Notes ECO162
Notes ECO162
Economics: is a social science that studies the allocation of limited resources to the production of
goods and services to satisfy consumers’ unlimited wants.
Islamic economics: is a social science which studies the economic problems faced by people. Islamic
economics is imbued with Islamic values that are based on the principles of Shariah.
Macroeconomics: is the branch of economics that studies the entire economics eg: Gross Domestic
Product (GDP), Inflation (Price level) and unemployment
Microeconomics: is the branch of economics that studies part of the economy eg: price of computer
and smartphone
Markets: is the organized exchange of commodity (goods and services, resources) between buyers and
sellers.
Scarcity: is a condition that exists when there is insufficient quantity of resources to produce all of
goods and services desired by people.
Opportunity Cost: is the highest value of goods or other benefits given up when a good is produced or
any action is taken.
Production Possibilities Curve: is a curve that illustrates the alternative combinations of 2 goods that
can be produced with the existing quantity and quality of resources and current level of technology.
Assumptions:
1) 2 products
2) Maximum efficiency
3) Fixed resources
4) Fixed technology
1) Economic growth: is the process of increasing the economy’s ability to produce goods and
services
2) Technology improvement
3) Increase inputs and resources
4) Increased population
1) What to produce?
2) How to produce?
3) For whom to produce?
4) How much to produce?
Economic system: is an organized method of producing and distributing goods, services and
resources in a society that answers the basic economic questions of allocation.
1) Ownership of resources
2) Decision making
Capitalism: is an economic system that is primarily based on private ownership of resource and
allocative decision made through markets.
Characteristics:
Advantages;
Disadvantages:
Characteristics:
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Characteristics:
Advantages:
• The government may have excessive control over business activities, hence discourage
investment
• Greater intervention by the government may lead to greater investment, hence heavier taxes
• The government may limit company sizes to reduce monopoly power, hence affecting the
entrepreneurial spirit
Advantages:
• Free Goods: Goods that have no production cost/Goods that are available without production
and usually referred to as “gift of nature” Eg: river water and air
• Economic goods: goods that involve cost of production /goods that are limited in supply and
man-made. Thus, consumers must pay for the goods. Eg. Clothes, houses
• Public Goods: goods that are commonly used and are of benefit to everyone. Eg. Public
clinic, schools
Law of demand: The principle stating that an inverse (indirect) relationship exists between the price of
a commodity and the quantity of the commodity that buyers are willing and able to purchase in a
given period of time if other factors are held constant.
Individual Demand Curve: The demand curve of a person participating in the market for that
particular product.
Market Demand Curve: The demand curve of all people participating in the market for that particular
product.
Change in Quantity Demanded: The movement along demand curve caused by a change in a price of
the goods. A change in quantity demanded can only result from a change in the price of the goods.
Change in demand: A shift of the entire demand curve resulting from a change in any of the
determinants of demand.*
Determinants of demand:
*Exceptional Demand: Against the law of demand where as the price increases the quantity demanded
increase.
Giffen goods (Inferior Goods): inferior goods normally consumed by those in the lower income
group.
Law of supply: is a principle that state a direct relationship exist between the price of a commodity
and the quantity of the commodity that sellers are willing and able to supply in a given period of time
if other factors are held constant.
Change in quantity supplied: is a movement along the supply curve caused by a change in the price of
the goods
Change in supply: is a shift in the entire supply curve resulting from a change in any of the
determinants of supply
*Exceptional supply: is against the law of supply where as the price increases, the quantity supplied
decrease – Backward bending labor supply curve
Topic 3: Elasticity
Price Elasticity of Demand: is the relative responsiveness to quantity demanded to a change in price
= Q1 - Q0 * P0
P1 - P0 Q0
Degree of elasticity:
• Inelastic: % change in quantity demanded is less than the % change in the price ,
Absolute value less than 1
• Elastic: % change in the quantity demanded is greater than the % change in the price,
Absolute value more than 1
• Unit Elastic: % change in the quantity demanded is exactly the same as the % change in the
price, absolute value equal to 1
Absolute value: 0
• Perfectly Elastic: An infinitely small change in price and the quantity demanded either falls to
zero or increase to an infinitely large value. Absolute value : infinity
Income elasticity of demand: is the demand relative response of demand to changes in income. It
indicates whether a good is normal or inferior.
Ey = Q1 - Q0 * Y0
Y1 - Y0 Q0
Type of good Income Elasticity (N)
Normal N>0
Inferior N<0
*
Cross Elasticity of demand: is the relative response of the demand of one good to changes in the price
of another goods.
= Q1 - Q0 * P0
P1 - P0 Q0
Factors influencing Price Elasticity of Supply:
Market Equilibrium: is the condition when the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied or the
state of the market that occurs when the demanders (buyers) and suppliers (sellers) come together and
exchange a mutually agreeable quantity at a mutually agreeable price. Graphically, equilibrium is
determined by the intersection of the demand and supply curve.
*Changes in demand and supply and effect on equilibrium price and quantity
Price ceiling: is a legally established maximum price below the market equilibrium, and is designed to
prevent the price of a commodity from becoming too high.
Price floor: is a legally established minimum price above the market equilibrium.
Shortage: the condition that occur when the commodity price is below the equilibrium price and
quantity demanded > quantity supplied.
Surplus: the condition that occur when the commodity price is above the equilibrium price and
quantity supplied > quantity demanded.
• In Islam, the equilibrium price and quantity are determined by market forces, as long as
responsible and honest.
• If the imported goods are few and rare (shortage), the price of these goods would increase and
considered fair in Islam. Transportation cost is one of the factor.
• Islam rejects the practice where price is fixed or controlled by anyone unless this is deemed
necessary, thereby the government might intervene for the benefit of society. i.e. prohibit
market manipulation, artificial shortage, hoarding.
Topic 5: Theory of Consumer Behavior
Production: is the process of transforming resources, through changes in structure, location or time,
into goods and services used for the satisfaction of wants and needs.
An input: is a resource or factor of production used in the production of a good or service.
A variable input: is an input whose quantity can be changed in the time period under consideration.
A fixed input: is an input whose quantity cannot be changed in the time period under consideration.
Short-run:(Fixed Plant) is a period in which at least one input is variable and at least one input is
fixed. It is a period of time too brief for an enterprise to alter its plant capacity, yet long enough to
permit a change in the level at which the fixed plant is used.
Long-run:(Variable Plant) is a period in which all inputs are variable. It is a period of time extensive
enough for these firms to change the quantities of all resources employed including plant capacity.
Productivity: is an economic measure of output per unit of input. Inputs include labor and capital,
while output is typically measured in revenues and other gross domestic product.
Total product (TP): is the total quantity of output produced by a firm with the given quantity of inputs.
The total product curve: is a curve depicting the relationship between total product and the variable
input.
Marginal product (MP): is the change in total product resulting from a change in a variable input,
holding all other inputs unchanged.
MP = change in TP
Change in input
Average product (AP) = is the quantity of total product produced per unit of variable input, holding all
other inputs unchanged.
AP = total product
Variable input
Law of Diminishing Returns (Law of diminishing marginal product): as successive unit of a variable
resource (say, labor) are added to a fixed resource (say, capital or land), beyond some point the extra
or, marginal product attributable to each additional unit of the variable resource will decline. It is also
a principle stating that as more and more of a variable input is combined with a fixed input, eventually
the marginal product of the variable input declines.
Explicit cost: the monetary payments – the “out of pocket” or cash expenditures a firm make to
outsiders who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation services, and power.
Implicit cost: resources used which is owned by the firm itself, such self-employed.
Total variable cost: are costs that change as the quantity of output changes.
Total fixed cost: are costs that do not change with the quantity of output.
Total cost: is the sum of total variable costs and total fixed costs.
Market structure: the number and distribution size of buyers and sellers in the market for
particular goods and services.
Market structure: is the way in which an industry is organized. A market can be structured
with only one firm or with several thousand. Each firm can have a great deal of control over
the market price or no control at all.
• Some buyers are willing to pay little more for a good, solely because it is produced by
one particular firm.
• The downward-sloping demand curve of the monopolistically competitive firm means
it determines the price and output in the same way as a monopolist.
Product Differentiation: is a real or perceived difference between goods, such that buyers are
willing to pay different prices
Oligopolistic Behavior:
• Mutual interdependence: in which each firm makes its decision based on the reaction
of other firms in the industry
• Price rigidity: in which prices in the industry change very little over time.
• Non-price competition: This is any type of behavior designed to increase a firm’s
demand without changing the price. Eg. Advertising, product differentiation.
Kinked Demand Curve: is a demand curve with two distinct segments, one that is very elastic
and one that is very inelastic.
4) Monopoly: is a market structure characterized by a single firm supplying all output in the
market.
Profit Curve: is a curve showing the relationship between profit and output.
Barriers to entry:
• Government franchise/license: is the legal right granted to a firm to produce and /or
sell a good in a particular market, subject to government control.
• Patent: is the exclusive control of an intervention awarded to its inventor for a certain
period
• Resource ownership or control over resources/raw materials
• Economies of scale
Price Discrimination: occurs when firms charge different consumers different prices for the same
good or services.
1. First-degree (perfect price discrimination), in which consumers are charged the maximum
price they are willing to pay.
2. Second- degree, in which consumers are charged different prices based on characteristics of
their purchase, such as the quantity they purchase.
3. Third – degree, in which different groups of consumers are charged different prices based on
their own attributes such as age, gender, or location.
Total Revenue: is the revenue received by a firm for the sale of its output, calculated as price
time quantity.
Average Revenue: is revenue received per unit of output sold, which is the price of the good.
Marginal Revenue: is the change in total revenue resulting from a change in the quantity of
output sold.
Change in quantity
Breakeven output: is the quantity of output in which total revenue is equal to total cost, such
that a firm earns a normal profit, but no economic profit.
A profit curve is the relationship between economic profit and the quantity of output.
Types of profit:
= (P x Q ) - (AC x Q )