hut300 notes mini
hut300 notes mini
1. What to produce: Deciding which goods and services to produce and in what quantities
2. How to produce: Choosing the methods, techniques, and resources for production
3. For whom to produce: Determining how goods and services will be distributed among
people
Why does the problem of choice arise in an economy? The problem of choice arises because:
A graph showing the maximum possible combinations of two goods an economy can
produce using all available resources efficiently
Shows the trade-off between producing different goods
Points on the curve represent full employment of resources
Points inside the curve represent underutilization of resources
Points outside the curve are unattainable with current resources
Underutilization of resources: Points inside the PPC curve (like point U) show the
economy is not using all available resources efficiently. This might be due to
unemployment, inefficient production methods, or unused capacity.
Full employment of resources: Points exactly on the PPC curve (like points A, B, C)
show the economy is using all resources efficiently. Every point on the curve represents
different allocation of resources between the two goods.
Explain the concept of opportunity cost and its linkage with PPC:
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative forgone when making a choice
On the PPC, opportunity cost is shown by the slope of the curve
Moving from one point to another on the PPC shows the opportunity cost
Example: If moving from point A (20 cars, 0 computers) to point B (15 cars, 10
computers), the opportunity cost of 10 computers is 5 cars
Typically, PPC is concave (bowed outward) because opportunity costs increase as more
of one good is produced
Business Organizations
What is a Joint Stock Company? Discuss its advantages and disadvantages:
1. Sole Proprietorship:
o One owner who manages business
o Owner keeps all profits and bears all risk
o Simple to start, flexible, direct control
2. Partnership:
o Two or more people share ownership
o Partners share profits, losses, and management
o More capital than sole proprietorship
o Limited to 20 partners (usually)
3. Joint Stock Company:
o Owned by shareholders
o Limited liability for owners
o Separate legal entity
o Professional management
4. Cooperative:
o Owned by members who are also users
o Democratic control (one member, one vote)
o Profits distributed based on use of services
o Focus on service rather than profit
Utility Theory
The additional satisfaction gained from consuming one more unit of a good
Example: The satisfaction from drinking the second glass of water is the marginal utility
of the second glass
Law of diminishing marginal utility: As more units of a good are consumed in a given time
period, the satisfaction (utility) from each additional unit decreases.
Assumptions:
The law states that as a consumer consumes more units of a good, the additional satisfaction
(marginal utility) from each extra unit falls.
Example:
State the law of demand and explain with diagram and schedule:
Law of demand: As price of a good increases, quantity demanded decreases, and vice versa
(negative relationship between price and quantity demanded).
4 200
3 300
2 400
1 500
1. Giffen goods: Inferior goods that are consumed more when price rises (e.g., staple foods
for poor)
2. Veblen goods: Luxury goods bought for status (e.g., designer clothes)
3. Emergency goods: Necessities like medicines bought regardless of price
4. Goods of ignorance: When quality is judged by price (e.g., perfumes)
5. Future expectations: If price is expected to rise further
Law of supply: As price of a good increases, quantity supplied increases, and vice versa
(positive relationship between price and quantity supplied).
Determinants of supply:
Elasticity of Demand
The percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price
Ed = % Change in Quantity Demanded ÷ % Change in Price
When percentage change in quantity demanded is less than percentage change in price
(Ed < 1)
Example: 10% price increase causes only 5% quantity decrease
Typically for necessities (salt, medicine)
The difference between what consumers are willing to pay for a good and what they
actually pay
Represented by the area below the demand curve and above the price line
Shows net benefit to consumers from market exchange
Define consumer surplus, producer surplus, social surplus and deadweight loss:
1. Consumer surplus: Difference between what consumers are willing to pay and what
they actually pay
2. Producer surplus: Difference between what producers receive and their minimum
acceptable price (the supply curve shows minimum acceptable prices)
3. Social surplus: Sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus; represents total benefit to
society
4. Deadweight loss: Loss of economic efficiency when market equilibrium is not achieved;
typically shown as a triangle area
What happens to consumer and producer surplus when the sale of a good is taxed?
Deadweight loss is the loss of economic efficiency when market equilibrium is not
achieved
It represents lost utility that isn't transferred to anyone else in the economy
With taxation, deadweight loss occurs because some trades that would be mutually
beneficial don't happen
The more elastic demand and supply are, the larger the deadweight loss from taxation
Opportunity Cost
Definition: Value of the next best alternative foregone when making a choice
Example: A student choosing to study medicine instead of engineering
o Direct cost: College fees, books for medicine
o Opportunity cost: Potential engineering salary during years of extra medical
training
Example: A farmer using land to grow wheat instead of corn
o Opportunity cost is the value of corn that could have been produced
What is a production function? Explain long run production function and represent the
three returns to scales with isoquants:
Production function is the relationship between inputs and maximum possible output. In the long
run, all inputs are variable, so firms can adjust all factors of production.
The law states that as more of a variable input is added to fixed inputs, total product initially
increases at an increasing rate, then at a decreasing rate, and finally declines.
1. Stage I:
o Total product (TP) increases at increasing rate
o Marginal product (MP) increases and is above average product (AP)
o AP increases
o Corresponds to increasing returns
2. Stage II:
o TP increases at decreasing rate
o MP decreases but remains positive
o AP decreases
o Most efficient stage, rational producer operates here
o Corresponds to diminishing returns
3. Stage III:
o TP decreases
o MP becomes negative
o AP continues to decrease
o Irrational to operate in this stage
Cost Concepts
Production decision: Should a firm continue production or shut down in the short run?
Break-Even Analysis
Uses:
Limitations:
Other reasons include: 3. Control problems: Difficult to maintain quality standards 4. Labor
relations: Worker alienation, less motivation, labor disputes 5. Transportation costs: Moving
materials within large facilities becomes costly
Briefly explain any four types of internal economies from large scale production:
1. Technical economies:
o Better machinery utilization
o Specialization of machinery
o Linked production processes
o Advantages of large machines
2. Managerial economies:
o Specialization of management functions
o Use of computers and technology
o Scientific management techniques
o Professional expertise
3. Marketing economies:
o Bulk buying discounts
o Lower transportation costs per unit
o Better bargaining power
o Specialized marketing department
4. Financial economies:
o Better access to capital markets
o Lower interest rates
o More financing options
o Ability to issue stocks and bonds
5. Risk-bearing economies:
o Diversification of products
o Spread risk across markets
o Research and development capabilities
o Weather market fluctuations better
Isoquant: A curve showing all combinations of inputs (like labor and capital) that
produce the same level of output
Properties of isoquants:
Expansion path: A line connecting all optimal input combinations as output increases
Shows how input proportions change as a firm expands
Found by connecting the tangent points of isoquants with isocost lines
For constant returns to scale with unchanging input prices, the expansion path is a
straight line from the origin
Technical Progress
Technical progress: Improvements in technology that allow more output from the same inputs
or same output with fewer inputs
Explain the concept of technical progress. Which are the three types of technical progress:
Technical progress: Improvement in production methods that allows more output from same
inputs
Three types:
Producer's Equilibrium
With the help of a diagram, explain producer's equilibrium and expansion path:
Producer's equilibrium: The optimal combination of inputs that minimizes cost for a given
output level
Cost-Output Relationships
Draw a diagram and derive the three relations between MC and AVC:
The three relations between marginal cost (MC) and average variable cost (AVC):
1. When AVC falls, MC < AVC:
o If the cost of an additional unit is less than the average, it pulls the average down
o Example: If AVC is ₹10 and MC is ₹8, AVC will decrease
2. When AVC is minimum, MC = AVC:
o At the minimum point of AVC, MC equals AVC
o MC curve intersects AVC curve at its minimum point
3. When AVC rises, MC > AVC:
o If the cost of an additional unit is more than the average, it pulls the average up
o Example: If AVC is ₹10 and MC is ₹12, AVC will increase
MODULE 3: MARKET STRUCTURES AND PRICING
Perfect Competition
What is perfect competition? What are the features of a perfectly competitive market?
Perfect competition: A market structure with many buyers and sellers, where no single
participant can influence the market price
Features:
1. Many buyers and sellers: No market power for any individual participant
2. Homogeneous product: Identical products, no differentiation
3. Free entry and exit: No barriers to entering or leaving the market
4. Perfect information: All buyers and sellers have complete knowledge
5. Price takers: Firms accept the market price, cannot influence it
6. Perfect mobility of factors: Resources can move freely between different uses
7. Zero transaction costs: No costs of exchange beyond the price
Monopoly
1. Number of sellers:
o Perfect competition: Many sellers
o Monopoly: Single seller
2. Price determination:
o Perfect competition: Price taker (accepts market price)
o Monopoly: Price maker (sets market price)
3. Barriers to entry:
o Perfect competition: No barriers to entry
o Monopoly: Strong barriers to entry
Similarities:
Number of
Single seller Many sellers
sellers
Control over
Substantial Limited by substitutes
price
Monopolistic Competition
What are the characteristics of monopolistic competition, and how does it differ from
monopoly?
Short-run equilibrium:
Profit maximization at MR = MC
Can earn abnormal profits if P > AC
Can incur losses if P < AC
Will continue if P > AVC even with losses
Long-run equilibrium:
Oligopoly
A market situation where a few firms in an oligopoly agree (formally or informally) to fix
prices, limit output, or share markets
Forms of collusion:
o Cartel: Formal agreement (like OPEC)
o Price leadership: One firm sets price, others follow
o Tacit collusion: Informal understanding without explicit agreement
Goal is to behave like a monopoly and maximize joint profits
Often illegal in many countries under antitrust laws
Oligopoly: Market dominated by a few large firms where each firm must consider rivals'
reactions
Features:
What is oligopolistic market? How does the concept of a kinked demand curve explain
price stability in an oligopolistic market?
Oligopolistic market: A market dominated by a few large firms, each aware that their actions
affect others and will cause reactions.
The demand curve facing an oligopolist has a "kink" at the prevailing price
If one firm raises price: Others won't follow, so demand is elastic (steep drop in quantity)
If one firm lowers price: Others will follow to protect market share, so demand is
inelastic (small gain in quantity)
Result: Price tends to be stable because:
o Price increases cause large loss in sales (not profitable)
o Price decreases cause price wars with little gain in quantity (not profitable)
MR curve has a discontinuity (gap) at the kink
Wide range of MC changes won't affect optimal price or quantity
Explains why oligopoly prices tend to be "sticky" and change less frequently
Pricing Strategies
Setting a high initial price for a new product, then gradually lowering it over time
Often used for innovative or unique products
Captures high-willingness-to-pay customers first
Helps recover R&D costs quickly
Price reduced as competition increases or to reach more price-sensitive segments
Examples: New electronics, pharmaceuticals, fashion items
What is pricing and what are the different methods used for pricing?
Pricing: Process of determining what a company will receive in exchange for its products or
services
Number of firms Many small firms Single firm Few large firms
Substantial (price
Price control None (price taker) Limited by interdependence
maker)
Allocatively
Efficiency Allocatively efficient Usually inefficient
inefficient
Automobiles,
Examples Agricultural products Public utilities
telecommunications
The organizational and other characteristics of a market that influence the behavior and
interaction of buyers and sellers
Determined by number of firms, nature of product, entry conditions, information
availability
Key types: perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, monopoly
Influences pricing decisions, output levels, efficiency, and consumer welfare
Non-Price Competition
Final goods:
o Products purchased for final use, not for resale or further processing
o Counted in GDP calculation
o Examples: Cars purchased by consumers, furniture for home use
Intermediate goods:
o Products used in the production of other goods and services
o Not counted directly in GDP (to avoid double counting)
o Value included in final goods' prices
o Examples: Steel used in car manufacturing, flour used by bakeries
Explain the difference between stock and flow in national income with example:
Adjustments made:
1. Income Method:
o Sum all factor incomes (wages, rent, interest, profit)
o Add taxes on products minus subsidies
o Add depreciation (for GDP)
o Advantage: Shows income distribution
o Challenge: Difficult to separate mixed income
2. Expenditure Method:
o Sum all final expenditures: C + I + G + (X-M)
o C = Consumer spending
o I = Investment spending
o G = Government spending
o X-M = Net exports
o Advantage: Shows composition of demand
o Challenge: Difficult to differentiate final and intermediate goods
3. Value Added Method:
o Sum value added at each production stage
o Value added = Output value - Intermediate input value
o Calculated sector by sector
o Advantage: Shows sectoral contribution
o Challenge: Requires detailed production data
How is GDP estimated under expenditure method? GDP using expenditure method is
calculated as:
GDP = C + I + G + (X-M)
Where:
Explain value added method: The value added method calculates GDP by summing the value
added at each stage of production:
Value added = Value of output - Value of intermediate inputs used
Prevents double counting in GDP calculation
Calculated for each enterprise or industry, then summed
Process:
Example:
Explain the circular flow of income in three sector and four sector model with a neat
diagram:
1. Households: Supply factors of production, receive income, spend on goods and services
2. Firms: Use factors of production, produce goods and services, earn revenue
3. Government: Collects taxes, provides public goods, makes transfer payments
Flows:
Four Sector Model adds: 4. Foreign sector: Other countries that engage in trade and financial
transactions
Additional flows:
Inflation
What is Inflation? Explain different types of inflation and its control measures:
Inflation: Persistent increase in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over
a period of time
Types of inflation:
1. Demand-pull inflation:
o Caused by excess aggregate demand relative to available supply
o "Too much money chasing too few goods"
o Causes: Increased consumer spending, government spending, investment, exports
o Graph shows rightward shift of aggregate demand curve
2. Cost-push inflation:
o Caused by increases in costs of production
o Triggers include wage increases, raw material costs, indirect taxes
o Results in higher prices even with stable demand
o Graph shows leftward shift of aggregate supply curve
Control measures:
1. Monetary measures:
o Increase interest rates to reduce borrowing
o Reduce money supply through higher reserve requirements
o Open market operations (selling government securities)
o Credit rationing and control
2. Fiscal measures:
o Reduce government spending
o Increase taxes to reduce disposable income
o Reduce budget deficit
o Control public expenditure
Effectiveness comparison:
1. Increase bank rate: Central bank raises interest rate for lending to commercial banks
o Commercial banks raise interest rates for customers
o Higher rates discourage borrowing and spending
o Reduces money supply and aggregate demand
2. Increase Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR): Higher percentage of deposits banks must keep
with central bank
o Reduces banks' lending capacity
o Less credit creation in economy
o Tightens money supply
3. Increase Statutory Liquidity Ratio (SLR): Higher percentage of deposits banks must
keep in liquid assets
o Further reduces lending capacity
o Controls credit expansion
4. Open Market Operations: Central bank sells government securities
o Buyers pay money to central bank
o Money moves from circulation to central bank
o Reduces money supply in economy
5. Credit rationing: Direct controls on bank lending
o Limits on loans for specific sectors
o Priorities for essential sectors
Explain cost push inflation with the help of a diagram. What are the effects of inflation on
production and distribution?
Cost-push inflation diagram: Shows aggregate supply curve shifting leftward due to increased
production costs, resulting in higher price level and lower output.
Effects on production:
Effects on distribution:
1. Fixed income groups suffer: Pensioners, salaried workers lose purchasing power
2. Creditors lose, debtors gain: Loans repaid in less valuable money
3. Savers lose: Real value of savings erodes
4. Speculative gains: Asset holders may benefit
5. Wage-price spiral: Workers demand higher wages, increasing costs further
6. Income inequality: Different groups affected differently
Financial Markets
Money Market:
Capital Market:
An account used for buying and selling securities in the stock market
Linked to a bank account for fund transfers
Required to trade in securities (stocks, bonds, derivatives)
Operated through a broker or trading platform
Shows transaction history, current holdings, profit/loss
Usually linked to demat account for holding securities
Monetary Policy
Monetary policy: The actions of a central bank to influence the money supply and interest rates
to achieve macroeconomic objectives (price stability, growth, employment)
How does open market operation work to affect the money supply?
Open Market Operations (OMO): Buying or selling of government securities by the central
bank in the open market
Stock Market
NIFTY:
SENSEX:
Demat account:
Electronic account to hold shares and securities
Eliminates physical share certificates
Reduces risks of theft, forgery, damage
Faster transfers and settlements
Maintained by depositories (NSDL, CDSL)
Required for trading in Indian stock markets
Trading account:
Bank Rate:
Percentage of net demand and time liabilities banks must keep with central bank
Held as cash reserves with central bank
Earns no interest (opportunity cost for banks)
Direct control on money multiplier
Quick impact on liquidity
SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio):
What is international trade? List out the advantages of foreign trade. (3 marks)
2. Trade Theories
Examine the comparative cost theory. Point out any two criticisms against this theory. (7
marks)
3. Balance of Payments
Definition: Record of all money flows between a country and rest of world
Components:
1. Current Account - Trade in goods/services, income, transfers
2. Capital Account - Purchase/sale of assets
3. Financial Account - Investment flows
4. Errors and Omissions - Statistical discrepancies
What is meant by BOP? What are the measures to correct disequilibrium in BOP? (7
marks)
Point out any three items coming under unilateral transfers account. (3 marks)
Devaluation:
o Government decision
o Happens in fixed exchange rate system
o Deliberate policy action
Depreciation:
o Market forces decide
o Happens in floating exchange rate system
o Natural market movement
What do you mean by devaluation? Explain the conditions for its success. (4 marks)
5. Trade Barriers
Tariff barriers:
o Import duties/taxes
o Makes imports expensive
o Government gets revenue
Non-tariff barriers:
o Quotas - Limit on quantity
o Licenses - Permission needed
o Technical standards - Safety rules
o Subsidies - Help to local producers
What are tariff barriers? Explain its impact on the economy. (7 marks)
6. Trade Policy
Differentiate between free trade and protectionism. List any six arguments in support of
protectionism (10 marks)
Free Trade:
o No barriers to trade
o Market decides everything
o Based on comparative advantage
Protectionism:
o Barriers to protect local industry
o Government controls trade
o Limits foreign competition
Explain any four measures to solve the problem of deficit in the balance of payments. (8
marks)
1. Devaluation/Depreciation:
o Makes exports cheaper
o Makes imports expensive
o Improves trade balance
2. Import restrictions:
o Tariffs raise import prices
o Quotas limit quantities
o Reduces import spending
3. Export promotion:
o Subsidies to exporters
o Tax benefits
o Better infrastructure
4. Deflation policy:
o Reduce domestic spending
o Lower imports naturally
o Control inflation
7. Marshall-Lerner Condition