1 advanced microeconomics: lecture 1 charit tingsabadh m.sc. programme in environmental and natural...

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1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Page 1: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Advanced Microeconomics:lecture 1Charit Tingsabadh

M.Sc. Programme inEnvironmental and Natural Resource Economics

June 2006

Page 2: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Outline

• Introduction to subject

• Why Microeconomics

• Expectation

• Simple concepts

• Tools

• Uses

• Example

Page 3: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Introduction to subject

• Microeconomics is about “individual” behaviour

• How to decide on resource allocation?• Individual as consumer-demand theory• Individual as producer – production• Theory of market – balancing demand and

supply• What happens when there more than one

of us? Collective action…

Page 4: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Why Microeconomics

• Basis of discipline

• Philosophical foundation, logical system

• Can explain the world, to some extent

• Tools for analysing the behaviour of business

Page 5: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Expectations

• Understanding the theories– assumptions, arguments, conclusion

• Explain..verbalising the understanding in words, graphs, equations.. etc.

• Applying theories to cases..goods, analysis of changes in the conditions of market

Page 6: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Simple concepts

• Prices and quantities• How they are related• Functions represent such relations• Also graphs, good way of simple

representation• For complex relationships, equations are

needed, because they allow for more variables (dimensions), but more difficult to handle (need mathematics)

Page 7: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Simple concepts

• Quantities of “Things” • Why care about things? • Object of living is “satisfaction” …through

use/consumption of “things” materialist approach, may not always guarantee “happiness” but seems to work for a lot of people

• Another word is … UTILITY • (not FUTILITY)

Page 8: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Simple concepts

• Price is about…• The value the individual places on an object..

Willingness to pay..

• But this implies a producer.. Where the good comes from, who receives the pay..

• Can there be a price with only one person? Yes, imagine a one man-economy, still can decide how to spend effort..individual as both consumer and producer– sufficient economy?

Page 9: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Simple concepts

• So there is the demand price and the

• Supply price• With more than one person, meaning is

quite self-evident

• Show by graph, quite simple to do..

Page 10: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Price

Quantity

Page 11: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Tools

• Graphs, as shown• Mathematical equation• Demand: Qd = a – pQ• Supply: Qs = b + pQ• Idea of market as place where demand

and supply interact, but in practice, needs no physical space – eBay is a market, Amazon.com is a supplier in a market, so market is a flexible concept.

Page 12: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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More simple concepts

• Want to talk about how quantities respond to price changes

• This is “elasticity” defined as

• Percentage change in quantity supplied(demanded) as the price changes by 1 percent

Page 13: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Tools

• Distinguish between

• Total-average-marginal• Total: production Q = f(L) where Q is

output, L is input

• Total: expenditure Y = p1X1+p2X2, all income (Y) is spent on buying two goods X1 and X2 at prices p1 and p2

Page 14: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Tools

• Average : based on ratio between total quantity and total labour

• Average productivity is Q/L

• Average price of computers is ..100,000 baht can buy 3 computers, so average price is 100,000/3.

Page 15: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Tools

• Marginal

• Marginal productivity of L in producing Q,

• Is the change in production Q from using “one” more unit of L, so it is NOT the average, but the additional/incremental output, mathematically like this:

• MPL = dQ/dL

Page 16: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Tools

• Budget Constraints• Is there a limit to what we can buy, use,

consume?• Human want is limitless, but not so our

income, so there is the

• BUDGET CONSTRAINT• Excess of spending over income means

debt..an accounting concept is necessary

Page 17: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Concepts

• Welfare• Means the result of consumption, so it is more

than the sum of things consumed, but in relation to the willingness to pay for the thing..

• So, for the consumer, it is the difference between the WTP and the price, the

consumer surplus• And the producer, the price and the cost of

production, the producer surplus

Page 18: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Finally, for today

• Equilibrium is

• When both consumer and producer are satisfied– deal is done, all goods are sold, market is cleared..

• Everyone is happy.. And can go home

• But not for all goods

Page 19: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Types of good

High excludability Low excludability

High rivalry Private good Open access

Low Rivalry Club good Public good

Give examples of each type

Page 20: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Finished for today

• Any questions?

Page 21: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Lecture 11 Various Micro-topics

Charit TingsabadhM.Sc. Programme in Environmental

and natural resource economicsSemester 1/2005

Page 22: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Topics

• Capital and investment

• Empirical demand and cost functions

• Corruption

Page 23: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Capital and Investment

• Capital as factor of production

• Source of capital – saving = income not consumed in current period

• Choice between present and future consumption

• Rate of time preference

• Opportunity cost of capital

Page 24: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Investment

• Rental rate – r – from MR.MPk = r

• MR = marginal revenue, MPk = marginal product of capital

• Rental r, interest i, maintenance m and depreciation d

• r > i+m+d, for a capital renting firm

• Buying equipment, reverse the above.

Page 25: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Appraisal of investment project

• Benefit (B), Cost (C), discount rate d, time t

• Present value of investment

• PV = t(Bt-Ct)/(1+d)t >= 0

• Other indicators: internal rate of return d* to make PV=0 d*>i

• Benefit cost ratio (BCR) = PVB/PVC >1

Page 26: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Empirical demand and supply functions

• Demand: perhaps adequate demand systems(Almon)

• Production/Cost function: Cobb-Douglas, CES, Translog

• Recognise and interpret

Page 27: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Demand function

• Perhaps adequate demand system• AIDS: good I, price p, income y, s = share of

good I in total expenditure

• Almon demand function xi per capita consumption, c constant

Page 28: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Almon demand function

• Make certain assumptions on substitutions

Page 29: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Then…

Page 30: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Empirical estimates..

Page 31: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Page 32: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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For food and cars..

Page 33: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Production/cost functions

• Production Q as function of factor inputs-capital K and labour L,

• Cost of production C as function of wages w and interest i. So

• Consider some fucntional forms

• Cobb-Douglas, CES, Translog

Page 34: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Cobb-Douglas

Page 35: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Estimation

Also useful for growth accounting exercise

Page 36: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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CES production function

Page 37: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Translog: Specification

Page 38: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Translog cost function

Page 39: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Results

Page 40: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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Corruption

• How to consider corruption economics?

• Develop a model

Page 41: 1 Advanced Microeconomics: lecture 1 Charit Tingsabadh M.Sc. Programme in Environmental and Natural Resource Economics June 2006

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In praise of microeconomics

• As a tool for thinking about situations

• Understand motivations and behaviour of agents

• Rational explanation of strange behaviour

• Enjoy!!