgsmacroblog.blogspot.com/!

Sunday 31 October 2010

Another Great example of Game Theory From T2U

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TmUWRJInwhk&feature=player_embedded

Saturday 30 October 2010

Can you unearth the economics in this?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-11657982

First identify the issues then try to weigh up the significance of the comments.

Wednesday 27 October 2010

Evaluate the view that, because price discrimination (PD) enables firms to make more profit, firms, but not consumers, benefit from PD. (25)



Price discrimination enables firms to increase their profits by setting a profit maximising price for different groups of consumers and therefore increase total profits. Customers with inelastic demand, who buy peak priced tickets may have reduced consumer surplus as firms increase prices to them. These customers will lose welfare as they pay a price higher than marginal cost, which is allocatively inefficient.

With price discrimination, the demand curve is divided into the elastic range down to D1 and the inelastic range down to D2. A higher price (P1) is charged to the low elasticity segment, and a lower price (P2) is charged to the high elasticity segment. The total revenue from the first segment is equal to the area P1,B,Q1,O.

The total revenue from the second segment is equal to the area E,C,Q2,Q1. The sum of these areas is always greater than the area without discrimination (see the upper diagram). Where more prices are introduced the value of the revenue area rises, and more of the consumer surplus is captured by the producer.

This profit can benefit consumers too; firms may use it to fund R&D. This enables dynamic efficiency and consumers benefit from better quality products and services in the long term; very important in industries like pharmaceuticals where a lot of investment is needed.

Another potential benefit of profit is that it might enable a firm to stay in business. By gaining more revenue as a price discriminator the firm is able to make sufficient profits to stay in the industry which might not have be the case had they only been able to charge one price. Although some customers pay a higher price they have a service where otherwise there might be none, a clear improvement.

Some customers may benefit if the higher prices paid by inelastic customers subsidise lower prices for other groups of consumer e.g. so the high prices paid by business people travelling at peak time could subsidise lower prices for pensioners say. However, people with inelastic demand (adults travelling at peak time) may have no greater ability to pay (an unemployed person travelling to an interview) than people with elastic demand (e.g. rich pensioners). So whilst price discrimination could enable a fairer distribution of resources in society, it doesn’t seem likely that it would!

So it can be seen that price discrimination provides benefits to some consumers, even those who pay the higher prices. The indirect benefits associated with dynamic efficiency gains are perhaps limited in scope, where supermarkets might deliver such improvements might be more difficult to determine than for a drug company. What seems quite clear is that firms benefit most from the ability to target customers by price.

Tuesday 19 October 2010

Producer Surplus

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-z_RmiTNoM&feature=player_embedded

Identify the producer and consumer surplus.

The relationship between AR and MR in monopoly



The relationship between the average and MR curves in monopoly is shown in diagram. Aa a monopolist’s demand curve slopes downward to the right (the market demand curve), an extra unit of output can only be sold by reducing the price at which all units of output are sold.

Total sales revenue increases by the area k in the diagram, but decreases by the area h. Areas k and h respectively show the revenue gain (namely the extra unit sold multiplied by its price) and the revenue lost resulting from the sale of an extra unit of output.

The revenue lost results from the fact that in order to sell one more unit of output, the price has to be reduced for all units of output, not just the extra unit sold. MR, which is the revenue gain minus the revenue loss (k − h), must be less than price or AR (area k).

Now in the top half (elastic section) of the AR curve, the area k is always larger than the area h, diagram illustrates. This means that MR is always positive under the top half of the AR curve.

However, the reverse is true under the bottom half of the demand curve. In this situation, demand is inelastic, with the result that the equivalent area k is always smaller than the equivalent area h. MR is now negative.

The final point to note is that provided the monopolist’s MR curve is linear (i.e. a straight line), the curve is twice as steep as the monopolist’s AR curve. MR falls to zero at the point where the MR curve cuts through the horizontal (output) axis of the diagram.

Monday 18 October 2010

Dynamic efficiency.

Dynamic efficiency occurs over time, as technology provides the chance to produce more and/or better products that improve welfare.

Improvements in dynamic efficiency result from the introduction of better methods of producing existing products and also from developing and marketing completely new products. In both cases, invention, innovation and research and development (R & D) improve dynamic efficiency.

Sunday 17 October 2010

The rip-off world of monopoly power

www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-11549150

Can you analyse what Gavascon did wrong and relay it in a succinct way?

The best win Luxury Chocolate from Green and Blacks!

Thursday 14 October 2010

AS More Fish...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8408895.stm


a) Who supplies fish to the maket
b) Who buys fish in the market?
c) How is the market price determined for any fish?
d) Does this fish market meet the economic definition of a market?

An exercise from Brin's AS Blog

Wednesday 13 October 2010

Will women be treated fairly in the cuts? BBC Today Programme

AQA U3 - Equality

http://news.bbc.co.uk/today/hi/today/newsid_9086000/9086752.stm

This article considers the issue of how the Government's spending review affects women.

60% of public sector jos are taken by women, jobs in the 'caring' professions particularly. Pay is often low but conditions of service create the flexibility for women to fit work around raising children.

Arguments include whether Childcare services add anything to GDP follow: the question asked is whether such services are productive?

Interesting but don't expect the arguments to fit easily with orthodox economic theory!

Tuesday 12 October 2010

Fishing

Line Fishing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5mMI8t7vV0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWw2o9zgm-o&NR=1

Factory Fishing

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BA7enHKa5As&feature=related

Costs of production - pizza

Dominos V Goodfellas

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gk0jhLfpRAw&feature=related v http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7733602.stm

Whilst the VC of production may be similar, the FC are not. Why?

Sunday 10 October 2010

Distinguish between normal and supernormal profit.



The concepts of normal and supernormal profit enable economists to get round a significant theoretical problem. Figure 5.1 below shows a perfectly competitive firm in long-run equilibrium.

The firm’s total sales revenue and also total cost of production are shown by the rectangle bounded by the points OP1XQ1. Because total cost = total revenue, the firm apparently makes no profit.

But why should a firm stay in the market if in the long run profit is zero?

The answer lies in the difference between normal and supernormal profit.

Normal profit is the minimum profit necessary to keep incumbent firms in the market. However, the normal profit made by firms already in the market is insufficient to attract new firms into the market. Because a firm must make normal profit to stay in production, economists treat normal profit as a cost of production, which is included in a firm’s average cost curve. In the long run, firms that cannot make normal profit have to leave the market.

Supernormal profit (which is also called above-normal profit and abnormal profit) is any extra profit over and above normal profit. In the long run, and in the absence of entry barriers, supernormal profit performs the important economic function of attracting new firms into the market.

Source unknown.

Saturday 9 October 2010

Chapter 3 Problems

Some help for Ch. 3

James S. There is a textbook in your form room to help. Check the idex for the page for allocative efficiency.

http://www.revisionguru.co.uk/economics/aqa5index.htm

Thursday 7 October 2010

Essay due end of lesson Friday!!!!!!

Chapter 3 ESQ part c)
Sort an appropriate intro!

Analysis: use diagrams to demonstrate a loss-making situation the effects of this on loss making firms andthe secondary and perhaps the effect on those left in the market.

Or use diagrams to demonstrate a firm earning of supernormal profit and the effects.

Doing both is in effect the same analysis in reverse - so no more marks!

Analyse the effect of this market structure on first Productive efficiency and next allocative efficiency (short run and or long run as appropriate for highest marks).


Evaluative discussion could consider:


The assumptions behind perfect competition
Whether firms really do aim to maximise profit
Whether the MR=MC rule is applicable in reality
Whether it is possible to ever have zero barriers to entry and exit

Wednesday 6 October 2010

Investigation into the Cocoa Market

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-11136797 - Fair Trade Video

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-10682433 - Speculator activity

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-11316915 - Disease in Cocoa Supplies

You may wish to take in the movie "Trading Places" as part of you research - NB - note what happens to frozen orange futures!

Use the above links to investigate the chocolate market.


Choose you own angle!

Future Of Cheap Clothing Hanging By A Thread

http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/Business/Cotton-Price-Cost-Hike-Could-Mean-End-Of-Cheap-Clothing-As-Bargain-Chains-Raise-Shop-Prices/Article/201009415743868

As a commodity, cotton is demanded in very large quantities. Although the total QD may rise slowly over time, this wouldn't noticeable shift the demand curve. The curve itself is very steep (inelastic to us the correct term - the next chapter of the book).

1. Describe what would happen to price if the quantity supplied fell by 50%

2. Then what would happen with a 50% rise. (Draw the diagram).

3. Open question: are higher cotton prices fair?


The market price in these commodities have the potential to be VOLATILE when there is a disruption.

The Spalding Pumkin Patch

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-11450538

The market for pumkins in the UK grown as the UK.

a. What factosr have affected the demand for Pumkins? Explain each.
b. What would happen to the market for Pumkins if the juice from pumkins was found to have magical properties? Explain the short term and long term effects. be precise about what the ST and the LT is for this market.
c. What might happen to suppliers of pumkins in the future if these properties were found to be a hoax?

Saturday 2 October 2010

Water is not a FREE product!

AS Economics

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-11435522

The above article shows that were it not for UK water management we would experience "water stress".