Principles of Political Economy

1

The Discourse of Economics

Chapter 1. The Discourse of Economics

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Economics is best understood as an intellectual discourse about how societies produce, circulate, and distribute products and services, rather than as a single unified science, because the discipline contains multiple competing schools of thought with fundamentally different entry points, methods, and assumptions.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • What economics is: an intellectual discourse (conversation) about social processes of production, circulation, distribution, and their effects on human welfare—not merely about money or business.
  • Historical emergence: economics developed relatively recently (17th–18th centuries) during the transition from feudalism to market capitalism in Western Europe, when people first became conscious of "the economy" as a separate sphere.
  • Neoclassical dominance: neoclassical economics defines the field narrowly as a science focused on efficient use of scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants, and it dominates modern textbooks so completely that students rarely learn about competing schools.
  • Common confusion—positive vs. normative: neoclassical economists claim to separate "purely factual" positive statements from value-laden normative statements, but in practice even seemingly descriptive statements (e.g., unemployment definitions) contain hidden moral judgments.
  • Method and models: neoclassical economics uses an entry point of given resources/technology/preferences, a logic of unidirectional causality, the ceteris paribus assumption, and graphical/mathematical models to assert causal relationships—but causation is never directly observable, only imposed by the theorist.

📚 What economics is and why it emerged

📖 Defining economics as discourse

Economics is an intellectual discourse concerned with the manner in which societies produce, circulate, and distribute products and services, as well as the consequences for human welfare that follow.

  • Not just money or business: although money and commerce are important topics, economics is much broader.
  • Intellectual: requires logical thinking, careful reasoning, and engagement with big ideas.
  • Participatory: the discourse happens in academia (classrooms, conferences, journals), among government officials (tax and spending debates), and in everyday conversations (e.g., why prices differ between stores).
  • Why "discourse" matters: this definition acknowledges deep disagreements and competing perspectives, rather than pretending economics has settled answers.

🏰 Historical roots: feudalism to capitalism

  • Late emergence: economics as a distinct discipline did not exist in ancient Greece or medieval times; it emerged only in the 17th–18th centuries.
  • Feudal system: Western Europe had a strict hierarchy (king, feudal lords, serfs) justified by divine right and religious tradition; people's livelihoods were embedded in this order.
  • Transformation: growth of markets, long-distance trade, and the enclosure movement (forceful expulsion of serfs from land) led to private property, wage labor, and market capitalism.
  • Why economics emerged then: for the first time, most people's livelihoods depended on unpredictable movements in prices and wages—people became conscious of "the economy" as a separate, puzzling force.
  • Example: a serf's life was governed by tradition and the lord's authority; a wage laborer's life depended on finding work at a market wage, which could fluctuate for unclear reasons.

🧑‍🏫 Key early thinkers

ThinkerWorkCore idea
Adam Smith (1723–1790)Wealth of Nations (1776)The "invisible hand": in a system of private property and voluntary exchange, each person pursuing self-interest unintentionally serves others' interests (e.g., customer gets haircut, stylist gets income).
David Ricardo (1772–1823)Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (1817)Comparative advantage: countries can benefit from trade even if one is better at producing both goods, because mutual gains arise from specialization.
Karl Marx (1818–1883)Capital (1867–1894)Capitalism drives rapid technological development but also exploits the working class (proletariat) for the benefit of property owners (bourgeoisie), leading to crises and class struggle.
  • Competing views: Smith and Ricardo were generally optimistic about capitalism; Marx was critical.
  • Schools of thought: followers of each thinker formed schools that refined and extended their ideas, leading to ongoing debates.

🏛️ Neoclassical economics and its dominance

🎓 What neoclassical economics is

Neoclassical economics is the dominant school of economic thought that defines economics as the social science concerned with the efficient use of scarce resources to achieve the maximum satisfaction of unlimited individual wants.

  • Origins: emerged in the 1870s (France, Britain, Austria) with new methods and concepts, building on but differing from classical political economy.
  • Dominance: by the end of World War II, neoclassical economics became so dominant in the U.S. that students are taught it as if it were the only approach; also called mainstream or orthodox economics.
  • Narrower definition: focuses specifically on efficiency and scarcity, not the broader social processes emphasized in the discourse definition.
  • Claims to be a science: like physics, implying only experts can participate meaningfully—this restricts broader participation in economic discourse.

🔀 Heterodox alternatives

  • Heterodox economics: all schools that reject at least some part of the neoclassical approach (Marxian, Austrian, Post-Keynesian, Sraffian, feminist, institutionalist).
  • What unites them: opposition to neoclassical dominance, not a single shared perspective.
  • Don't confuse political orientation with methodology: Austrian economics is further right than neoclassical, so rejection of neoclassical is not always left-wing; often methodological differences drive the split.

🧩 Neoclassical entry point and logic

Entry point (bedrock assumptions):

  1. Given resources: society's endowment of resources is taken as given.
  2. Given technology: society's production knowledge is taken as given.
  3. Given preferences: each individual's preferences are taken as given.
  • What "taken as given" means: these are the starting assumptions; neoclassical economists do not try to explain how society acquired its territory, technology, or why people have certain preferences—those questions are for historians, psychologists, etc.
  • Strict boundaries: this limits what counts as an "economic" question.
  • Example: how the U.S. acquired its territory (conquest vs. purchase) is not an economic question; how a smoker developed a preference for cigarettes is not an economic question.

Logic: unidirectional causality (cause-and-effect)

  • Variable A causes a change in variable B, but B never causes a change in A.
  • Mutual causality forbidden: e.g., consumer preferences affect diamond ring prices, but could higher prices also make some consumers desire rings more (as a quality signal)? Neoclassical logic does not allow this feedback loop.
  • Why this logic: it lends itself well to mathematical reasoning.

⚖️ Positive vs. normative: a contested distinction

📊 The distinction

  • Positive statement: supposedly purely factual, can be true or false (e.g., "Dave is an American citizen").
  • Normative statement: value-laden, expresses what "should" be, neither true nor false (e.g., "U.S. officials should pursue full employment").
  • Roots: philosopher David Hume (1711–1776) argued "No 'is' implies an 'ought'"—you cannot derive moral conclusions from facts alone.
  • Neoclassical view: only positive statements are scientific; normative questions are important but cannot be answered definitively.

🧐 Why the distinction is problematic

  • Hidden values in "facts": seemingly descriptive statements often contain normative content.
  • Example: "John is not unemployed."
    • Context: John lost his job 13 weeks ago, searched for 7 weeks, then gave up 6 weeks ago and now stays home.
    • According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, John is not unemployed (because he hasn't searched in the last 4 weeks; he's "outside the labor force").
    • The normative choice: defining unemployment this way reflects a value judgment about whether discouraged workers "should" count as unemployed.
  • Construction of variables: economists must decide what to include/exclude when defining measures (unemployment, GDP, etc.)—these choices are value-laden.
  • Don't confuse: a statement that looks purely descriptive may smuggle in moral assumptions through definitions and classifications.

💬 Joan Robinson's warning

"To pretend to have none [ideological, moral, political views] and to be purely objective must necessarily be either self-deception or a device to deceive others. A candid writer will make his preconceptions clear and allow the reader to discount them if he does not accept them."

  • Implication: claims to pure objectivity in economics should be viewed with caution; better to acknowledge one's values openly.

🧪 Economic models and the ceteris paribus assumption

🏗️ What economic models are

  • Like physical models: simplifications of complex reality (e.g., a model airplane includes essential parts but omits inessential details).
  • Abstract: economic models are mental constructs, not physical objects.
  • Model-building choices: theorists must decide what to include and exclude—these choices inevitably reflect the theorist's values.
  • Implication: even "positive" models contain implicit moral content.

🔒 The ceteris paribus assumption

Ceteris paribus (other-things-equal assumption): hold all other variables constant so the theorist can focus on the relationship between variables of greatest interest.

  • Why necessary: in reality, many variables change at once; to isolate the effect of one variable, we must imagine all others are frozen.
  • Biologist analogy:
    • Experiment 1: Plant A gets moderate sunlight, Plant B gets zero sunlight; both get same water and food → Plant A thrives, Plant B dies → supports hypothesis that sunlight encourages growth.
    • Experiment 2: Plant A gets moderate sunlight but zero water, Plant B gets zero sunlight but moderate water → Plant A dies anyway → hypothesis not supported, because other conditions differed.
    • Lesson: to test a hypothesis, all other conditions must be the same except the variable of interest.

🧪 Controlled experiments vs. thought experiments

  • Biologists' advantage: can perform controlled experiments in a lab, directly imposing and monitoring conditions.
  • Economists' challenge: cannot create identical economies or control all variables; must rely on thought experiments (imagining other variables held constant) and statistical tests of historical data.
  • Weaker evidence: statistical tests are less convincing than lab experiments, making economics harder to compare to physics.

📈 Graphical analysis and causal relationships

📉 Two-dimensional graphs

  • Cartesian coordinate system: horizontal axis (first coordinate) and vertical axis (second coordinate); any point is an ordered pair (x, y).
  • Positive (direct) relationship: both variables move in the same direction (upward-sloping line).
  • Negative (inverse) relationship: one variable increases as the other decreases (downward-sloping line).

🔍 Correlation vs. causation

  • Key insight: graphs show correlations, not causation.
  • Example: basketball players' practice hours and average points per game are positively correlated.
    • Interpretation 1: more practice → more points (practice causes scoring).
    • Interpretation 2: players with more natural ability score more points and also enjoy practicing more, so higher scoring → more practice (scoring causes practice).
    • Hume's critique of induction: we never observe causal connections, only repeated correlations; causation is imposed by the theorist, not observed.
  • Don't confuse: correlation does not imply causation; the theorist asserts the causal direction based on theory, not direct observation.

🔢 Independent and dependent variables

  • Independent variable: the cause (e.g., quantity of output Q).
  • Dependent variable: the effect (e.g., total cost TC).
  • Cost function example: TC = f(Q) means total cost is a function of (depends on) output.
    • Neoclassical claim: as output increases, total cost rises (positive relationship), other factors held constant.

💰 Example: a neoclassical cost model

📊 Total cost, fixed cost, variable cost

  • Total cost (TC): all costs incurred by the firm.
  • Total fixed cost (TFC): costs that do not vary with output (e.g., rent on a factory); positive even when output is zero.
  • Total variable cost (TVC): costs that vary with output (e.g., raw materials, labor); zero when output is zero.
  • Relationship: TC = TFC + TVC.

📐 Linear cost function

  • Suppose a firm has the following data:
    • When Q = 0, TC = $60 (this is TFC).
    • When Q increases, TC rises at a constant rate.
  • Slope (marginal cost): the additional cost from producing 1 more unit.
    • Example: if two points are (Q₁ = 20, TC₁ = 70) and (Q₂ = 40, TC₂ = 80), then slope = (80 – 70)/(40 – 20) = 10/20 = 0.50.
    • Interpretation: each additional unit of output adds $0.50 to total cost.
  • Cost function form: TC = TFC + (ΔTC/ΔQ)Q
    • Plugging in: TC = 60 + 0.50Q.
  • Economic forecast: if Q = 120, then TC = 60 + 0.50(120) = 60 + 60 = $120.

🔄 Shifts vs. movements

  • Movement along the curve: output changes, cost changes along the same curve (ceteris paribus holds).
  • Shift of the curve: a change in a "held constant" variable (e.g., rent increases) shifts the entire curve upward (ceteris paribus violated).
  • Don't confuse: a change in output moves you along the curve; a change in fixed costs shifts the curve.

🧮 Review of basic math concepts

↔️ Slopes of special lines

  • Vertical line: slope is undefined (infinite), because Δx = 0 → slope = Δy/0.
  • Horizontal line: slope is zero, because Δy = 0 → slope = 0/Δx = 0.

📏 Slope of a nonlinear curve

  • Tangent line method: the slope at a point on a curve equals the slope of the unique straight line that just touches the curve at that point.
  • When it fails: if no unique tangent exists (e.g., a sharp corner like in the absolute value function at the origin), the slope is undefined at that point.

✏️ Equation of a straight line from two points

Given points (x₁, y₁) and (x₂, y₂):

  1. Calculate slope: m = (y₂ – y₁)/(x₂ – x₁).
  2. Point-slope form: y – y₀ = m(x – x₀), then solve for y.
  3. Slope-intercept form: y = mx + b; plug in slope and one point to find b.
  • Example: points (4, 5) and (12, 3) → slope = (3 – 5)/(12 – 4) = –2/8 = –1/4 → y = –(1/4)x + 6.

🌍 Broader implications

🗣️ Economics as conversation, not settled science

  • Pluralism: the excerpt emphasizes that economics is a discourse with many voices (Smith, Ricardo, Marx, neoclassical, heterodox schools).
  • Textbook dominance: most textbooks present only neoclassical economics and ignore the history of debate, giving students a false impression of consensus.
  • Why it matters: understanding economics as discourse encourages critical thinking and recognition that economic "facts" often embed values.

🧭 Methodological self-awareness

  • Entry points and logic: every school of thought starts somewhere and reasons in a particular way; recognizing this helps evaluate claims.
  • Ceteris paribus and models: simplifications are necessary but always involve choices about what to include/exclude.
  • Causation is imposed: theorists assert causal relationships; they are not directly observable, so different theorists may interpret the same data differently.

🎯 Practical takeaway

  • Be skeptical of claims to pure objectivity: definitions, models, and causal claims all involve value judgments.
  • Ask whose perspective: when reading economic analysis, consider the entry point, logic, and implicit assumptions of the school of thought being used.
  • Engage in the discourse: economics is not just for experts; everyone participates when discussing prices, taxes, employment, and social well-being.
2

What is a Good Society?

Chapter 2. What is a Good Society?

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical economists define the ideal society as one that achieves economic efficiency—full employment, productive efficiency, and allocative efficiency—in the face of the insoluble economic problem of unlimited wants and scarce resources.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Competing visions: Many thinkers (Plato, More, Gandhi, Islamic economists, Marx, Rand) have offered different answers to what constitutes a good society; neoclassical economics defines it as achieving efficiency.
  • The economic problem: All societies face the challenge of transforming scarce resources (land, labor, capital) with given technology into goods and services in the presence of unlimited human wants—a problem that can never be fully solved.
  • Three components of efficiency: Economic efficiency requires full employment of resources, productive efficiency (least-cost production), and allocative efficiency (the most desirable mix of goods).
  • Common confusion: Achieving economic efficiency does not solve the economic problem; it only does the best possible in the face of scarcity.
  • The law of increasing opportunity cost: Because resources are heterogeneous (better suited to some uses than others), the opportunity cost of producing more of one good rises as production increases.

🌍 Competing visions of the good society

🏛️ Historical and philosophical perspectives

Different thinkers across history have proposed distinct ideals:

Thinker/TraditionCore visionKey features
Plato (The Republic)Rule by philosopher-kingsStrict social hierarchy; wisdom justifies rule; includes warrior class and slaves
Thomas More (Utopia)Christian communal societyCommunal property; free distribution of necessities; six-hour workday; rotation between city and countryside
GandhiEconomic self-sufficiency and spiritual valuesLocal production; protectionism; avoidance of materialism; elevation of the worst-off; resistance to colonialism's legacy
Islamic economistsAdherence to Islamic law (Quran and Hadith)Profit-sharing but no interest; wealth tax for the poor; prohibition of alcohol, pork, gambling; universal brotherhood; theocratic governments enforce compliance
Karl MarxSocialism and communismWorkers own means of production; abolition of class distinctions; compensation according to work (socialism) or need (communism); contribution according to ability
Ayn RandCapitalism as protector of rightsRights to life and property derive from human nature; voluntary exchange only; the state's sole function is to protect individual rights
  • Don't confuse: These visions reflect different entry points (religious, philosophical, historical) and different ultimate values (wisdom, spirituality, equality, divine law, class abolition, individual rights).

🎯 The neoclassical perspective

The ideal society is the one that achieves efficiency: obtaining the most advantages with the least use of resources, or the avoidance of all waste.

  • Neoclassical economists possess their own concept of the good society, distinct from the others listed.
  • This vision is grounded in the economic problem and the concept of efficiency, which will be developed in detail.

🧩 The economic problem

🧩 What the economic problem is

The economic problem: How can society best transform scarce and limited economic resources with its given state of technology into goods and services in the presence of unlimited and insatiable human wants?

  • All human societies face this problem, whether primitive or advanced.
  • The problem is insoluble: infinite production would be needed to satisfy unlimited wants, which is impossible.
  • This is why neoclassical economics is called the "dismal science"—it begins with a problem that can never be fully solved.

🏗️ Resources (factors of production)

Resources are classified into three categories:

ResourceSymbolDefinitionType of variable
LandTNatural resources not previously passed through production (rivers, forests, unextracted minerals)Stock or flow
LaborLWork performed by individualsStock (number of workers) or flow (hours per year)
CapitalKPhysical goods used to produce other goods (machinery, tools, plants)Stock
  • Capital in neoclassical economics means physical goods, not money (which is called financial capital).
  • Investment (I) means the growth of capital through production or purchase, not financial investments in stocks/bonds.
  • Don't confuse: Stock variables (measured at a point in time, e.g., 500 factories) vs. flow variables (measured per unit of time, e.g., 15 factories per year).

⚙️ Technology

  • Technology = the methods or techniques used to transform resources into goods and services.
  • At a point in time, technology is given or fixed—it is an additional constraint.

🎯 Economic efficiency: the neoclassical ideal

🎯 Three components of economic efficiency

For an economy to achieve economic efficiency, all three conditions must be met:

  1. Full employment: All land, labor, and capital must be fully used for production.
  2. Productive efficiency: Production must use the least-cost or cost-minimizing method.
  3. Allocative efficiency: The most desirable mix of goods must be produced (what consumers most want).
  • If any one component is missing, economic efficiency is not achieved.
  • Example: If heart surgeons and basketball players trade places for a day, everyone is still employed (full employment), but the cost of heart surgeries is very high and basketball games are poorly played (productive efficiency is lost).
  • Example: If all resources are fully employed in the least-cost way but only silly string is produced, consumers have no food, housing, or clothing (allocative efficiency is lost).

⏱️ Static vs. dynamic efficiency

  • Static efficiency: Efficiency in the present moment.
  • Dynamic efficiency: Efficiency over time (e.g., sustainability—not using all natural resources this year so that future years have resources).
  • The excerpt focuses on static efficiency.

🔍 Does efficiency solve the economic problem?

  • No. An economically efficient economy does the best it possibly can in the face of the insoluble economic problem, but it does not eliminate scarcity or unlimited wants.
  • The economically efficient economy is the ideal society according to neoclassical economists, but the question of which form of society achieves this ideal is deferred.

📊 The production possibilities model

📊 What the model represents

The production possibilities model: A graphical depiction of the economic problem confronting any form of society.

  • The model is completely general—it applies to any economic system (barter, money-based, etc.).
  • It shows the tradeoffs and opportunity costs that all societies face.

🧱 Assumptions of the model

  1. Society produces only two goods, measured in physical terms (not monetary).
  2. Society possesses fixed stocks of land, labor, and capital.
  3. Society has a fixed production technology.
  4. Society is currently achieving full employment and productive efficiency (but not necessarily allocative efficiency).
  • Don't confuse: The model assumes full employment and productive efficiency, but it does not assume allocative efficiency—societal preferences will be introduced later.

📈 Production possibilities schedule and frontier (PPF)

  • A production possibilities schedule is a table showing different combinations of two goods that can be produced.
  • The production possibilities frontier (PPF) is the line connecting these combinations on a graph.
  • Each point on the PPF represents full employment and productive efficiency.
  • The PPF has a negative slope, indicating tradeoffs.

Example (from the excerpt):

  • Production combination A: 0 computers, 50 automobiles.
  • Production combination B: 60 computers, 45 automobiles.
  • Production combination E: 240 computers, 0 automobiles.

⚖️ Tradeoffs and opportunity cost

⚖️ Lesson 1: All societies face tradeoffs

  • An increase in the production of one good necessarily leads to a reduction in the production of another good.
  • The negative slope of the PPF indicates this tradeoff.
  • Another way of stating this: all societies incur opportunity costs.

Opportunity cost of an option X: The next best alternative Y that must be sacrificed to obtain X.

  • Example: If society desires more computers, it can only obtain them by sacrificing automobile production (shifting resources away from automobiles).
  • Example: The reader chose to read this book rather than take a nap—the opportunity cost of reading is the nap that cannot be taken.

📏 Measuring opportunity cost: Total opportunity cost

Total opportunity cost: The entire amount of one good lost to produce a given amount of another good.

  • Example: If society produces 120 computers, automobile production falls from 50 to 35 (a loss of 15 automobiles). The total opportunity cost of 120 computers is 15 automobiles.
  • Example: The total opportunity cost of 45 automobiles is 180 computers (computer production falls from 240 to 60).
  • Opportunity cost is always stated in terms of the other good that is lost.

📏 Measuring opportunity cost: Marginal opportunity cost

Marginal opportunity cost: The opportunity cost of a small or marginal change in production of one good, measured by the impact on the other good.

  • Example: Increasing computer production from 60 to 120 leads to a reduction in automobile production from 45 to 35. The marginal opportunity cost of the additional 60 computers is 10 automobiles.
  • When data is discrete, marginal opportunity cost is approximated using the slope of the PPF: Δ A / Δ C (change in automobiles divided by change in computers).
  • Example: The marginal opportunity cost of the 60th computer is approximately (45 - 50) / (60 - 0) = -5 / 60 = 1/12 of an automobile. The negative sign indicates the negative slope of the PPF.
  • Example: The marginal opportunity cost of the 120th computer is approximately (35 - 45) / (120 - 60) = -10 / 60 = 1/6 of an automobile.
  • Don't confuse: When calculating the marginal opportunity cost of good X, the other good is always placed in the numerator (because opportunity cost is measured in terms of the lost amount of the other good).

📈 The law of increasing opportunity cost

📈 Lesson 2: All societies face increasing opportunity costs

Law of increasing opportunity cost: The opportunity cost of producing an additional unit of a good rises as more of it is produced.

  • This is observed in the PPF by noting how the slope becomes steeper as society moves along the curve.
  • Example: The marginal opportunity cost of the 60th computer is 1/12 of an automobile, but the marginal opportunity cost of the 120th computer is 1/6 of an automobile—the cost has increased.
  • Neoclassical economists elevate this to the status of an economic law because they argue all human societies experience this phenomenon.

🧱 Why increasing opportunity cost occurs: Heterogeneous resources

Heterogeneous resources: Resources that are better suited to the production of some goods than others.

  • In general, societies possess heterogeneous resources (not homogeneous resources, which would be equally suited to all goods).
  • When society shifts resources from one sector to another, the first resources shifted are those best suited to the new sector and least suited to the old sector.
  • As more resources are shifted, the resources become less suited to the new sector and better suited to the old sector, so the opportunity cost rises.

Example (from the excerpt):

  • Starting at 0 computers and 50 automobiles, society shifts resources to computer production.
  • Moving to 60 computers, automobile production falls by only 5 units (the first resources shifted are best suited to computers and least suited to automobiles).
  • Moving to 120 computers, automobile production falls by 10 units (the resources shifted are now better suited to automobiles).
  • Moving to 240 computers, automobile production falls by 20 units (the best automobile resources must be shifted to computers).

📉 Law of diminishing returns

  • The law of increasing opportunity cost is sometimes described in terms of the law of diminishing returns.
  • Example: Starting at 240 computers and 0 automobiles, as computer production declines in increments of 60, the increases in automobile production become smaller and smaller.
  • The more society devotes resources to one good, the more difficult it is to increase production of that good.

🎯 Allocative efficiency and societal preferences

🎯 Representing economic efficiency in the model

  • Any point on the PPF satisfies full employment and productive efficiency (because these were assumed).
  • To achieve economic efficiency, allocative efficiency must also be met: the most desirable mix of goods must be produced.
  • But what is the most desirable mix for all members of society, given that people have very different preferences?

💰 Cost-benefit analysis

Cost-benefit analysis: A method to determine the most desirable mix of goods by comparing marginal benefit and marginal cost (measured in dollar terms).

  • This analysis requires dropping the assumption that money values do not exist.
  • Marginal cost (MC): The opportunity cost of producing an additional unit, measured in dollars. MC increases due to the law of increasing opportunity cost.
  • Marginal benefit (MB): The maximum dollar amount that members of society are willing to pay for a specific unit of a good. MB declines as consumption increases (diminishing marginal benefit).

Example (from the excerpt):

  • When 0 computers are produced, someone is willing to pay $1100 for the first computer (MB = $1100), but the marginal cost is only $100 (MC = $100).
  • When 60 computers are produced, MB = $900 and MC = $200.
  • When 120 computers are produced, MB = $700 and MC (not fully stated in excerpt, but implied to be less than $700).
  • When 240 computers are produced, MB = $100.

🔍 Decision rule for cost-benefit analysis

  • At each step, compare marginal benefit and marginal cost.
  • If MB > MC, production of that unit represents a net gain to society and should be produced.
  • Example: The first computer should be produced because MB ($1100) > MC ($100).
  • Example: When 60 computers are produced, another unit should be produced because MB ($900) > MC ($200).
  • The excerpt does not complete the analysis, but the implication is that production should continue until MB = MC (the point of allocative efficiency).
3

The Neoclassical Theory of Supply and Demand

Chapter 3. The Neoclassical Theory of Supply and Demand

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical theory argues that market capitalism automatically achieves economic efficiency—producing the optimal mix of goods at the lowest cost—by coordinating private ownership with competitive markets, while alternative economic systems fail to reach this ideal outcome.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Allocative efficiency rule: society should produce each good up to the point where marginal benefit equals marginal cost; producing beyond this point wastes resources.
  • Economic growth vs contraction: the PPF shifts outward when resources or technology increase (growth) and inward when they are lost (contraction); unemployment moves the economy inside the PPF without shifting it.
  • Neoclassical classification of systems: economic systems are defined by two dimensions—property ownership (private vs state) and allocation mechanism (market vs central planning)—yielding four types: market capitalism, command socialism, market socialism, and command capitalism.
  • Common confusion: unemployment vs resource loss—unemployment leaves the PPF unchanged (resources still exist but are idle), whereas resource loss shifts the PPF inward (resources no longer available).
  • Why market capitalism is favored: neoclassical economists claim that competitive markets with private ownership automatically guide the economy to the efficient point on the PPF, solving coordination problems like the double coincidence of wants through money.

📊 Marginal analysis and allocative efficiency

📈 Marginal cost and marginal benefit

Marginal cost (MC): the opportunity cost (in dollar terms) of producing one additional unit of a good.

Marginal benefit (MB): the maximum dollar amount that members of society are willing to pay for one additional unit of a good.

  • As production increases, marginal cost rises due to the law of increasing opportunity cost (heterogeneous resources).
  • As consumption increases, marginal benefit declines because people experience less additional satisfaction from each extra unit.
  • Example: when zero computers are produced, someone is willing to pay $1100 for the first computer (high MB), but by 240 computers the willingness to pay drops to $100 (low MB).

⚖️ The efficiency rule

Net marginal gain = marginal benefit minus marginal cost.

  • When MB > MC: society gains from producing more of the good.
  • When MB < MC: society loses from producing that unit; production should be reduced.
  • When MB = MC: the allocatively efficient quantity is reached; net marginal gain is zero, and society "just breaks even" on the last unit.
  • Example: at 180 computers, MB = MC = $400; producing the 240th computer would cost $500 but yield only $100 in benefit, creating inefficiency.

🎯 Full efficiency requires both conditions

  • Productive efficiency: producing on the PPF (full employment, least-cost methods).
  • Allocative efficiency: producing at the optimal point on the PPF where MB = MC for all goods.
  • The excerpt emphasizes that reaching the PPF is not enough; society must also be at the right point on the PPF according to preferences and costs.

🔄 Shifts and movements of the PPF

📍 Movements inside the PPF (no shift)

Unemployment of resources:

  • If resources in one sector become unemployed, production in that sector falls, moving the economy inside the PPF.
  • Example: automobile workers lose jobs → move from point W to point X (fewer autos, same computers).
  • The PPF itself does not move because the resources still exist; they are simply idle.

Failure to use least-cost methods:

  • If an industry stops using cost-minimizing technology (even with full employment), output falls and the economy moves inside the PPF.
  • Don't confuse: this is not about losing technology; the technology exists but is not being used.

↗️ Outward shifts (economic growth)

Causes:

  • Increase in resource stocks (land, labor, capital).
  • Technological advances that improve production methods.

Effect: the entire PPF shifts outward, allowing greater production of both goods.

Example: U.S. economic growth in the twentieth century was driven by population growth, capital accumulation, and especially technological change.

↙️ Inward shifts (economic contraction)

Causes:

  • Loss of resources (war, population decline, sale of assets).
  • Loss of production technology (e.g., skilled workers lose skills during long unemployment spells).

Effect: the PPF shifts inward because resources or knowledge are no longer available.

Don't confuse: resource loss (PPF shifts in) vs unemployment (economy moves inside PPF but PPF stays put).

🔀 Unbalanced growth and contraction

TypeWhat happensExample from excerpt
Unbalanced growthOne industry gains resources/technology faster than others; PPF shifts outward but skewed toward that industrySteel industry gains new furnaces (open-hearth, basic oxygen); steel production expands more than other sectors
Unbalanced contractionOne industry loses resources/technology; PPF shifts inward but skewed against that industry2004 tsunami harms fishing and tourism but leaves inland manufacturing unaffected
Mixed shiftOne industry expands while another contractsAgricultural land erodes (contraction) while military technology advances (expansion)
  • The excerpt notes that perfectly balanced growth is unusual; most real-world expansions are unbalanced.

💰 Applications: investment, trade, and historical events

🏗️ Investment and the consumption tradeoff

  • Treating capital goods and consumer goods as the two outputs, societies face a tradeoff: more capital goods today → faster growth and more consumption tomorrow; more consumer goods today → slower growth and less consumption tomorrow.
  • Example: post-WWII Japan invested heavily in capital (high saving rate) → rapid growth ("Japanese Miracle"); the U.S. consumed more and saved less → slower growth.
  • The excerpt emphasizes that this illustrates a tradeoff between present and future consumption at the societal level.

🌍 Petrodollar recycling (late 1970s–early 1980s)

The process:

  1. U.S. purchases large quantities of Middle Eastern oil → Middle East gains petrodollars.
  2. Middle Eastern nations (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait) cannot profitably invest surplus dollars domestically → they purchase U.S. financial assets (bonds), recycling the dollars.
  3. U.S. banks loan petrodollars to Latin American nations (Mexico, Brazil, Argentina) to cope with high oil prices.

Effects on PPFs:

  • U.S.: PPF expands (gains oil, recycles dollars back as investment).

  • Middle East: PPF contracts (loses oil resources, does not reinvest enough in domestic production).

  • Latin America: PPF expands initially (uses loans to acquire resources/technology) but then contracts sharply when U.S. interest rates rise in early 1980s → debt burden becomes unsustainable → Mexico defaults 1982 → panic, lending stops, unemployment rises, incomes fall (movement from boom point E to bust point F).

  • Critics argue this created a neocolonial relationship benefiting the U.S. at Latin America's expense.

🏛️ Neoclassical classification of economic systems

🧩 Two defining dimensions

Form of property ownership: who owns the means of production and land.

  • Private ownership: owned by private citizens.
  • State ownership: owned by the government.

Allocation mechanism: how resources and goods are distributed.

  • Market allocation: resources and goods transferred through competitive markets where prices are set by free interaction of buyers and sellers.
  • Centrally planned allocation: resources and goods distributed according to a government plan.

🗂️ The four system types

Property ownershipAllocation mechanismSystem nameExamples from excerpt
PrivateMarketMarket capitalismU.S., Japan, Germany, UK, Canada, Mexico (most nations today)
StateCentral planningCommand socialismSoviet Union, China (historically), Cuba, North Korea
StateMarketMarket socialism (hybrid)Yugoslavia (1950s–1980s): worker-managed, socially owned enterprises operating in competitive markets
PrivateCentral planningCommand capitalism (hybrid)Nazi Germany (private ownership but government planning for war); U.S. during WWII (wartime boards set production levels and prices)

🔍 Common confusions

  • Sweden is not market socialist: it has private ownership and market allocation, so it is market capitalist; extensive redistribution and social programs make it a social market economy (a special type of market capitalism), not socialist.
  • All economies are mixed: every real society has elements of both ownership types and both allocation mechanisms; classification depends on which type dominates.

✅ Why neoclassical economists favor market capitalism

  • Neoclassical theory claims that market capitalism automatically achieves economic efficiency: the economy ends up both on the PPF and at the optimal point (where MB = MC for all goods).
  • The excerpt states that the full demonstration of this claim will come in later chapters (3 and 8).

💵 The role of money in efficiency

🔄 The double coincidence of wants problem

Barter economy: goods are directly traded for one another without money.

Double coincidence of wants problem: in barter, a successful exchange requires that the seller of good A wants to buy good B and the buyer of good B wants to sell good A.

  • Example: Dave has 2 cows and wants desks; he must find someone who sells desks and wants to buy cows; then they must negotiate the price (cows per desk).

💡 How money solves the problem

  • With money, Dave only needs to sell cows for money, then use money to buy desks from anyone selling desks.
  • The seller of desks no longer needs to be the buyer of cows.
  • This reduces transaction costs (the costs of carrying out an exchange, especially search time).

📈 Money promotes efficiency in two ways

  1. Lower transaction costs: less time spent searching for trading partners.
  2. Encourages specialization: because exchange is easier, people rely more on trade and specialize more; specialization increases efficiency.
  • The excerpt argues that the widespread use of money in market capitalist societies is an important reason why neoclassical economists believe such societies achieve efficiency.

🔴 Marxian classification (alternative framework)

🏗️ Social formations vs economic systems

Social formation: a broad concept with two components—the economic base and the social superstructure.

Economic base (mode of production): all economic processes relating to how production is carried out and by whom.

Social superstructure: all political, religious, cultural, and familial processes that reflect the underlying economic base.

  • Marxian economists recognize multi-directional causality (base influences superstructure and vice versa) but traditionally emphasize the economic base and class conflict.
  • Two reasons for this emphasis: (1) class conflict is under-theorized in mainstream economics; (2) neglecting class relationships blocks the construction of an alternative society free of class conflict.

🛠️ Components of a mode of production

Social forces of production: the entire stock of accumulated knowledge of how to produce (techniques, scientific expertise, engineering capabilities).

Social relations of production: all patterns of interaction between producers within a society.

Class exploitation: occurs whenever a class other than the direct producers appropriates and distributes the products of the direct producers.

🗂️ Marxian modes of production

ModeSocial forcesSocial relationsExploitative?Key features from excerpt
Primitive communistHunting and gatheringSmall familial/tribal groups; common ownershipNoNot enough wealth to create class distinctions
Slave-basedAgricultural techniquesMaster/slave; masters own land, means of production, and slavesYesSlaves produce; masters appropriate and distribute
FeudalAgricultural techniquesLord/serf; serfs bound to land by tradition/custom/religionYesSerfs hand over portion of produce; lords provide protection
CapitalistLarge-scale machinery, mass production, factoriesCapitalist/wage laborer; capitalists own means of productionYesWage laborers produce; capitalists appropriate and distribute products
SocialistLarge-scale machinery, mass production (conjectural)Direct producers control enterprises and own them(Conjectural)Will only come into being through revolutionary upheaval abolishing capital/wage labor distinction

🔍 Key Marxian distinctions

  • Wage laborers are not slaves: capitalists do not own workers, but Marxian economists still regard capitalism as exploitative because workers do not appropriate or distribute the products of their labor.
  • Socialist mode of production: described mostly by conjecture because it has not yet replaced capitalism; direct producers will likely own and control production enterprises.
  • The excerpt notes that the capitalist mode of production has been of greatest interest to Marxian economists, just as market capitalism has been of greatest interest to neoclassical economists.
4

Marxian Modes of Production and Class Exploitation

Chapter 4. The Marxian Theory of Class Exploitation

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Marxian economists classify societies by their mode of production—defined by who controls production and who appropriates the fruits of labor—and view most historical modes as exploitative because direct producers do not control the distribution of what they produce.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Mode of production framework: Every social formation is defined by its social forces of production (technology/tools) and social relations of production (who owns, who works, who appropriates).
  • Exploitation criterion: A mode is exploitative when direct producers do not appropriate or distribute the fruits of their own labor.
  • Historical progression: Marxian theory identifies primitive communism, slave-based, feudal, capitalist, socialist, and communist modes, each with distinct ownership and appropriation patterns.
  • Common confusion: Capitalism vs slavery—wage laborers are not owned like slaves, but Marxian economists still consider capitalism exploitative because workers do not control the products they create.
  • Future modes: Socialist and communist modes have not yet replaced capitalism; descriptions are based on conjecture about revolutionary transformation.

🏛️ The mode of production framework

🏛️ Core components

Every mode of production consists of two elements:

ComponentWhat it includes
Social forces of productionTechnology, tools, machinery, production techniques
Social relations of productionWho owns means of production, who performs labor, who appropriates and distributes products
  • The excerpt emphasizes that these two components together define how a society organizes economic life.
  • Different combinations create fundamentally different economic systems.

⚖️ The exploitation test

Class exploitation: when direct producers do not appropriate or distribute the fruits of their labor.

  • The key question is not just "who works" but "who controls what is produced."
  • Even if workers are not enslaved, the system can still be exploitative if others appropriate their output.
  • Don't confuse: legal freedom (not being owned) with economic control (appropriating one's own product).

📜 Historical modes of production

🌾 Primitive communist mode

  • Direct producers appropriate and distribute their own labor.
  • Not exploitative because no class appropriates others' production.
  • The excerpt presents this as the earliest human economic organization.

⛓️ Slave-based mode

  • Social forces: simple tools and techniques.
  • Social relations: masters own slaves and appropriate all products of slave labor.
  • Exploitative because slaves do not control what they produce.
  • Example: Masters distribute the fruits of slave labor according to their own decisions.

🏰 Feudal mode

  • Social forces: agricultural tools and techniques.
  • Social relations: serfs work the land, feudal lords appropriate a portion of production.
  • Exploitative because serfs hand over part of their produce to the lord.
  • The excerpt notes both sides viewed this as natural order—serfs saw it as their "right" to work land by giving produce to the lord, who provided protection.
  • Don't confuse the mutual obligations (protection for produce) with non-exploitation; the key is who appropriates.

🏭 Capitalist mode

  • Social forces: large-scale machinery, mass production, factories, large production plants.
  • Social relations: wage laborers produce, capitalists (who own means of production and land) appropriate and distribute products.
  • Exploitative even though capitalists do not own workers.
  • The excerpt emphasizes: "wage laborers are not slaves because the capitalists do not own them in the way that masters own slaves."
  • Nevertheless, exploitation exists because workers do not appropriate or distribute what they produce.
  • Example: A factory worker operates machinery owned by the capitalist; the capitalist decides what happens to the products.

🔮 Future modes (conjectural)

🚩 Socialist mode

  • Will only emerge through "revolutionary upheaval that abolishes capitalism and the distinction between capital and wage labor."
  • Social forces: likely large-scale machinery and mass production in complex enterprises (similar to capitalism).
  • Social relations: direct producers directly control production enterprises, own them in common, compensation linked to duration and intensity of work.
  • Not exploitative because class distinctions are abolished and direct producers appropriate and distribute their own labor.
  • The excerpt notes this is "based mostly on conjecture" since it has not yet replaced capitalism.

🌟 Communist mode

  • Represents "the most advanced form of human society" with harmonious relationship with nature.
  • Marks "the end of history" in the sense that class struggle permanently ends.
  • Key difference from socialism: compensation shifts from "according to work performed" to "according to need."
  • This difference in compensation marks a difference in social relations of production.
  • Otherwise expected to be quite similar to the socialist mode.
  • Not exploitative (class distinctions abolished).

🔄 Socialist vs communist distinction

The excerpt clarifies a common confusion:

AspectSocialist modeCommunist mode
Class struggleAbolishedAbolished
Compensation basisDuration/intensity of workNeed
Capitalist remnantsSome persistFully eliminated
Social forcesLarge-scale productionLarge-scale production
  • Don't confuse: both abolish exploitation, but only communism fully eliminates all remnants of capitalism.

🗺️ Alternative classification scheme

🗺️ Marxian vs neoclassical frameworks

  • The excerpt positions modes of production as an "alternative classification scheme for social formations."
  • Neoclassical economists focus on market capitalism; Marxian economists analyze multiple modes with capitalism as one historical stage.
  • The excerpt mentions other modes (ancient, Asiatic) exist but focuses on the six main ones.
  • Purpose: provide terminology "used repeatedly throughout the book" for analyzing economic systems.
5

The Neoclassical Theory of Supply and Demand

Chapter 5. The Neoclassical Concept of Elasticity

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical supply and demand theory explains market prices and quantities exchanged through the interaction of buyers and sellers in competitive markets, where equilibrium is reached when quantity supplied equals quantity demanded and social welfare is measured by the sum of consumers' and producers' surplus.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The circular flow model shows how households and businesses interact peacefully in resource and product markets, with no inherent class conflict.
  • Methodological individualism builds market outcomes from individual actions: individual demands and supplies are aggregated to obtain market demand and supply, which together determine equilibrium price and quantity.
  • Laws of demand and supply: quantity demanded falls as price rises (inverse relationship); quantity supplied rises as price rises (positive relationship), ceteris paribus.
  • Common confusion: distinguish change in quantity demanded/supplied (movement along the curve due to price change) from change in demand/supply (shift of the entire curve due to non-price factors).
  • Equilibrium and welfare: markets reach equilibrium when quantity supplied equals quantity demanded; social welfare is measured by consumers' surplus plus producers' surplus.

🔄 The circular flow framework

🏠 Two sectors and two markets

The neoclassical circular flow model links the household sector and the business sector through two broad categories of markets:

  • Resource market: households sell land, labor, and capital to businesses; businesses pay factor income (rental, wage, interest, and profit income) to households.
  • Product market: businesses sell goods and services to households; households pay consumer expenditure, which becomes business revenue.

Real quantities (resources, goods, services) flow in one direction; nominal quantities (dollar amounts) flow in the opposite direction.

🤝 Social harmony and no class structure

  • The model suggests peaceful, mutually beneficial exchange: each participant gives up something valued less for something valued more, ending up better off.
  • This is Adam Smith's "Invisible Hand"—self-interested individuals promote the social interest.
  • No rigid class structure: all people are in the household sector (everyone owns at least their own labor); any household member can start a business by purchasing resources.
  • As Paul Samuelson remarked, in a perfectly competitive market it does not matter whether capital hires labor or labor hires capital—no resource owner has a privileged position.

🛒 The buyers' side: demand

📉 Individual and market demand

Individual demand: the amount of a good that a buyer is willing and able to buy at each price during a given period.

  • Both willingness and ability to pay are essential; preferences without purchasing power do not count in the marketplace.
  • Law of demand: other things equal, a reduction in price causes quantity demanded to rise; a rise in price causes quantity demanded to fall (inverse relationship).

Why the law of demand holds:

  1. Substitution effect: as price falls, consumers substitute toward the now relatively cheaper good.
  2. Income effect: as price falls, purchasing power rises, so consumers buy more of all goods, including this one.

Market demand is obtained by horizontal summation of all individual demand curves—sum the individual quantities demanded at each price.

🔀 Change in quantity demanded vs. change in demand

TermCauseGraphical representation
Change in quantity demandedChange in the good's own priceMovement along the demand curve
Change in demandChange in a non-price determinantShift of the entire demand curve

Don't confuse: a price change moves you along the curve; a change in tastes, income, number of buyers, prices of related goods, or expectations shifts the entire curve.

🧩 Non-price determinants of demand

Quantity demanded is a function of the good's own price and other variables held constant (ceteris paribus):

  1. Consumer preferences/tastes: stronger preference → increase in demand; weaker preference → decrease in demand.
  2. Number of buyers: more buyers → increase in demand; fewer buyers → decrease in demand.
  3. Consumers' incomes:
    • Normal goods: income rises → demand increases; income falls → demand decreases.
    • Inferior goods (used goods, generics): income rises → demand decreases; income falls → demand increases.
  4. Prices of related goods:
    • Substitutes (e.g., tea and coffee): price of substitute rises → demand for the good increases.
    • Complements (e.g., peanut butter and jelly): price of complement rises → demand for the good decreases.
  5. Consumer expectations: expect future price to rise → current demand increases (buy now to avoid higher price); expect future price to fall → current demand decreases (postpone purchase).

Example: As Halloween approaches, the number of buyers in the apple market increases, shifting the demand curve to the right (increase in demand at every price).

🏭 The sellers' side: supply

📈 Individual and market supply

Individual supply: the amount of a good that a seller is willing and able to sell at each price during a given period.

  • Law of supply: other things equal, an increase in price causes quantity supplied to rise; a decrease in price causes quantity supplied to fall (positive relationship).

Why the law of supply holds:

  1. As a firm increases production, per-unit cost rises due to resource scarcity; the firm requires a higher price to cover higher unit costs.
  2. As price rises, producing additional units becomes profitable, but the firm eventually stops due to rising unit costs.

Market supply is obtained by horizontal summation of all individual supply curves.

🔀 Change in quantity supplied vs. change in supply

TermCauseGraphical representation
Change in quantity suppliedChange in the good's own priceMovement along the supply curve
Change in supplyChange in a non-price determinantShift of the entire supply curve

🧩 Non-price determinants of supply

Quantity supplied is a function of the good's own price and other variables held constant:

  1. Number of sellers: more sellers → increase in supply; fewer sellers → decrease in supply.
  2. Factor prices (resource/input prices—land, labor, capital): factor prices rise → supply decreases (higher production costs); factor prices fall → supply increases.
  3. Production technology: technological advance → supply increases (lower production costs); inferior technology → supply decreases.
  4. Taxes and subsidies:
    • Per-unit tax increases → supply decreases; tax decreases → supply increases.
    • Subsidy increases → supply increases; subsidy decreases → supply decreases.
  5. Prices of related goods (from seller's perspective): if the same firm produces two goods with fixed resources, a rise in the price of one good → supply of the other good decreases (resources reallocated).
  6. Sellers' expectations about future prices:
    • Expect price to rise → may increase current supply (expand now) or decrease current supply (store inventory for future sale).
    • Expect price to fall → may decrease current supply (contract now) or increase current supply (sell before price drops).
    • Which outcome occurs depends on product durability and timing of the expected change.

Example: In late summer and fall, apples are in season, so the number of sellers increases, shifting the supply curve to the right (increase in supply at every price).

⚖️ Market equilibrium

🎯 Definition and mechanism

Equilibrium: a state from which there is no inherent tendency to change.

  • In equilibrium, quantity supplied = quantity demanded (not "supply = demand"—that would mean the curves are identical).
  • The market clears: every buyer willing to pay the market price can purchase, and every seller willing to sell at the market price can sell; all plans are consistent.
  • The force that brings about equilibrium is competition between buyers and sellers.

🔄 How equilibrium is reached

If price is above equilibrium:

  • Quantity supplied > quantity demanded → surplus (excess supply).
  • Sellers feel pressure to cut price.
  • As price falls, quantity demanded rises (law of demand) and quantity supplied falls (law of supply).
  • Surplus shrinks until quantity supplied = quantity demanded.

If price is below equilibrium:

  • Quantity demanded > quantity supplied → shortage (excess demand).
  • Sellers raise price.
  • As price rises, quantity supplied rises (law of supply) and quantity demanded falls (law of demand).
  • Shortage shrinks until quantity supplied = quantity demanded.

Example: At $1.00 per unit, quantity demanded = quantity supplied = 9 units; neither shortage nor surplus exists, so no inherent tendency for price or quantity to change.

📊 Comparative statics analysis

Comparative statics: analysis that compares static equilibrium states after external shocks (changes in non-price determinants).

Three-step method:

  1. Identify whether supply or demand shifts and in which direction.
  2. Determine whether a surplus or shortage exists at the initial equilibrium price.
  3. Explain the direction of changes in price and quantity exchanged.

Examples:

  • Increase in demand (e.g., postwar boom in automobiles) → shortage at old price → price rises, quantity exchanged rises.
  • Decrease in demand (e.g., fewer buyers in late fall for apples) → surplus → price falls, quantity exchanged falls.
  • Increase in supply (e.g., lower per-unit taxes on cigarettes) → surplus → price falls, quantity exchanged rises.
  • Decrease in supply (e.g., higher wages for steelworkers) → shortage → price rises, quantity exchanged falls.

🔀 Simultaneous shifts in supply and demand

When both supply and demand shift at the same time, one variable (price or quantity) will change in a known direction, and the other will be indeterminate (depends on the magnitudes of the shifts):

SupplyDemandPriceQuantity
IncreaseIncreaseIndeterminateMust rise
DecreaseDecreaseIndeterminateMust fall
IncreaseDecreaseMust fallIndeterminate
DecreaseIncreaseMust riseIndeterminate

Example: If both supply and demand for oil increase (new technology + industrialization in developing nations), quantity exchanged must rise, but the net effect on price depends on which shift is larger.

💰 Social welfare measurement

🎁 Consumers' surplus

Consumers' surplus: the difference between the maximum amount consumers are willing and able to pay for a good and the amount they actually pay.

  • The market demand curve shows the maximum prices consumers are willing and able to pay.
  • Consumers' surplus is the area below the demand curve and above the market price.
  • A larger area means greater consumer welfare.

Example: You are willing to pay up to $30 for a shirt, but the market price is $20; your consumers' surplus is $10—you acquire the shirt and retain the extra $10.

Calculation (approximation): treat the demand curve as a staircase; sum the surplus on each unit (difference between willingness to pay and actual price).

🏭 Producers' surplus

Producers' surplus: the difference between the amount producers receive for a good and the minimum amount they are willing and able to accept.

  • The market supply curve shows the minimum prices producers are willing and able to accept.
  • Producers' surplus is the area above the supply curve and below the market price.
  • A larger area means greater producer welfare.

Calculation (approximation): treat the supply curve as a staircase; sum the surplus on each unit (difference between market price and minimum acceptable price).

📐 Total social welfare

  • Total social welfare = consumers' surplus + producers' surplus.
  • Neoclassical economists use these measures to evaluate how well-off market participants are at equilibrium and to assess the impact of policies or market changes on overall welfare.
6

Consumer and Producer Surplus, Market Efficiency, and Market Failure

Chapter 6. Theories of Utility Maximization

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical economists argue that competitive markets maximize total surplus (the sum of consumer and producer surplus) at equilibrium, but market failures such as public goods and externalities prevent markets from achieving economic efficiency.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Consumer and producer surplus: Consumer surplus is the difference between what buyers are willing to pay and what they actually pay; producer surplus is the difference between what sellers receive and the minimum they would accept.
  • Market equilibrium maximizes total surplus: When markets reach equilibrium, the sum of consumer and producer surplus is maximized, achieving economic efficiency.
  • Price controls create deadweight loss: Binding price ceilings and price floors prevent markets from reaching equilibrium and reduce total surplus.
  • Market failures: Public goods (non-rival and non-excludable) and externalities (external costs or benefits to third parties) prevent markets from achieving efficiency.
  • Common confusion: Distinguishing between when a good is under-priced vs. over-produced—negative externalities lead to both under-pricing and over-production; positive externalities lead to under-pricing and under-production.

💰 Understanding surplus concepts

💵 Consumer surplus definition

Consumer surplus: the difference between the amount consumers are willing and able to pay for a good and the amount they actually pay.

  • It measures the welfare gain consumers receive from market transactions.
  • Graphically, it is the area below the demand curve and above the market price line.
  • A larger consumer surplus area means greater consumer welfare.
  • The excerpt calculates it by adding up surplus on different units (e.g., $0.50 surplus on units 0-3, $0.25 on units 3-6, $0.00 on units 6-9).

💼 Producer surplus definition

Producer surplus: the difference between the amount producers receive for a good and the minimum amount they are willing and able to accept.

  • The supply curve represents the minimum prices producers will accept.
  • Graphically, it is the area above the supply curve and below the market price line.
  • A larger producer surplus area means greater producer welfare.
  • The calculation method mirrors consumer surplus: sum the surplus on each unit sold.

🔄 Revenue equals expenditure

  • Producer revenue equals consumer expenditure (both equal price times quantity).
  • This result is consistent with the neoclassical circular flow diagram.
  • Example: At $1.00 per unit and 9 units, both revenue and expenditure equal $9.00.

🎯 Market efficiency and equilibrium

📊 Total surplus and efficiency

Total surplus (TS): the sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus.

  • Economic efficiency is achieved when total surplus is maximized.
  • Neoclassical economists argue that competitive markets maximize total surplus at equilibrium.
  • This connects to the three components of economic efficiency mentioned in chapter 2: productive efficiency, allocative efficiency, and full employment.

⚖️ Why equilibrium maximizes surplus

  • At equilibrium, marginal benefit (MB) equals marginal cost (MC), which is the condition for allocative efficiency.
  • If the demand curve represents MB and the supply curve represents MC, then equilibrium satisfies MB = MC.
  • When all resource markets clear, full employment is achieved.
  • Any price other than equilibrium creates deadweight loss.

🚫 Price controls and deadweight loss

📉 Price ceilings

Price ceiling: a maximum legal price that may be charged for a good or service.

  • To be binding (effective), a price ceiling must be set below the equilibrium price.
  • A binding price ceiling creates a persistent shortage (quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied).
  • Example: If equilibrium gasoline price is $3.75 and the ceiling is $3.25, a shortage equal to Q₂ - Q₁ results.
  • Consumer and producer surplus on units between Q₁ and Q* are lost, creating deadweight loss.

📈 Price floors

Price floor: a minimum legal price that may be charged for a good or service.

  • To be binding, a price floor must be set above the equilibrium price.
  • A binding price floor creates persistent excess supply (quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded).
  • Example: If equilibrium gasoline price is $3.75 and the floor is $4.00, excess supply equal to Q₂ - Q₁ results.
  • Deadweight loss occurs because surplus on units between Q₁ and Q* is lost.

⚠️ Don't confuse: binding vs. non-binding

  • A price ceiling set above equilibrium has no effect—price simply falls to equilibrium.
  • A price floor set below equilibrium has no effect—price simply rises to equilibrium.
  • Only when controls prevent the market from reaching equilibrium do they create deadweight loss.

🔴 Market failure: public goods

🏛️ Characteristics of public goods

Public goods: goods that have two key characteristics—non-rivalry and non-excludability.

Non-rivalry: One individual's consumption does not reduce another's consumption.

  • Example: A lighthouse—one boat's use of the light does not diminish another boat's use.
  • Contrast with private goods (e.g., a sandwich), where one person's consumption necessarily reduces another's.

Non-excludability: It is not possible to exclude anyone from consuming the good once it is provided.

  • Example: Once a lighthouse is operating, all boats benefit and cannot be excluded.
  • This makes it impossible to charge a fee—boats can consume without paying.

🚫 The free-rider problem

Free-rider effect: each potential user has an incentive to let others pay while still enjoying the benefit.

  • Because all boat owners face this incentive, no one is willing to pay for construction.
  • The lighthouse is not built even though total benefits outweigh costs.
  • This is market failure—the market fails to deliver the efficient amount of the good.
  • Government intervention (e.g., taxation to fund construction) may enhance efficiency.

🌊 Market failure: externalities

🏭 Negative externalities

Externalities: external effects of a market transaction on third parties not directly involved in the transaction.

Negative externality example: A steel company dumps waste into a river.

  • The waste imposes costs on people living downstream.
  • The steel price does not reflect this cost because it is not part of the company's private cost.
  • Neither buyers nor sellers of steel experience these external costs.
ConceptMeaning
Marginal Private Cost (MPC)Cost borne by the producer
Marginal Social Cost (MSC)MPC plus external costs
Marginal Private Benefit (MPB)Benefit to the direct consumer
  • MSC is higher than MPC because it includes pollution costs.
  • Market equilibrium occurs where MPB intersects MPC at price P* and quantity Q*.
  • Efficient outcome occurs where MPB intersects MSC at higher price P₁ and lower quantity Q₁.
  • Result: The good is under-priced and over-produced in competitive markets.

🎓 Positive externalities

Positive externality example: Education creates benefits for society beyond the individual student.

  • A better-educated population has higher earning potential and lower crime rates.
  • Third parties benefit even though they did not purchase the education.
ConceptMeaning
Marginal Private Benefit (MPB)Benefit to the direct consumer
Marginal Social Benefit (MSB)MPB plus external benefits to third parties
  • MSB exceeds MPB because it includes spillover benefits.
  • Market equilibrium occurs where MSB intersects MPC at price P* and quantity Q*.
  • Efficient outcome occurs where MSB intersects MPC at higher price P₁ and higher quantity Q₁.
  • Result: The good is under-priced and under-produced in competitive markets.

💊 Policy responses to externalities

For negative externalities:

Pigouvian tax: a unit tax imposed on producers to reduce supply and align it with MSC.

  • Named after economist A.C. Pigou.
  • Aims to internalize the external cost.

For positive externalities:

  • A subsidy per unit given to consumers can increase demand and align it with MSB.

Challenge: It is difficult to know the correct tax or subsidy amount—errors might create even greater inefficiency than the competitive equilibrium.

📰 Real-world application: coal market dynamics

📉 Multiple market shifts

The excerpt describes Australian thermal coal prices falling 25% due to:

  1. Demand reduction: Lower foreign demand for Australian coal exports.
  2. Substitute price changes: Falling gas prices reduce demand for coal (gas and coal are substitutes).

🔄 Supply response and price stabilization

  • Low coal prices drive high-cost producers out of business.
  • Remaining high-cost producers cut production.
  • As market supply contracts, upward pressure on price occurs.
  • If supply contracts sufficiently, it may offset demand reductions and stabilize prices.

Complex case: Both supply and demand shift.

  • Overall price impact is indeterminate (may rise, fall, or stay the same).
  • Quantity exchanged definitely falls (both shifts reduce quantity).
7

Marxian Theory of Value, Capital, and Surplus Value

Chapter 7. Theories of Production Technology and the Cost of Production

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Capitalists generate profit (surplus value) not by cheating in exchange but by purchasing labor-power—a unique commodity that creates more value than it costs—and appropriating the extra value workers produce beyond what is needed to reproduce their own labor-power.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The commodity circuit vs. capital circuit: ordinary exchange (C-M-C') swaps one use value for another; capital (M-C-M') seeks to expand money into more money.
  • Labor-power as the key commodity: unlike all other commodities, labor-power creates new value when consumed in production, enabling surplus value.
  • Exploitation is structural, not fraudulent: even when all commodities (including labor-power) sell at their full value, workers produce more value than they receive as wages.
  • Two paths to more surplus value: lengthening the working day (absolute surplus value) or cheapening workers' necessities (relative surplus value).
  • Common confusion: the hourly wage appears to pay for every hour worked, but in reality each hour contains both necessary labor (for the worker) and surplus labor (for the capitalist).

💱 Commodity exchange and the puzzle of capital

💱 The commodity circuit (C-M-C')

Commodity circuit: the process by which a commodity owner sells a commodity (C) for money (M), then uses that money to buy a different commodity (C').

  • The owner trades equivalent values but ends with a qualitatively different use value (e.g., books → money → desk).
  • This is rational for individuals: they obtain something they want more than what they gave up.
  • Example: An owner sells 5 books for $100 (representing 10 hours of SNALT), then buys a desk for $100 (also 10 hours of SNALT).

🔄 The capital circuit (M-C-M')

Capital circuit: the process of advancing money (M) to purchase commodities (C), then selling them for a larger sum of money (M').

  • If equivalent values are exchanged, M-C-M makes no sense: the owner starts and ends with money of the same value.
  • The only rational motive is to end with more money: M' = M + ΔM.
  • Surplus value (ΔM): the increment by which the final sum exceeds the initial sum.
  • Capital: money (or commodities) engaged in this movement of self-expansion; value in search of greater value.

❓ The mystery: where does surplus value come from?

  • If surplus value came from selling above value, one person's gain would be another's loss—no net creation of value.
  • Marx concludes: surplus value must originate in the sphere of production, not circulation.
  • The expanded circuit: M – C (mop + Lp) … P … C' – M', where production (P) transforms the commodity and adds value.

🏭 Labor-power: the commodity that creates value

🏭 What is labor-power?

Labor-power: the capacity to perform work during a specific period (e.g., one hour, one day).

  • It is a commodity with both use value and exchange value.
  • Its use value is unique: when consumed, it creates new value.
  • Example: A capitalist buys a desk and uses it; its value does not increase. A capitalist buys labor-power and consumes it (i.e., the worker works); the worker performs SNALT that adds value to materials.

📜 Historical conditions for labor-power as a commodity

  • Labor-power has not always been a commodity; it is specific to capitalism.
  • Two conditions were required:
    1. Workers must be free to enter voluntary labor contracts (legally recognized as owners of their labor-power).
    2. Workers must be forced to have this freedom: separated from means of production, they must sell labor-power to survive.
  • Marx calls this being "free in a double sense": free to sell labor-power, and free from ownership of means of production.
  • Historical note: the decline of feudalism forced serfs off the land, creating a class of wage laborers.

💵 The value of labor-power

Value of labor-power: the SNALT embodied in the commodities necessary to maintain the worker in a normal working state (the means of subsistence).

  • It includes food, clothing, housing, fuel, medical care, and an allowance for dependents.
  • It contains a "historical and moral element": what counts as necessary varies by time and place (e.g., a cell phone in the 21st-century U.S. vs. the 19th century).
  • Formula for daily value of labor-power:
    • Numerator: (365 × daily necessities) + (52 × weekly necessities) + (4 × quarterly necessities)
    • Denominator: 365 days
  • Example: If daily food = $10, weekly fuel = $73, quarterly rent = $3,650, then daily value = $50; hourly value (8-hour day) = $6.25.

⚙️ How surplus value is produced

⚙️ Constant capital and variable capital

Constant capital (c): the portion of money capital advanced to purchase means of production (tools, raw materials, machinery).

Variable capital (v): the portion of money capital advanced to purchase labor-power.

  • Constant capital only preserves and transfers its value to the final product; it does not expand.
  • Variable capital expands because labor-power creates new value beyond its own value.
  • Total money capital: M = c + v.

🕐 The working day and the creation of surplus value

  • Assume: a capitalist hires one worker for a 10-hour day; advances $300 constant capital and $90 variable capital; MELT = $15/hour; worker produces 225 lbs. of sugar.
  • Necessary labor (NL): the hours needed to produce value equal to the variable capital.
    • $90 ÷ $15/hour = 6 hours.
  • Surplus labor (SL): the additional hours worked beyond necessary labor.
    • 10 hours – 6 hours = 4 hours.
  • Surplus value (s): the value created during surplus labor.
    • 4 hours × $15/hour = $60.
  • Dead labor (DL): the SNALT embodied in the means of production, transferred to the product.
    • $300 ÷ $15/hour = 20 hours.
  • Living labor (LL): the total labor the worker performs during the day.
    • NL + SL = 6 + 4 = 10 hours.

📊 Total value and the components of the product

  • Total value (TV) = c + v + s = $300 + $90 + $60 = $450.
  • Total labor (TL) = DL + NL + SL = 20 + 6 + 4 = 30 hours.
  • Price per pound of sugar: $450 ÷ 225 lbs. = $2/lb.
  • The product can be divided into:
    • Dead product (DP): the portion corresponding to constant capital = 150 lbs.
    • Necessary product (NP): the portion corresponding to variable capital = 45 lbs.
    • Surplus product (SP): the portion corresponding to surplus value = 30 lbs.

🔗 Exploitation defined

Exploitation: the production of surplus value by workers and its appropriation and distribution by capitalists.

  • Even though the worker is paid the full value of labor-power, the capitalist owns the final product and the surplus value it contains.
  • The worker creates all the new value but receives only part of it as wages.
  • Don't confuse: hourly wages ($9/hour in the example) make it appear the worker is paid for every hour, but each hour contains both necessary labor (for the worker) and surplus labor (for the capitalist).

📈 Measuring exploitation and profitability

📈 Rate of surplus value (degree of exploitation)

Rate of surplus value = s/v (surplus value ÷ variable capital).

  • Measures the extent to which the worker works for the capitalist rather than for herself.
  • In the example: $60 ÷ $90 = 66.67%.
  • A higher rate means a higher degree of exploitation.

💰 Rate of profit

Rate of profit = s/(c + v) (surplus value ÷ total capital advanced).

  • Measures how quickly the capital value has expanded.
  • In the example: $60 ÷ $390 = 15.38%.
  • A higher rate means a more profitable investment.

🔧 Two ways to increase surplus value

🔧 Absolute surplus value

Absolute surplus value: an increase in surplus value due to an extension of the working day.

  • If the working day lengthens from 10 to 13 hours (with the same necessary labor of 6 hours), surplus labor rises from 4 to 7 hours.
  • Additional surplus value: 3 hours × $15/hour = $45.
  • Both the rate of surplus value and the rate of profit increase.

🔧 Relative surplus value

Relative surplus value: an increase in surplus value due to a reduction in the value of labor-power (a new division of the working day).

  • If productivity increases in sectors producing workers' necessities, the value of those goods falls.
  • The value of labor-power declines (e.g., from $90 to $75 per day).
  • Necessary labor falls (from 6 to 5 hours); surplus labor rises (from 4 to 5 hours).
  • Surplus value increases even though the working day is unchanged.
  • Both the rate of surplus value and the rate of profit increase.

⚖️ Changes that hurt capitalists

  • Shorter working hours (e.g., union demands) reduce surplus labor → lower rates of surplus value and profit.
  • Rising value of necessities forces higher wages → less surplus value appropriated.
    • Note: the worker is no better off; the higher wage only buys the same quantity of necessities as before.

🏗️ The uniqueness of capitalist production

🏗️ Labor process vs. valorization process

Labor process: any purposeful activity aimed at the production of use values (includes the worker, objects of labor, and instruments of labor).

Valorization process: the process by which surplus value is created.

  • All human societies require a labor process to produce use values.
  • Under capitalism, the labor process overlaps with the valorization process.
  • The capitalist's goal is not to produce use values but to produce commodities containing surplus value.
  • The valorization process—the creation of surplus value through the productive consumption of labor-power—is the defining characteristic of the capitalist mode of production.

🌍 Real-world example: exploitation after natural disasters

  • The excerpt cites immigrant workers hired for cleanup after the 2018 Paradise, California fire.
  • Workers face long hours, low pay, exposure to asbestos and mold, and lack of protective gear.
  • Undocumented status discourages reporting violations.
  • Wage theft is common: unpaid final wages, bad checks, debit card scams.
  • In cases of complete wage theft, the rate of exploitation (s/v) becomes infinite as variable capital falls to zero.
8

Price Elasticity of Demand and Related Elasticity Measures

Chapter 8. Theories of Intensely Competitive Markets

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Price elasticity of demand measures how responsive consumers are to price changes, providing a unit-free way to compare consumer behavior across markets and predict how price changes affect total revenue.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • What elasticity measures: the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price—a unit-free measure of consumer responsiveness.
  • Elastic vs inelastic: when the absolute value exceeds 1, demand is elastic (consumers highly responsive); when less than 1, demand is inelastic (consumers less responsive); when equal to 1, demand is unit elastic.
  • Common confusion—slope vs elasticity: elasticity is inversely related to slope and uses percentage changes (not absolute changes), making it unit-free; elasticity also varies along a linear demand curve even though slope is constant.
  • Why it matters for revenue: whether total revenue rises, falls, or stays constant when price changes depends entirely on whether demand is elastic, inelastic, or unit elastic.
  • Other elasticity concepts: supply elasticity, cross-price elasticity (substitutes vs complements), and income elasticity (normal vs inferior goods) extend the framework to other market relationships.

📐 Defining and calculating elasticity

📐 The basic formula

Price elasticity of demand (E_D): the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.

  • Example from the excerpt: price rises 6%, quantity demanded falls 12% → elasticity = -12% / 6% = -2.
  • The formula places Q in the numerator and P in the denominator, inversely related to slope.
  • Uses percentage changes, not absolute changes, which makes the measure unit-free.

🔢 Why unit-free matters

  • Percentage changes cancel out units (e.g., 5 lbs. / 100 lbs. = 5%, a pure number).
  • This allows comparisons across different markets and products.
  • Example: you can compare apple consumers and orange consumers if you know each elasticity, even though apples and oranges are measured differently.

➖ The negative sign convention

  • The law of demand means price and quantity demanded move in opposite directions, so elasticity is almost always negative.
  • Neoclassical economists typically report the absolute value to simplify interpretation.
  • Example: an elasticity of -2 is reported as 2, meaning a 1% price rise causes a 2% quantity reduction.

🔍 Interpreting elasticity values

🔍 The five categories

Absolute valueTermMeaning
Greater than 1ElasticConsumers respond by a greater percentage than the price change
Equal to 1Unit elasticConsumers respond by an equal percentage to the price change
Less than 1InelasticConsumers respond by a smaller percentage than the price change
Equal to 0Perfectly inelasticConsumers do not respond at all to price changes
Equal to ∞Perfectly elasticEven the smallest price change causes an infinite quantity response

🎯 Why 1 is the key threshold

  • When elasticity = 1 (unit elastic), a 5% price rise leads to exactly a 5% quantity reduction.
  • When elasticity > 1 (elastic), the percentage quantity change exceeds the percentage price change (in absolute terms).
  • When elasticity < 1 (inelastic), the percentage quantity change is smaller than the percentage price change (in absolute terms).

🔄 Elastic vs inelastic—don't confuse

  • More elastic = larger absolute value = more responsive consumers.
  • If we used negative values, we'd have to say "lower value = more elastic," which is less intuitive.
  • That's why absolute values are used as shorthand.

🧮 Two calculation methods

🧮 Arc elasticity formula

  • Used when moving between two points on a demand curve.
  • Formula: absolute value of [(Q₂ - Q₁) / average Q] divided by [(P₂ - P₁) / average P].
  • Uses average quantity and average price to avoid arbitrariness (otherwise the result differs depending on which point you start from).
  • Example: price rises from $4 to $5, quantity falls from 22 to 18 → average Q = 20, average P = $4.50 → elasticity = (4/20) / (1/4.50) = 9/10 = 0.9 (inelastic).

📍 Point elasticity formula

  • Used to calculate elasticity at a single point on a linear demand curve.
  • Formula: absolute value of (slope) × (P / Q) at that point.
  • Requires knowing the slope of the demand curve.
  • Example: at P = $13 and Q = 80, with slope = -1/4 → elasticity = (1/4) × (13/80) = 13/20 = 0.65... Wait, the excerpt shows a different calculation yielding elasticity > 1 at this point.
  • Key insight: elasticity varies along a linear demand curve even though slope is constant—elasticity falls as you move down the curve (as price falls and quantity rises).

⚠️ Don't confuse slope and elasticity

  • Slope is constant on a linear demand curve; elasticity is not.
  • Slope uses absolute changes; elasticity uses percentage changes.
  • Elasticity and slope are inversely related.

📊 Elasticity along a linear demand curve

📊 How elasticity changes

  • At the top (vertical-axis intercept): elasticity approaches infinity (perfectly elastic).
  • At the bottom (horizontal-axis intercept): elasticity equals zero (perfectly inelastic).
  • At the midpoint: elasticity equals 1 (unit elastic).
  • Upper half of the curve: elastic (|E_D| > 1).
  • Lower half of the curve: inelastic (|E_D| < 1).

🧠 Intuition behind the pattern

  • Consumers are more responsive to price changes at higher prices than at lower prices.
  • A 5% price reduction when price is very high has a greater impact on quantity demanded than a 5% reduction when price is very low.
  • As price falls and quantity rises, the ratio P/Q declines, causing elasticity to fall continuously.

🎯 Extreme cases

🎯 Perfectly inelastic demand

  • Demand curve is vertical (slope = infinite).
  • Quantity demanded does not change at all when price changes.
  • Example: a consumer desperate for life-saving medication may not reduce quantity demanded no matter how high the price rises (though this has limits based on ability to pay).
  • Elasticity = 0.

🎯 Perfectly elastic demand

  • Demand curve is horizontal (slope = 0).
  • The smallest price increase causes quantity demanded to drop to zero; the smallest price decrease causes quantity demanded to soar.
  • Example: when a perfect substitute is available at the same price, consumers switch immediately if price rises at all.
  • Elasticity = ∞.

🔄 Inverse relationship confirmed

  • Slope and elasticity are inversely related in both extreme cases.

🧩 What determines elasticity

🧩 Nature of the good—luxury vs necessity

  • Luxuries: consumers can do without them → more responsive to price changes → more elastic.
  • Necessities: consumers cannot easily reduce purchases → less responsive → more inelastic.
  • Example: life-saving medication (necessity) has inelastic demand; restaurant meals (luxury) have elastic demand.

💰 Budget share

  • Goods that take up a large share of the consumer's budget → more elastic.
  • Consumers feel a bigger pinch from price changes on big-ticket items.
  • Example: automobile price changes affect consumers more than chewing gum price changes.

⏱️ Time horizon

  • Short run: consumers cannot easily adjust behavior → more inelastic.
  • Long run: consumers can find substitutes and adjust → more elastic.
  • Example: when gasoline prices rise, consumers cannot immediately change commuting habits, but over time they can carpool, take the bus, or buy fuel-efficient cars.
  • Don't confuse: the same good can be inelastic in the short run but elastic in the long run.

🔀 Availability of substitutes

  • More close substitutes → more elastic demand.
  • Fewer substitutes → more inelastic demand.
  • Example: apple juice has many substitutes (grape juice, orange juice) → elastic; juice in general has fewer good substitutes (milk, soda are not as close) → more inelastic.

📋 Real-world examples from the excerpt

ProductElasticityExplanation
Restaurant meals2.27Luxury good → highly elastic
Gasoline (short run)0.3Necessity + short period → inelastic
Premium white pan bread1.01Many close substitutes → elastic

💵 Elasticity and total revenue

💵 What is total revenue

Total revenue (TR): price per unit × quantity demanded.

  • Graphically, TR is the area of the rectangle under the demand curve at a given price and quantity.
  • Example: at P = $5 and Q = 10, TR = $50.

💵 The revenue dilemma

  • A manager wants to increase revenue by raising price.
  • But the law of demand says quantity demanded will fall when price rises.
  • Two conflicting effects: price ↑ (increases TR) vs quantity ↓ (decreases TR).
  • Net effect depends on elasticity.

📈 Three cases when price falls

ElasticityPrice changeQuantity changeNet effect on TR
Elastic (> 1)Falls by smaller %Rises by larger %TR rises
Unit elastic (= 1)Falls by same %Rises by same %TR unchanged
Inelastic (< 1)Falls by larger %Rises by smaller %TR falls
  • Elastic demand: price and TR move in opposite directions (price ↓ → TR ↑).
  • Inelastic demand: price and TR move in the same direction (price ↓ → TR ↓).
  • Unit elastic: TR does not change when price changes.

📉 The total revenue curve

  • As price falls from its peak, TR first rises (elastic region), reaches a maximum (unit elastic point), then falls (inelastic region).
  • TR is maximized at the point where demand is unit elastic (the midpoint of a linear demand curve).
  • Don't confuse: maximum TR does not necessarily mean maximum profit (profit also depends on production cost).

🧠 Intuition

  • If demand is elastic, consumers are very responsive → a price cut brings in many new buyers → revenue rises.
  • If demand is inelastic, consumers are not very responsive → a price cut doesn't attract enough new buyers to offset the lower price → revenue falls.

🔗 Other elasticity measures

🔗 Price elasticity of supply

Price elasticity of supply (E_S): percentage change in quantity supplied divided by percentage change in price.

  • Measures how responsive sellers are to price changes.
  • Example: price rises 8%, quantity supplied rises 24% → elasticity = 3.
  • No need for absolute value because supply elasticity is virtually always positive (law of supply).
  • Interpretation: elasticity of 3 means a 1% price rise leads to a 3% quantity supplied increase.
  • Key determinant: time frame—supply is more inelastic in the short run (producers cannot quickly expand production) and more elastic in the long run (producers can build capacity).

🔗 Cross-price elasticity of demand

Cross-price elasticity: percentage change in quantity demanded of good A divided by percentage change in price of good B.

  • Measures how demand for one good responds to a price change in a different good.
  • Sign matters:
    • Positive → goods are substitutes (price of B rises → quantity demanded of A rises).
    • Negative → goods are complements (price of peanut butter rises → quantity demanded of jelly falls).
    • Zero → goods are unrelated (no response).
  • Example: price of good B rises 4%, quantity demanded of A rises 2% → cross elasticity = +0.5 (substitutes).
  • Application: U.S. antitrust law uses positive cross elasticity as evidence that two goods are substitutes and a merger would reduce competition.

🔗 Income elasticity of demand

Income elasticity: percentage change in quantity demanded divided by percentage change in income.

  • Measures how demand responds to changes in consumer income.
  • Sign matters:
    • Positivenormal good (income rises → quantity demanded rises).
    • Negativeinferior good (income rises → quantity demanded falls).
    • Zeroneutral good (no response to income changes).
  • Example: income rises 3%, quantity demanded rises 12% → income elasticity = +4 (normal good).
  • Example: income rises 3%, quantity demanded falls 6% → income elasticity = -2 (inferior good, like used goods).

🔄 Why signs matter for these three

  • For supply, cross-price, and income elasticity, the sign conveys important economic information (direction of relationship).
  • That's why we do not take absolute values for these measures (unlike price elasticity of demand).

🧐 Marxian perspective

🧐 Why Marxian economists don't emphasize elasticity

  • Elasticity measures relate to market supply and demand curves.
  • Neoclassical economists see supply and demand as the best explanation of prices.
  • Marxian economists see supply and demand as influencing prices, but subordinate to the law of value (socially necessary abstract labor time governs commodity values).
  • Marxian focus: class dynamics and exploitation, not consumer responsiveness to price changes.
  • Marxian economists already have unit-free measures: rate of surplus value (degree of exploitation) and rate of profit (self-expansion of capital)—both expressed in percentages, allowing direct cross-industry comparisons.

📰 Real-world application—Hershey case

📰 Business strategy and elasticity

  • Hershey CEO Michele Buck raised prices but expected candy purchases not to fall much → belief that demand is relatively inelastic.
  • Hershey introduced new packaging and products (thinner Reese's cups) to justify price increases.
  • Result: total sales rose 2.5% to $1.99 billion in Q4 2018; profits rose 24%.
  • Implication: if TR rises when price rises, demand must be inelastic (price and TR move together).
  • The price increases were part of a profit-maximizing strategy, not just a revenue strategy.

🧠 Why innovation matters

  • For products with inelastic demand, innovation (new packaging, new varieties) can justify price increases without losing many customers.
  • Consumers perceive added value, so they accept higher prices.

Summary of key mechanisms:

  • Elasticity is a unit-free measure using percentage changes, allowing cross-market comparisons.
  • Absolute value > 1 = elastic; < 1 = inelastic; = 1 = unit elastic.
  • Elasticity varies along a linear demand curve (falls as price falls), even though slope is constant.
  • Determinants: luxury vs necessity, budget share, time horizon, substitutes.
  • Revenue impact: elastic demand → price and TR move opposite; inelastic → same direction; unit elastic → TR unchanged.
  • Other elasticities (supply, cross-price, income) extend the framework; their signs convey important information.
9

Price Elasticity of Demand

Chapter 9. Theories of Monopolistic Markets

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Price elasticity of demand is a unit-free measure of consumer responsiveness to price changes that determines how firms' revenues react to pricing decisions and varies systematically along a linear demand curve.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • What it measures: consumer responsiveness to price changes using percentage changes (not absolute changes), making it unit-free and comparable across markets.
  • Elastic vs inelastic: when the absolute value exceeds 1, demand is elastic (consumers respond by a greater percentage than the price change); when less than 1, demand is inelastic (smaller percentage response).
  • Common confusion: slope vs elasticity—they are inversely related, and elasticity changes along a linear demand curve even though slope stays constant; also, the same good can be inelastic in the short run but elastic in the long run.
  • Key determinants: luxury vs necessity, budget share, time span, and availability of substitutes all affect how responsive consumers are.
  • Revenue implications: when demand is elastic, lowering price increases total revenue; when inelastic, lowering price decreases revenue.

📐 Definition and calculation

📏 What price elasticity measures

Price elasticity of demand: the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.

  • Formula: (percentage change in Q) / (percentage change in P)
  • Example: price rises 6%, quantity demanded falls 12% → elasticity = -12% / 6% = -2
  • It is not the slope of the demand curve; it places Q in the numerator and P in the denominator (inverse relationship to slope) and uses percentage changes instead of absolute changes.

🔢 Why it is unit-free

  • Percentage changes cancel out units in the calculation.
  • Example: a child's weight rises from 100 lbs to 105 lbs → percentage change = 5 lbs / 100 lbs = 5% (units cancel).
  • The same cancellation happens with price elasticity: (ΔQ/Q) / (ΔP/P) → units in numerator and denominator cancel.
  • This makes elasticity comparable across different markets (e.g., oranges vs apples).

➖ The negative sign convention

  • The law of demand means price and quantity demanded are inversely related, so elasticity is almost always negative.
  • Neoclassical economists typically omit the negative sign and refer to the absolute value.
  • Example: an elasticity of -2 is stated as "2" for convenience.
  • Using absolute values makes interpretation easier: a larger number means more elastic demand.

🎚️ Interpreting elasticity values

🎚️ Classification by magnitude

Absolute valueTermMeaning
= 0Perfectly inelasticConsumers do not respond at all to price changes
< 1InelasticConsumers respond by a smaller percentage than the price change
= 1Unit elasticConsumers respond by an equal percentage to the price change
> 1ElasticConsumers respond by a greater percentage than the price change
= ∞Perfectly elasticConsumers respond infinitely to even the smallest price change

🔍 Why 1 is the critical threshold

  • When elasticity equals 1 (unit elastic), a 5% price rise leads to exactly a 5% reduction in quantity demanded—equal percentage responses.
  • When elasticity exceeds 1 (elastic), consumers respond by a greater percentage amount than the price change.
  • When elasticity is less than 1 (inelastic), consumers respond by a smaller percentage amount than the price change.
  • Don't confuse: "greater" and "smaller" here refer to absolute value terms, not the negative sign.

🔄 Comparing across markets

  • Because elasticity is unit-free, we can compare responsiveness across different goods.
  • Example: if the price elasticity of demand for oranges is 2 and for apples is 3, then apple consumers are relatively more responsive to price changes than orange consumers.
  • This was not possible using only the slopes of demand curves, which depend on units.

🧮 Calculation methods

🌉 Arc elasticity formula

  • Used when calculating elasticity between two points on the demand curve.
  • Formula (absolute value): |ΔQ / ΔP| × (average P / average Q)
  • Uses the average quantity and average price to avoid arbitrary choice of which point to use in the denominator.
  • Example: price rises from $4 to $5, quantity demanded falls from 22 to 18 units → average Q = 20, average P = $4.50 → elasticity = (4 / 1) × (4.5 / 20) = 9/10 = 0.9 (inelastic, because less than 1).

📍 Point elasticity formula

  • Used when calculating elasticity at a single point on a linear demand curve.
  • Formula (absolute value): (1 / slope) × (P / Q), where slope = ΔP / ΔQ
  • Requires knowing the slope of the demand curve and the specific P and Q at that point.
  • Example: at P = $13 and Q = 100, with slope = -1/4 → elasticity = 4 × (13 / 100) = 52/100 = 0.52... (the excerpt shows a different example with elasticity > 1).

📉 Elasticity changes along a linear demand curve

  • Major result: the price elasticity of demand falls as the price falls along a linear demand curve, even though the slope remains constant.
  • Intuition: consumers are less responsive to price changes at lower prices than at higher prices; a 5% price reduction has a greater impact when the price is very high than when it is very low.
  • At the vertical axis intercept (where Q = 0), elasticity approaches infinity.
  • At the horizontal axis intercept (where P = 0), elasticity equals zero.
  • Somewhere in between, elasticity equals 1 (unit elastic), dividing the demand curve into an elastic portion (upper half, |E_D| > 1) and an inelastic portion (lower half, |E_D| < 1).

🔬 Extreme cases

⬇️ Perfectly inelastic demand

  • Demand curve is perfectly vertical.
  • Quantity demanded does not change at all, no matter how much the price changes.
  • Slope of the demand curve is infinite → elasticity = 0.
  • Example: a consumer in desperate need of life-saving medication may not reduce quantity demanded even when price rises sharply (though this has limits—ability to pay eventually constrains willingness).
  • Don't confuse: slope and elasticity are inversely related; infinite slope → zero elasticity.

➡️ Perfectly elastic demand

  • Demand curve is perfectly horizontal.
  • The smallest price increase causes quantity demanded to drop to zero; the smallest price decrease causes quantity demanded to soar to infinity (or a very large amount).
  • Slope of the demand curve is zero → elasticity = ∞.
  • Example: when a perfectly good substitute is available at the same price, consumers switch immediately if the price of the first product rises at all.
  • Again, slope and elasticity are inversely related: zero slope → infinite elasticity.

🧩 What determines elasticity

🎁 Nature of the good: luxury vs necessity

  • Luxuries: consumers can do without them, so they are highly responsive to price changes → more elastic demand.
  • Necessities: consumers cannot easily reduce purchases when price rises (e.g., life-saving medication) → more inelastic demand.
  • Example: the price elasticity of demand for restaurant meals has been estimated at 2.27 (elastic), likely because many consumers view them as luxury goods.

💰 Budget share

  • If consumers spend a large percentage of their budget on a good, demand tends to be more elastic.
  • Consumers feel a greater "pinch" from a price rise in a big-ticket item (e.g., automobile) than from a small item (e.g., chewing gum).
  • Automobile consumers are therefore more responsive to price changes than chewing gum consumers.

⏳ Time span

  • Quantity demanded is a flow variable (defined per period: day, week, month, year).
  • Short run: demand tends to be inelastic because consumers cannot quickly adjust behavior.
    • Example: when gasoline prices rise sharply, consumers still need to drive to work and school immediately.
  • Long run: demand becomes more elastic because consumers can seek substitutes (carpool, bus, bike).
  • Example: the short-run price elasticity of demand for gasoline has been estimated at 0.3 (inelastic).
  • Don't confuse: the same good can be inelastic in the short run but elastic in the long run.

🔄 Availability of substitutes

  • More close substitutes → more elastic demand.
  • Example: if the price of apple juice rises, consumers can easily switch to grape juice → quantity demanded of apple juice drops sharply (elastic).
  • Contrast: if the price of juice in general rises, substitutes (milk, soda) are not very close → demand for juice is much more inelastic.
  • Example: the price elasticity of demand for premium white pan bread has been estimated at 1.01 (roughly unit elastic), likely due to many close substitutes.

💵 Elasticity and total revenue

💵 What total revenue is

Total revenue (TR): the product of price per unit and quantity demanded (P × Q).

  • On a graph, total revenue is represented as the area of the box under the demand curve at a given price and quantity.
  • Example: at P = $5 and Q = 10 units, TR = $50.

🤔 The manager's dilemma

  • A manager aiming to increase revenue faces conflicting effects when changing price:
    • Raising price increases revenue per unit sold.
    • But raising price decreases quantity demanded (law of demand), which decreases revenue.
  • The net effect depends on which factor dominates—and that depends on the price elasticity of demand.

📊 How elasticity determines revenue changes

ElasticityPrice falls →Quantity rises →Net effect on TR
Elastic (> 1)Smaller % decreaseLarger % increaseTR rises
Unit elastic (= 1)Equal % decreaseEqual % increaseTR unchanged
Inelastic (< 1)Larger % decreaseSmaller % increaseTR falls
  • Intuition for a price reduction:
    • If price falls by a smaller percentage than quantity demanded rises (elastic), the net effect on revenue is positive.
    • If price falls by the same percentage as quantity demanded rises (unit elastic), the net effect is zero.
    • If price falls by a greater percentage than quantity demanded rises (inelastic), the net effect is negative.

📈 The total revenue curve

  • As price falls from its peak along a linear demand curve:
    • In the elastic portion (upper half), total revenue rises.
    • At the unit elastic point (midpoint), total revenue is at its maximum and does not change.
    • In the inelastic portion (lower half), total revenue declines.
  • At the extremes:
    • When elasticity is infinite (top of demand curve), TR = 0 (price is high, but quantity demanded is zero).
    • When elasticity is zero (bottom of demand curve), TR = 0 (quantity is high, but price is zero).

🎯 Practical implication

  • A firm wanting to increase revenue should lower price if demand is elastic and raise price if demand is inelastic.
  • Don't confuse: "raising price always increases revenue" is false—it depends on elasticity.

Budget: 1000000 Used: 194214 Remaining: 805786

10

Theories of Utility Maximization

Chapter 10. Theories of Imperfectly Competitive Markets

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical economists shifted value theory from labor content to consumer satisfaction by developing the concept of marginal utility, which they claim follows a universal law of diminishing returns as consumption increases.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Historical shift: Early neoclassical economists in the 1870s moved away from labor theory of value toward a consumption-focused theory based on marginal utility.
  • Utility vs use value: Utility measures subjective satisfaction from consumption, not objective usefulness—even "useless" items like Pet Rocks can provide utility.
  • The law of diminishing marginal utility: As a consumer consumes more of a good, each additional unit provides less additional satisfaction (marginal utility falls).
  • Total vs marginal utility: Total utility is overall satisfaction; marginal utility is the additional satisfaction from one more unit—don't confuse the two.
  • Common confusion: Marginal utility can become negative (reducing total utility) even though total utility was positive earlier; the law describes the change in satisfaction, not the absolute level.

🏛️ Philosophical and historical foundations

🏛️ Utilitarianism roots

Utilitarianism: A moral philosophy founded by Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832) that judges policies by their consequences for human happiness; the goal is "the greatest happiness of the greatest number."

  • Originally a normative (what ought to be) moral theory.
  • Influenced John Stuart Mill and continues to shape moral philosophy and economics.
  • Neoclassical economists adapted it from a normative ideal into a positive (what is) theory: individuals acting in scarcity seek to maximize their own happiness.

📜 The 1870s co-discovery of marginal utility

  • Three economists working independently discovered marginal utility:
    • Leon Walras (France)
    • William Stanley Jevons (Britain)
    • Carl Menger (Austria)
  • This discovery launched neoclassical economics, a school so different from classical economics (Smith, Ricardo) that it received a new name.
  • Why the shift? The labor theory of value implied workers create more value than they receive in wages—threatening to defenders of market capitalism. Marginal utility theory shifted focus back to consumption and away from labor content.

🧩 Core concepts: utility and its measurement

🧩 What is utility?

Utility: The satisfaction that a user experiences in consumption.

  • Not the same as use value: Use value refers to the useful properties of a good; utility refers to subjective satisfaction.
  • Consumption is highly subjective—what satisfies one person may not satisfy another.
  • Example: Pet Rocks (1975) had no function but provided satisfaction (humor), making the entrepreneur a millionaire.
  • Even painful experiences (e.g., a doctor's shot) can provide utility if the consumer recognizes it is "good for them."

📏 Measuring utility in utils

  • Early neoclassical economists assumed utility could be measured in standardized units called utils.
  • Example: eating a bowl of cereal might give you 25 utils of satisfaction.
  • Important: This was an assumption for model building, not a literal claim about brain chemistry.
  • The goal: if we assume satisfaction is measurable, can we explain and predict consumer behavior? Early neoclassical economists believed yes.

🔢 Total utility vs marginal utility

ConceptDefinitionUnitsWhat it measures
Total utility (TU)Overall satisfaction from consuming a goodutilsCumulative satisfaction over a period
Marginal utility (MU)Additional satisfaction from one additional unitutils per unitChange in satisfaction from the last unit consumed

Formula for marginal utility:

  • MU = change in total utility ÷ change in quantity
  • Example: Six mozzarella sticks give 65 utils total, but the third stick alone gives 12 utils marginal utility.

Don't confuse: Total utility can still be rising even when marginal utility is falling; marginal utility measures the rate of change, not the level.

📉 The law of diminishing marginal utility

📉 Statement of the law

Law of diminishing marginal utility: Marginal utility declines as a consumer consumes more of a good.

  • Why? The consumer is attempting to satiate herself; each additional unit satisfies less urgently felt needs.
  • Eventually, an additional unit can make a negative addition to total utility (MU becomes negative).

📊 Visualizing the law: table and graphs

Table 6.1 pattern (from the excerpt):

  • As quantity consumed increases:
    • Total utility (TU) rises at first, then eventually begins to decrease.
    • Marginal utility (MU) falls from the beginning and eventually becomes negative.

Figure 6.1 (described in the excerpt):

  • TU curve: Rises, peaks, then falls.
  • MU curve: Declines continuously, crossing zero and becoming negative.

🔍 Two ways to state the law

  1. In terms of marginal utility: Each additional unit consumed provides less additional satisfaction.
  2. In terms of total utility: Total utility increases at a decreasing rate, reaches a maximum, then declines.

Example: Consuming mozzarella sticks—

  • The first stick provides high MU (e.g., 20 utils).
  • The second provides less MU (e.g., 15 utils).
  • By the sixth or seventh, MU might be zero or negative (you feel sick), even though earlier sticks were satisfying.

Common confusion: A good can still have positive total utility even when marginal utility is negative. The law describes the change in satisfaction per unit, not whether the good is "good" overall.

🔗 Connection to other elasticity measures (from earlier in the excerpt)

🔗 Price elasticity of supply

Price elasticity of supply (E_S): Measures the percentage change in quantity supplied for a given percentage change in price.

  • Formula: E_S = (% change in quantity supplied) ÷ (% change in price)
  • Example: Price increases 8%, quantity supplied rises 24% → E_S = 3.
  • No need for absolute value: Supply elasticity is virtually always positive due to the law of supply (price and quantity supplied move together).
  • Interpretations (same as demand elasticity):
    • E_S = 1 → unit elastic
    • E_S > 1 → elastic
    • E_S < 1 → inelastic
    • E_S = ∞ → perfectly elastic
    • E_S = 0 → perfectly inelastic

⏱️ Time frame as the primary determinant

  • Short run: Producers cannot expand production quickly (e.g., apple growers can hire more pickers but cannot grow more apples in a month) → supply is inelastic.
  • Long run: Producers can purchase more orchards or grow more trees → supply becomes much more elastic.
  • Figure 5.11 (mentioned): shows inelastic short-run supply curve and more elastic long-run supply curve.

🔀 Cross-price elasticity of demand

Cross-price elasticity of demand: Measures the percentage change in quantity demanded of one product for a given percentage change in the price of a different product.

Formula (for goods A and B):

  • Cross elasticity = (% change in quantity demanded of A) ÷ (% change in price of B)

Sign matters:

  • Positive cross elasticity → goods are substitutes (when price of B rises, quantity demanded of A rises).
    • Example: Price of good B rises 4%, quantity demanded of A rises 2% → cross elasticity = +1/2.
  • Negative cross elasticity → goods are complements (consumed together; when price of one rises, quantity demanded of the other falls).
    • Example: Price of peanut butter rises 6%, quantity demanded of jelly falls 2% → cross elasticity = -1/3.
  • Zero cross elasticity → goods are unrelated (quantity demanded of one does not change when price of the other changes).

Application in antitrust law:

  • U.S. Justice Department uses cross elasticity to determine if two goods are substitutes.
  • If two firms want to merge and their goods have positive cross elasticity, the merger reduces competition and may harm consumers.
  • Expert testimony on positive cross elasticity supports blocking the merger.

💰 Income elasticity of demand

Income elasticity of demand: Measures the percentage change in quantity demanded for a given percentage change in income (Y).

Formula:

  • Income elasticity = (% change in quantity demanded) ÷ (% change in income)

Sign matters:

  • Positive income elasticitynormal goods (income rises, quantity demanded rises).
    • Example: Income rises 3%, quantity demanded rises 12% → income elasticity = +4.
  • Negative income elasticityinferior goods (income rises, quantity demanded falls).
    • Example: Income rises 3%, quantity demanded falls 6% → income elasticity = -2.
  • Zero income elasticityneutral goods (quantity demanded does not change when income changes).

Don't confuse: A positive income elasticity can result from either both increasing (+/+) or both decreasing (-/-); a negative income elasticity can result from opposite movements (+/- or -/+).

🧮 Elasticity and total revenue (from earlier in the excerpt)

🧮 The revenue dilemma

  • A manager considering a price increase faces two conflicting effects:
    • Price effect: Higher price per unit → tends to increase revenue.
    • Quantity effect: Higher price → lower quantity demanded (law of demand) → tends to decrease revenue.
  • Net effect on total revenue? Depends on the price elasticity of demand.

📈 How elasticity determines revenue changes

When price falls:

  • If price falls by the same percentage as quantity demanded rises → net effect on total revenue is zero (unit elastic).
  • If price falls by a greater percentage than quantity demanded rises → net effect on total revenue is negative (inelastic demand).
  • If price falls by a smaller percentage than quantity demanded rises → net effect on total revenue is positive (elastic demand).

Summary table:

Demand elasticityPrice falls → Total revenuePrice rises → Total revenue
Elastic (> 1)RisesFalls
Unit elastic (= 1)No changeNo change
Inelastic (< 1)FallsRises

📊 Shape of the total revenue curve (Figure 5.10)

  • As price falls from its peak:
    • Elastic region: Total revenue rises.
    • Unit elastic point: Total revenue does not change (reaches maximum).
    • Inelastic region: Total revenue declines.
  • At the extremes:
    • Price is very high, quantity demanded is zero → total revenue = 0.
    • Price is zero, quantity demanded is high → total revenue = 0.
  • Important: Maximum total revenue occurs at the point of unit elasticity, but this is not necessarily the optimal output for the firm (must also consider production cost).

🏢 Real-world example: Hershey Co.

  • Following the Economic News 5: Hershey CEO Michele Buck increased prices but expected sales not to fall much → believes demand is relatively inelastic.
  • Hershey introduced innovations (new packaging, thinner Reese's cups) to justify price increases.
  • Result: Total sales rose 2.5% to $1.99 billion in Q4 2018; profits rose 24%.
  • Implication: Price increases boosted both revenue and profit, consistent with inelastic demand (absolute value < 1).

🔍 Marxian perspective on elasticity

🔍 Why Marxian economists don't use elasticity much

Two main reasons:

  1. Supply and demand are subordinate to the law of value:

    • Neoclassical economists: Supply and demand provide the best explanation of market prices.
    • Marxian economists: Supply and demand influence market prices, but the law of value (socially necessary abstract labor time) governs commodity values.
    • Marxian focus: Class dynamics of capitalist societies, not consumer responsiveness to price changes.
  2. Marxian measures are already unit-free percentages:

    • Rate of surplus value: Measures degree of exploitation of labor-power.
    • Rate of profit: Measures rate of self-expansion of capital.
    • Both are expressed in percentage terms, allowing direct comparisons across industries without needing elasticity measures.
    • Chapter 8 (mentioned): These comparisons play an important role in the Marxian theory of industrial competition.

📋 Summary of key terms and formulas

📋 Key elasticity formulas

  • Price elasticity of demand: (% change in quantity demanded) ÷ (% change in price); use absolute value.
  • Price elasticity of supply: (% change in quantity supplied) ÷ (% change in price); no absolute value needed (always positive).
  • Cross-price elasticity: (% change in quantity demanded of A) ÷ (% change in price of B); sign indicates substitutes (+) or complements (-).
  • Income elasticity: (% change in quantity demanded) ÷ (% change in income); sign indicates normal (+), inferior (-), or neutral (0) goods.

📋 Key distinctions

  • Arc elasticity: Used when moving between two points on a demand curve.
  • Point elasticity: Used to calculate elasticity at a single point on a demand curve.
  • Absolute value: Used for price elasticity of demand (to avoid confusion from negative slope); not used for supply, cross-price, or income elasticity (because the sign is significant).
11

Theories of the Labor Market

Chapter 11. Theories of the Labor Market

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical consumer theory explains how individuals maximize satisfaction by allocating limited income across goods according to the law of diminishing marginal utility, ensuring that the marginal utility per dollar spent is equal across all purchases.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The law of diminishing marginal utility: as a consumer consumes more of a good, the additional satisfaction from each extra unit declines, eventually becoming negative.
  • Utility maximization rule: a consumer maximizes total utility when the marginal utility per dollar spent is the same for all goods and all income is spent.
  • Cardinal vs ordinal utility: early neoclassical economists assumed utility was measurable in units (cardinal utility), but modern theory only requires consumers to rank preferences (ordinal utility).
  • Common confusion: total utility vs marginal utility—total utility measures overall satisfaction from all units consumed, while marginal utility measures the additional satisfaction from one more unit; the paradox of value (water vs diamonds) is resolved by focusing on marginal utility, not total utility.
  • Why it matters: the theory derives the downward-sloping demand curve, explains consumer choices under budget constraints, and addresses the paradox of value, though it faces criticisms regarding the assumption of constant marginal utility of money.

📊 Core concepts: Total utility and marginal utility

📦 Total utility (TU)

Total utility (TU): the overall amount of satisfaction derived from the consumption of a good or service.

  • Measured in "utils" for a certain period.
  • Represents the cumulative satisfaction from all units consumed.
  • Example: six mozzarella sticks might give you a total utility of 65 utils.

➕ Marginal utility (MU)

Marginal utility (MU): the additional satisfaction obtained from the consumption of an additional unit of a good or service.

  • Measured in "utils per unit."
  • Calculated as the change in total utility divided by the change in quantity: MU = ΔTU / ΔQ.
  • Example: the third mozzarella stick might give you a marginal utility of 12 utils for that unit alone.
  • Don't confuse: MU is not the same as TU; MU focuses on the extra satisfaction from one more unit, not the total from all units.

📉 The law of diminishing marginal utility

The law of diminishing marginal utility: marginal utility declines as a consumer consumes more of a good.

  • As consumption increases, each additional unit provides less and less additional satisfaction.
  • Eventually, marginal utility can become negative, meaning an additional unit actually reduces total utility.
  • Two ways to visualize:
    1. The MU curve slopes downward from the beginning.
    2. The TU curve rises at a decreasing rate, then eventually falls.
  • Mathematical relationship: the slope of the TU curve equals MU; when TU reaches its maximum, MU equals zero.
  • Why it happens: the consumer approaches satiation due to consumption of the good.

🔗 Connection to the law of demand

  • If a consumer experiences declining marginal utility as he consumes more, he will only purchase another unit if the price falls.
  • Each additional unit offers less satisfaction, so a lower price is needed to justify the purchase.
  • This is perfectly compatible with the law of demand (quantity demanded rises as price falls).
  • Also compatible with the discovery that price elasticity of demand falls along a linear demand curve: consumers are less responsive to price changes at lower prices because those units correspond to lower marginal utilities.

🛒 The traditional theory of utility maximization

🎯 Assumptions

The model assumes:

  • The consumer aims to maximize total utility.
  • The consumer has complete preferences: she knows exactly how many utils she will obtain from any specific quantity of a good.
  • The consumer is subject to the law of diminishing marginal utility.
  • The consumer faces a constant money income and constant prices for goods.
  • Neoclassical entry point: given individual preferences and a given resource (income) endowment.

💰 Marginal utility per dollar spent (MU/$)

  • To compare goods with different prices, divide the marginal utility of each good by its price: MU/$.
  • Example: a television gives 400 utils and costs $100 → MU/$ = 400/100 = 4 utils per dollar spent. A computer gives 800 utils and costs $400 → MU/$ = 800/400 = 2 utils per dollar spent.
  • General rule: the consumer will always purchase first the good that gives the higher MU per dollar spent.
  • This accounts for both satisfaction and price, giving "more bang for the buck."

⚖️ The utility maximization condition

The consumer maximizes utility when the marginal utilities per dollar spent are the same for both goods and all income is spent.

  • Algebraically: MUₓ / Pₓ = MUᵧ / Pᵧ, and all income M is spent.
  • How it works: the consumer moves back and forth between goods, always choosing the one with the higher MU/$ until the ratios are equal.
  • Example: with income $35, Pₓ = $5, Pᵧ = $3, the consumer buys units one by one, always selecting the good with the highest MU/$ at each step, until all income is spent and MU/$ is equal for both goods.
  • Why all income must be spent: if some income is not spent (i.e., saving occurs), utility cannot be at its maximum, because only consumption of goods generates utility in this model.

🔄 Adjusting to disequilibrium

  • If all income is spent but MUₓ / Pₓ > MUᵧ / Pᵧ, the consumer should buy more X and less Y.
    • As more X is purchased, MUₓ falls (diminishing marginal utility).
    • As less Y is purchased, MUᵧ rises (diminishing marginal utility).
    • These changes continue until MU/$ is the same for both goods.
  • If all income is spent but MUₓ / Pₓ < MUᵧ / Pᵧ, the consumer should buy more Y and less X, with the same logic.

📈 Deriving the individual demand curve

📉 Why the demand curve slopes downward

  • Suppose the consumer is maximizing utility at the original price Pᵧ, so MUₓ / Pₓ = MUᵧ / Pᵧ.
  • Now suppose Pᵧ declines to Pᵧ*.
  • After the price drop: MUₓ / Pₓ < MUᵧ / Pᵧ* (because the denominator for Y is now smaller).
  • The consumer will purchase more Y because the MU per dollar spent on Y is now greater.
  • As quantity demanded of Y rises when price falls, the demand curve slopes downward.
  • Self-correcting mechanism: the increase in quantity demanded of Y eventually ceases because the diminishing marginal utility of Y restores the equality between the two MU/$ ratios.

💎 The paradox of value

❓ What is the paradox?

The paradox of value: many goods like diamonds appear not very useful even though they have high prices, while the most useful goods like water often have the lowest prices.

  • Classical economists (Smith, Ricardo) explained this with the labor theory of value: diamonds require a lot of labor time, water requires little.
  • Early neoclassical economists in the 1870s offered a different solution emphasizing consumer satisfaction rather than production cost.

🔑 The neoclassical solution

  • The proper resolution requires distinguishing between total utility and marginal utility.
  • Water:
    • Generates a great deal of total utility (very useful).
    • But the marginal utility of the last unit consumed is very low, because so many units are consumed (law of diminishing marginal utility).
    • It is the marginal utility of the last unit consumed that governs its price → low MU explains low price.
  • Diamonds:
    • Do not give consumers a great deal of total utility (relatively useless in aggregate).
    • But the marginal utility of the last unit consumed is very high, because relatively few units are consumed (law of diminishing marginal utility).
    • High MU of diamonds explains its high price.
  • Don't confuse: the price is determined by marginal utility, not total utility; water has high total utility but low marginal utility, while diamonds have low total utility but high marginal utility.

📊 Summary table

GoodTotal UtilityMarginal Utility of Last UnitPriceExplanation
WaterVery high (large volume consumed)Very low (due to diminishing MU)LowLow MU → low price
DiamondsVery low (small amount consumed)Very high (due to diminishing MU)HighHigh MU → high price

⚠️ Criticisms of neoclassical welfare measures

💵 Constant marginal utility of money assumption

  • Concepts like consumer surplus and producer surplus implicitly assume a constant marginal utility of money.
  • Example: if you enjoy $3 consumer surplus on the first ice cream sundae and $2 on the second, the total $5 surplus only makes sense if each dollar of surplus contributes equally to your welfare.
  • The problem: if the law of diminishing marginal utility applies to money, the first dollar of consumer surplus contributes more to welfare than the last dollar.
  • The yardstick by which we measure welfare must remain the same for consumer surplus to be internally consistent.
  • The same criticism applies to producer surplus.

👥 Same marginal utility of money across individuals

  • The concepts also implicitly assume that the marginal utility of money is the same for all buyers and sellers.
  • Example: if your consumer surplus is $75 and another person's is also $75, adding them gives $150 total.
  • The problem: if your marginal utility of money is much higher than the other person's, your surplus should count more in the aggregate measure, but in this calculation they contribute equally.
  • This raises serious problems for aggregating surpluses across different individuals.
  • Neoclassical response: these difficulties have been recognized, but the concepts are still used, and students are rarely encouraged to critically reflect on the problems.

🔬 The modern theory: From cardinal to ordinal utility

🔢 Cardinal utility (early neoclassical)

Cardinal utility: utility that is quantifiable and measurable in units (utils).

  • Assumes consumers can assign exact numerical values to satisfaction.
  • Example: bundle 1 creates 10 utils, bundle 2 creates 5 utils → bundle 1 is exactly twice as preferred as bundle 2.
  • This is a strict assumption.

🥇 Ordinal utility (modern neoclassical)

Ordinal utility: utility that implies consumers receive satisfaction from consumption but can only create a ranking among alternative commodity bundles.

  • Consumers can only say one of three things about two bundles:
    1. Bundle 1 is preferred to bundle 2.
    2. Bundle 2 is preferred to bundle 1.
    3. Bundles 1 and 2 are equally preferred (indifferent).
  • Example: bundle 1 (2 apples, 1 banana) vs bundle 2 (1 apple, 2 bananas) → the consumer can rank them but cannot say "bundle 1 is twice as good."
  • Why the shift: neoclassical economists applied Ockam's Razor, a philosophical principle stating that the strongest theory is based on the simplest assumptions, other things the same.
  • Ordinal utility is a simpler, less strict assumption than cardinal utility.

🦒 Ockam's Razor analogy: Darwin vs Lamarck

  • Darwin's theory of natural selection: random genetic mutations cause variations; advantageous traits are passed down because organisms with them survive and reproduce.
  • Lamarck's theory: organisms acquire advantageous traits during their lifetimes (e.g., a giraffe stretches its neck and acquires a longer neck), which are then passed down.
  • Lamarck's assumption (acquired traits alter genetic material) is more complicated than Darwin's (random mutations).
  • Darwin's theory was accepted because it was based on simpler assumptions (Ockam's Razor).
  • Similarly: neoclassical economists replaced cardinal utility with ordinal utility to simplify assumptions and strengthen the theory.
  • Important note: Darwin's theory was not proven once and for all; it was accepted as the best theory due to Ockam's Razor.
12

Ordinal Utility and Consumer Choice

Chapter 12. Macroeconomic Measurement

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical economists replaced cardinal utility with ordinal utility to simplify assumptions about consumer satisfaction, but this shift has the implicit ideological effect of making interpersonal utility comparisons impossible and thus undermining efficiency-based arguments for wealth redistribution.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Cardinal vs ordinal utility: cardinal allows quantifying satisfaction (e.g., "10 utils") and comparing how much more one bundle is preferred; ordinal only allows ranking bundles without measuring the degree of preference.
  • Why ordinal was adopted: neoclassical economists applied Ockam's Razor to replace the less plausible assumption of quantifiable satisfaction with a simpler assumption that consumers can only rank bundles.
  • Ideological significance: ordinal utility blocks interpersonal utility comparisons, making it impossible to justify wealth redistribution on efficiency grounds alone—any redistribution argument must appeal to equality or fairness instead.
  • Common confusion: ordinal utility still assumes consumers receive satisfaction; the difference is that satisfaction cannot be measured or compared across people, only ranked within one person's choices.
  • Modern theory setup: the consumer chooses between two goods with fixed income and prices, and preferences are represented by indifference curves in commodity space rather than by quantifiable utility numbers.

🔄 From cardinal to ordinal utility

🧮 What cardinal utility assumed

Cardinal utility: the concept that consumers receive quantifiable satisfaction from consumption, measured in units called "utils."

  • Under cardinal utility, a consumer could say "bundle 1 creates 10 utils and bundle 2 creates 5 utils."
  • This allows stating not only that bundle 1 is preferred, but exactly how much more preferred it is (e.g., twice as preferred).
  • Example: if bundle 1 has 2 apples and 1 banana, and bundle 2 has 1 apple and 2 bananas, cardinal utility lets you assign specific satisfaction numbers to each.

📏 What ordinal utility assumes

Ordinal utility: the concept that consumers receive satisfaction from consumption but can only create a ranking among alternative commodity bundles, not measure the degree of preference.

  • A consumer can only say one of three things:
    1. Bundle 1 is preferred to bundle 2.
    2. Bundle 2 is preferred to bundle 1.
    3. The two bundles are equally preferred (indifferent).
  • It is impossible to state how much more preferred one bundle is than another.
  • Example: you can say you prefer 2 apples and 1 banana over 1 apple and 2 bananas, but you cannot say "I prefer it twice as much."

🪒 Why the shift happened: Ockam's Razor

  • Neoclassical economists aimed to replace the "less plausible assumption of quantifiable satisfaction" with a simpler assumption.
  • The excerpt compares this to Darwin's theory replacing Lamarck's: Darwin assumed random genetic mutations (simpler) rather than Lamarck's assumption that organisms acquire and pass down traits during their lifetimes (more complicated).
  • Ordinal utility was adopted because it rests on a simpler set of assumptions, not because cardinal utility was proven wrong.
  • Don't confuse: acceptance of ordinal utility was based on simplicity (Ockam's Razor), not empirical proof.

💰 Ideological implications of ordinal utility

🚫 Interpersonal utility comparisons become impossible

Interpersonal utility comparisons: the ability to compare the satisfaction or utility that different people receive from the same good or income.

  • Under cardinal utility with diminishing marginal utility, you could argue:
    • Person A has $1 million; an additional $10,000 gives 10 utils.
    • Person B has $10,000; an additional $10,000 gives 500 utils.
    • Transferring $10,000 from A to B creates a net gain of about 490 utils for society.
  • This would justify wealth redistribution on efficiency grounds (society gains total utility).

🔒 How ordinal utility blocks redistribution arguments

  • With ordinal utility, you can only say:
    • Person A prefers $1,010,000 to $1,000,000.
    • Person B prefers $20,000 to $10,000.
  • You cannot say that person B values the additional $10,000 more than person A does.
  • Because there is no "common yardstick for the measurement of satisfaction," you cannot conclude that redistribution leads to a net welfare gain.
  • Any argument for redistribution must appeal to equality or fairness, not efficiency.

🎯 Political consequence

  • For those wishing to limit government redistributions of wealth and income, the ordinal utility assumption is a powerful tool.
  • The excerpt emphasizes this is an implicit ideological significance—it may not be immediately obvious to the uninitiated reader.

📐 The modern theory framework

🛒 Assumptions of the modern theory

  • The consumer chooses between two goods, X and Y.
  • The consumer has:
    • A fixed money income (M).
    • Constant prices: P_X for good X and P_Y for good Y.
    • Given individual preferences.
  • The only major difference from the traditional theory: preferences must be represented differently because utility is not quantifiable.

🗺️ Commodity space

Commodity space: a two-dimensional space where the quantities of goods Y and X are measured on the vertical and horizontal axes, respectively.

Commodity bundle: a point in the commodity space representing a combination of the two goods.

  • Example: the ordered pair (8, 6) represents 8 units of good X and 6 units of good Y.
  • The goal is to determine which affordable bundle maximizes the consumer's utility.

💵 The budget line

  • The budget equation when the consumer spends all income: M = P_X times X plus P_Y times Y.
  • Solving for Y gives the slope-intercept form: Y equals M divided by P_Y minus (P_X divided by P_Y) times X.
  • Vertical intercept: M divided by P_Y (maximum Y if all income spent on Y).
  • Horizontal intercept: M divided by P_X (maximum X if all income spent on X).
  • Slope: negative P_X divided by P_Y.

Budget line: a line in commodity space representing all bundles that require the consumer to spend the entire money income.

Budget set: all bundles on the budget line and below it (affordable bundles).

  • Bundles on the line require spending all income.
  • Bundles below the line are affordable but leave some income unspent.
  • Bundles above the line are not affordable.

🔀 The slope as a trade-off rate

  • The slope (negative P_X divided by P_Y) represents the consumer's ability to trade off one good for another in the marketplace at current prices.
  • If the consumer wants one more unit of X, she must give up (P_X divided by P_Y) units of Y.
  • Example: if M = $20, P_X = $5, P_Y = $4, then:
    • Budget equation: Y = 5 minus 1.25 times X.
    • Slope = –1.25, meaning giving up 1.25 units of Y to get 1 more unit of X.

📊 How the budget line shifts

ChangeEffect on budget lineReason
Income (M) risesOutward parallel shiftBoth intercepts increase proportionately; more bundles become affordable
Price of X (P_X) risesInward rotation (vertical intercept unchanged)Horizontal intercept falls; fewer bundles affordable
Price of Y (P_Y) risesInward rotation (horizontal intercept unchanged)Vertical intercept falls; fewer bundles affordable
  • A fall in income or prices would have the opposite effects (budget set expands).

📈 Representing preferences with indifference curves

🌀 What an indifference curve is

Indifference curve through commodity bundle A: a line drawn through all the commodity bundles that the consumer considers to be equally satisfying in relation to commodity bundle A.

  • All bundles along the same indifference curve (e.g., U_1) are equally preferred to each other.
  • The consumer is indifferent among all bundles on the same curve.

🗺️ Regions around a bundle

  • Relative to bundle A, the commodity space can be divided into regions:
    • More of both goods.
    • Less of both goods.
    • More Y and less X.
    • Less Y and more X.

📉 Why indifference curves slope downward

  • The downward slope indicates the consumer is willing to trade off some of good Y for more of good X, and vice versa.
  • If the consumer begins at bundle A and wants more X, she must accept less Y to remain equally satisfied (stay on the same indifference curve).

🎨 Why indifference curves are bowed away from the origin

  • The excerpt states the curve is "bowed away from the origin (as opposed to a straight line or having some other shape)."
  • The excerpt does not provide the full explanation for this shape in the given text (the explanation appears to continue beyond the excerpt).
13

Chapter 13. The Theory of Effective Demand and the Neoclassical Synthesis Model

Chapter 13. The Theory of Effective Demand and the Neoclassical Synthesis Model

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The modern theory of utility maximization derives the same consumer equilibrium condition as the traditional cardinal utility approach but uses only ordinal preferences and indifference curves, thereby avoiding the unrealistic assumption that utility is cardinally measurable.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Budget constraints shift or rotate: income changes shift the budget line parallel; price changes rotate it inward or outward.
  • Indifference curves represent ordinal preferences: all bundles on the same curve are equally preferred; higher curves are preferred to lower ones without requiring measurable utility numbers.
  • Utility maximization occurs at tangency: the consumer maximizes utility where the budget line is tangent to the highest attainable indifference curve, meaning the marginal rate of substitution equals the price ratio.
  • Common confusion—cardinal vs ordinal utility: the traditional theory assumed utility could be measured in "utils"; the modern theory only requires ranking bundles, yet both yield the same equilibrium condition (marginal utility per dollar equalized).
  • Endogenous preferences break the standard derivation: if preferences change with price (e.g., Veblen goods), the demand curve cannot be derived in the usual way because the indifference map itself shifts.

💰 Budget constraints and how they change

💰 The budget line and the budget set

The budget line shows all combinations of two goods (X and Y) that exhaust the consumer's income at given prices.

  • The vertical intercept is income divided by the price of Y; the horizontal intercept is income divided by the price of X.
  • The budget set is the collection of all affordable bundles (on or below the budget line).

📈 Income changes: parallel shifts

  • A rise in income (M) increases both intercepts proportionately, shifting the budget line outward and parallel.
  • More bundles become affordable; the budget set expands.
  • Example: if income doubles, the consumer can buy twice as much of either good (or any proportional combination).

📉 Price changes: rotations

  • A rise in the price of X rotates the budget line inward around the vertical intercept (the Y-intercept is unaffected).
    • Fewer bundles are affordable; the budget set contracts.
  • A rise in the price of Y rotates the budget line inward around the horizontal intercept (the X-intercept is unaffected).
  • Don't confuse: a price change rotates the line; an income change shifts it parallel.

🗺️ Indifference curves and ordinal preferences

🗺️ What an indifference curve is

An indifference curve through commodity bundle A is a line drawn through all the commodity bundles that the consumer considers to be equally satisfying in relation to commodity bundle A.

  • All bundles on the same indifference curve are equally preferred.
  • The consumer is indifferent among them—hence the name.

📉 Why indifference curves slope downward

  • If the consumer loses some of good Y, the only way to restore her to the same satisfaction level is to give her more of good X.
  • This trade-off means the curve must slope downward: less Y requires more X to stay on the same curve.

🔄 Why indifference curves are bowed toward the origin

  • The marginal rate of substitution (MRS) is the slope of the indifference curve (in absolute value).
  • The MRS measures how many units of Y the consumer is willing to sacrifice for one more unit of X.
  • Diminishing marginal rate of substitution: as the consumer consumes more X, the MRS falls (becomes flatter).
    • At low levels of X, the consumer might sacrifice 5 units of Y for 1 more X (steep slope).
    • At high levels of X, the consumer might sacrifice only 1 unit of Y for 1 more X (flat slope).
  • This reflects that X becomes less valuable to the consumer as more of it is consumed, without requiring cardinal utility.
  • Example: moving along the curve from left to right, the consumer has more X and less Y, so each additional unit of X is worth less in terms of Y forgone.

🗂️ The indifference map

An indifference map is a series of indifference curves, one passing through every possible bundle in the commodity space.

  • Because preferences are complete (every bundle can be ranked against every other), an infinite number of indifference curves exist.
  • Higher indifference curves are preferred to lower ones (assuming more of both goods is always preferred to less).
  • Example: bundles W and A are on the same curve (equally preferred); both are strictly preferred to bundles C and H (on a lower curve); C and H are preferred to Z and G (on an even lower curve).

🎯 Utility maximization and the tangency condition

🎯 The utility-maximizing bundle

  • The consumer maximizes utility by choosing a bundle on the budget line (so all income is spent) that lies on the highest attainable indifference curve.
  • This occurs where the budget line is tangent to an indifference curve.
  • At tangency, the slope of the budget line equals the slope of the indifference curve.

🧮 The mathematical condition

  • Slope of the budget line: negative price of X divided by price of Y.
  • Slope of the indifference curve (MRS): negative change in Y divided by change in X.
  • Tangency condition: MRS = (price of X) / (price of Y).

🔁 Rewriting the MRS in terms of marginal utilities

  • Moving along an indifference curve, total utility remains constant: change in total utility = 0.
  • The change in total utility from a small move equals the loss from consuming less Y plus the gain from consuming more X:
    • (Marginal utility of Y) × (change in Y) + (Marginal utility of X) × (change in X) = 0.
  • Solving for the MRS (change in Y / change in X):
    • MRS = (Marginal utility of X) / (Marginal utility of Y).
  • Substituting into the tangency condition:
    • (Marginal utility of X) / (Marginal utility of Y) = (Price of X) / (Price of Y).
  • Rearranging:
    • (Marginal utility of X) / (Price of X) = (Marginal utility of Y) / (Price of Y).
  • Result: the marginal utility per dollar spent must be equal for both goods—the same condition as in the traditional cardinal utility theory.

🏆 Why this result matters

  • Neoclassical economists obtained the same equilibrium condition using ordinal utility (only rankings) instead of cardinal utility (measurable "utils").
  • The modern theory has simpler, more realistic assumptions.
  • By Ockam's Razor (prefer the theory with the simplest assumptions), the modern theory became the chosen framework.

📊 Deriving the individual demand curve

📊 How a price change traces out the demand curve

  • Start with an initial price of X (P₁) and an initial utility-maximizing bundle (X₁ units of X).
  • When the price of X rises to P₂, the budget line rotates inward.
  • The consumer moves to a new utility-maximizing point on a lower indifference curve (lower satisfaction).
  • The quantity demanded of X falls from X₁ to X₂.
  • Plotting price against quantity demanded gives a downward-sloping demand curve.
  • Example: as price rises, the consumer moves up the demand curve; as price falls, the consumer moves down the demand curve.

🔽 Why satisfaction falls when price rises

  • The consumer now faces a higher price for X, and nothing else has changed (income and other prices are constant).
  • The new utility-maximizing bundle is on a lower indifference curve, so the consumer is worse off.

🔀 Endogenous preferences and their implications

🔀 Exogenous vs endogenous preferences

When preferences are exogenous, they are determined by external factors and are not explained within the model; they are treated as given or fixed.

When preferences are endogenous, they are determined by variables within the model (such as prices or income) and can change as those variables change.

  • Neoclassical theory typically assumes exogenous preferences.
  • Many heterodox critics argue that preferences should be endogenous because the variables that change in neoclassical models (prices, income) can directly affect preferences.

🚫 Why neoclassical economists avoid endogenous preferences

  • It becomes mathematically very difficult to incorporate endogenous preferences into formal models.
  • It makes it impossible to derive the demand curve using the modern utility-maximization approach.

💎 Conspicuous consumption and Veblen goods

Conspicuous consumption (analyzed by Thorstein Veblen, 1857–1929): the upper classes display their consumption and leisure to signal wealth—examples include mansions, yachts, luxury vehicles, expensive art, jewelry, fine clothes, and servants.

A Veblen good is a good for which the quantity demanded rises as the price increases.

  • For the wealthy, the more useless and expensive an item, the more it is prized; anything useful and affordable to common people is considered vulgar.
  • A wealthy consumer may wish to purchase more of an item as its price rises because the high price signals the consumer's ability to afford expensive items.
  • This means preferences change when the price changes—preferences are endogenous.

📉 Why endogenous preferences break the derivation

  • In the standard derivation, when the price of jewelry falls, the budget line rotates outward and the consumer moves to a higher indifference curve, increasing quantity demanded from J₁ to J₂.
  • But if preferences are endogenous: as the price of jewelry falls, the consumer's preferences change such that she prefers to purchase less jewelry (because it no longer signals wealth as effectively).
  • The indifference map itself shifts, so the usual tangency analysis no longer applies.
  • Don't confuse: in the standard model, only the budget line moves; with endogenous preferences, both the budget line and the indifference curves move.
AssumptionWhat happens when price changesCan we derive a demand curve?
Exogenous preferencesBudget line rotates; indifference map stays fixedYes—standard derivation works
Endogenous preferencesBudget line rotates and indifference map shiftsNo—the usual method fails
14

Endogenous Preferences and the Breakdown of Demand Theory

Chapter 14. Unorthodox Theories of Macroeconomic Crisis

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

When preferences change in response to price changes or marketing efforts (endogenous preferences), the individual demand curve cannot be derived, causing the neoclassical supply-and-demand framework to collapse.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Why neoclassical economists avoid endogenous preferences: making preferences endogenous is mathematically difficult and prevents deriving the demand curve using utility maximization.
  • Veblen Goods example: wealthy consumers may buy more of a good as its price rises because higher prices signal status, changing their preferences.
  • Cigarette/e-cigarette example: advertising and addiction can shift preferences so consumers buy more even when prices rise.
  • Common confusion: an upward-sloping relationship between price and quantity does not mean an upward-sloping demand curve—the demand curve requires holding preferences constant, which is impossible when preferences are endogenous.
  • Why it matters: without stable preferences, the entire supply-and-demand explanation of market price breaks down.

🚫 Why neoclassical models assume fixed preferences

🧮 Mathematical and theoretical obstacles

  • Neoclassical economists generally avoid making preferences endogenous because:
    • It becomes very difficult mathematically to incorporate into formal models.
    • The modern approach to utility maximization and demand-curve derivation requires that preferences remain constant.
  • The assumption of endogenous preferences makes it impossible to derive the demand curve.

📐 What the demand curve requires

The demand curve shows the relationship between price and quantity demanded when everything else is held constant, including preferences.

  • If preferences change when price changes, you cannot isolate the effect of price alone.
  • Without a stable demand curve, the supply-and-demand framework collapses.

💎 Conspicuous consumption and Veblen Goods

💎 What conspicuous consumption means

  • The concept was first analyzed in detail by Thorstein Veblen (1857–1929).
  • The upper classes display their consumption and leisure publicly: mansions, yachts, luxury vehicles, expensive art, jewelry, fine clothes, servants.
  • According to historians: "For the wealthy, the more useless and expensive a thing was, the more it was prized as an article of conspicuous consumption."
  • Anything useful and affordable to common people was considered vulgar and tasteless.

📈 Veblen Goods: quantity demanded rises as price increases

Veblen Good: a good for which the quantity demanded rises as the price increases.

  • A wealthy person wishes to purchase more of an item as its price rises because of the message it conveys about their ability to buy expensive items.
  • Why this matters: the consumer's preferences change because the price rises—preferences are endogenous.

🔍 How this breaks demand-curve derivation

  • Figure 6.14 in the excerpt illustrates jewelry consumption:
    • As the price of jewelry falls, the budget line rotates outward as usual.
    • If preferences are exogenous (given), quantity increases from J₁ to J₂ and utility rises from U₁ to U₂.
    • If preferences are endogenous, the wealthy consumer's preferences change when the price falls—she now prefers to purchase less jewelry.
    • The indifference curves move so the utility-maximizing choice is J₃ at the lower price, with utility U₃.
  • Less wealthy consumers might not experience any preference change and will purchase more.
  • Don't confuse: even though price fell and quantity fell (suggesting a positive relationship), this does not produce an upward-sloping demand curve—because preferences did not stay constant, no demand curve can be derived.

🚬 Advertising, addiction, and preference formation

🚬 The cigarette example

  • In 2006, cigarette companies spent $12.4 billion on advertising and promotional expenses in the United States (CDC data).
  • Specific populations targeted: young people, women, racial/ethnic communities.

📊 How a price increase can lead to more consumption

  • Figure 6.15 in the excerpt shows a high school student facing a rise in cigarette prices:
    • The budget line rotates inward as usual.
    • If preferences are exogenous, the student reduces consumption from C₁ to C₂ and utility declines from U₁ to U₂.
    • If preferences are endogenous, the price rise may lead to greater profits for tobacco companies, which they use to advertise more aggressively to young people.
    • The advertising campaign changes the student's preferences so much that he ends up purchasing more cigarettes (C₃) even though the price rose, with utility U₃.
  • Even though price rose and quantity rose, this positive relationship does not produce an upward-sloping demand curve—because preferences changed, no demand curve can be derived.

💨 E-cigarettes and relentless marketing

  • The excerpt cites Bogusky: vaping rose nearly 80% among high school students from 2017 to 2018 (CDC).
  • The vaping industry adopted tactics of large tobacco companies:
    • Provide nicotine in concentrations even higher than traditional cigarettes.
    • Put products in sleek packages and market relentlessly.
  • Relentless marketing shapes consumer preferences and creates conditions for producers to raise prices while increasing quantity sold.
  • Higher prices permit even more aggressive marketing, encouraging greater sales and nicotine addiction.

🎯 Marketing tactics targeting young people

  • Fruity and minty flavors.
  • "Vaping trick" competitions resembling bubble-gum-blowing contests.
  • Range of custom colors.
  • Inconspicuous appearance and lack of foul odor.
  • Advertisements placed near kids' eye level in stores.
  • Key insight: a theory of endogenous preferences allows one to better understand reasons for preference changes and how the law of demand can break down under conditions of aggressive marketing and addiction.

🔄 Summary: the collapse of supply-and-demand theory

🔄 What is lost when preferences are endogenous

  • The neoclassical assumption of given (exogenous) individual preferences implies that causal factors responsible for preference formation are outside the scope of neoclassical theory.
  • The two examples (Veblen Goods and cigarettes/e-cigarettes) demonstrate how serious the complications are from assuming endogenous preferences.
  • Without the ability to derive an individual demand curve, the supply-and-demand explanation of market price completely collapses.

🧩 Key distinction table

AssumptionWhat happens when price changesCan you derive a demand curve?
Exogenous preferencesPreferences stay constant; only quantity adjusts along a stable indifference mapYes—the demand curve shows price vs. quantity with everything else held constant
Endogenous preferencesPreferences themselves change (indifference curves shift) in response to price or marketingNo—because preferences did not stay constant, you cannot isolate the effect of price alone

⚠️ Don't confuse

  • A positive relationship between price and quantity (price up, quantity up) does not mean an upward-sloping demand curve.
  • The demand curve is defined as the relationship holding preferences constant—if preferences change, there is no demand curve to speak of.
15

Theories of Consumer Utility and Preferences

Chapter 15. Theories of Financial Markets

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The theory of utility maximization explains consumer choice through either cardinal or ordinal utility frameworks, but breaks down when preferences are endogenous rather than exogenous.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Law of diminishing marginal utility: extra satisfaction from consuming one more unit declines as consumption increases.
  • Two approaches to utility: cardinal utility (measurable in utils) vs. ordinal utility (only rankings matter); ordinal is simpler by Ockam's Razor.
  • Budget constraints respond differently: price changes rotate the budget line; income changes shift it parallel.
  • Common confusion: exogenous vs. endogenous preferences—when preferences are endogenous (change with price), individual demand curves cannot be derived.
  • Utility maximization condition: in modern theory, the slope of the budget line must equal the marginal rate of substitution.

💡 Foundations of utility theory

💡 Historical roots in utilitarianism

  • The positive theory of utility maximization developed by neoclassical economists in the 1870s has roots in the normative philosophy of utilitarianism.
  • This connects economic analysis to broader philosophical traditions about human satisfaction and well-being.

📉 Law of diminishing marginal utility

The law of diminishing marginal utility: the extra satisfaction from consuming an additional unit of a good declines as the amount consumed rises.

  • This is a fundamental behavioral assumption in consumer theory.
  • Example: the first unit of a good provides more satisfaction than the tenth unit.
  • Applies across consumption decisions and helps explain spending patterns.

🎯 Traditional utility maximization rule

  • In the traditional theory, the consumer spends all income such that the marginal utilities per dollar spent are the same for each good.
  • If the marginal utility per dollar is higher for one good, the consumer should buy more of that good and less of others.
  • Example problem: if pencils cost $0.75 with 5 utils of marginal utility, that's 6.67 utils per dollar; if erasers cost $1.50 with 12 utils, that's 8 utils per dollar—buy more erasers.

🔄 Cardinal vs. ordinal utility

🔢 Cardinal utility assumption

  • Cardinal utility treats utility as measurable in specific units called "utils."
  • Allows for interpersonal utility comparisons (comparing one person's satisfaction to another's).
  • Used in concepts like consumers' surplus and producers' surplus, which assume a constant marginal utility of money that is the same for all buyers and sellers.

📊 Ordinal utility assumption

  • Ordinal utility only requires ranking preferences, not measuring exact satisfaction levels.
  • According to Ockam's Razor (the simplest theory is best, other things equal), the ordinal utility assumption is superior to the cardinal utility assumption.
  • Modern indifference curve analysis uses ordinal utility.

⚖️ Why ordinal is preferred

  • Ordinal utility avoids the need to measure satisfaction in absolute units.
  • It only requires consumers to say "I prefer A to B" rather than "A gives me 10 utils and B gives me 5 utils."
  • This makes fewer assumptions and is therefore simpler.

📐 Modern indifference curve analysis

📐 Budget lines and constraints

  • Budget line: represents all combinations of goods a consumer can afford given prices and income.
  • Changes in price cause rotations of the budget line (one intercept moves, the other stays fixed).
  • Changes in income cause parallel shifts of the budget line (both intercepts move proportionally).

Example: If income is $26, yogurt costs $4, and pudding costs $5, the budget equation shows all affordable combinations.

🔀 Indifference curves

  • Indifference curves slope downwards because consumers are willing to make tradeoffs between goods.
  • They are bowed towards the origin because consumers experience diminishing marginal satisfaction as they consume more of a good.
  • This bowing reflects the diminishing marginal rate of substitution.

🎯 Marginal rate of substitution (MRS)

Marginal rate of substitution: the rate at which a consumer is willing to trade one good for another while maintaining the same level of satisfaction.

  • Utility maximization in modern theory requires that the slope of the budget line equal the marginal rate of substitution.
  • This is the tangency condition: the consumer's willingness to trade equals the market's rate of exchange.
  • Diminishing MRS: as you consume more of one good, you're willing to give up less of the other good to get even more of the first.

🔄 Exogenous vs. endogenous preferences

🔄 Exogenous preferences (standard assumption)

  • Exogenous preferences: preferences are fixed and determined outside the economic model.
  • This is the standard assumption in traditional consumer theory.
  • Allows derivation of stable demand curves from utility maximization.

🔄 Endogenous preferences (alternative view)

  • Endogenous preferences: preferences themselves change in response to economic variables like prices or marketing.
  • When preferences are endogenous, the individual demand curve cannot be derived because a change in price causes preferences to change.
  • This breaks down the traditional law of demand under conditions of aggressive marketing and addiction.

🏷️ Conspicuous consumption and Veblen goods

  • Conspicuous consumption: consuming goods to display wealth or status.
  • Veblen Good: a good whose demand may increase with price because higher price signals status.
  • These concepts relate to endogenous preferences—the price itself affects how desirable the good is.
  • Example: products "placed near kids' eye level in stores" can shape preferences through marketing.

⚠️ Don't confuse

  • Exogenous: preferences are stable; price changes move you along a fixed demand curve.
  • Endogenous: preferences shift when prices change; the demand curve itself moves, making traditional analysis invalid.

💎 The paradox of value

💎 What the paradox is

  • The paradox of value asks why some essential goods (like water) have low prices while non-essential goods (like diamonds) have high prices.
  • This seems to contradict the idea that value reflects usefulness.

💎 Two solutions

ApproachSolution
Classical labor theory of valuePrice reflects labor time required for production; abundant goods need less labor
Marginal utility conceptPrice reflects marginal utility (last unit consumed), not total utility; water is abundant so marginal utility is low
  • The neoclassical solution uses marginal utility: water has high total utility but low marginal utility because it's plentiful.
  • Classical economists recognized that scarcity or abundance influences the labor requirement and thus price.
16

Theories of Production Technology and Cost of Production

Chapter 16. Money Supply Measures and Theories of Commercial Bank Behavior

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical production theory uses the distinction between short run (at least one fixed input) and long run (all inputs variable) to derive cost structures, while production technology itself remains constant in both periods.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Production technology is defined broadly as all accumulated knowledge and technical skills used in producing goods and services.
  • Short run vs long run: the short run has at least one fixed factor of production; the long run allows all factors to vary.
  • Time periods vary by industry: what counts as "short run" depends on how long it takes for all inputs to become variable (e.g., 6 months for a pizzeria, 2 years for a manufacturing plant).
  • Common confusion: short run and long run are not calendar periods but depend on input flexibility—the same industry may have different time horizons than another.
  • Technology stays fixed: in neoclassical analysis, production knowledge and skills do not change in either the short run or the long run.

🏗️ What is production technology

🏗️ Broad neoclassical definition

Production technology: all of the accumulated knowledge and technical skills that are used in the production of goods and services.

  • This is not just machinery or equipment; it includes know-how, methods, and skills.
  • The excerpt emphasizes that neoclassical thinking applies "unidirectional logic": technology determines the cost structure that firms face.
  • Technology is treated as an input to the cost analysis, not as something that changes during the analysis.

🔒 Technology remains constant

  • In both short run and long run periods, production technology is held fixed.
  • The knowledge and skills related to production do not change in this framework.
  • This assumption is a "key entry point" of neoclassical theory—it isolates the effect of input quantities on costs without mixing in technological change.

⏱️ Short run vs long run periods

⏱️ Short run: at least one fixed input

Short run: a period in which at least one factor of production is fixed.

  • Example: A pizzeria uses capital (K) and labor (L). Labor is variable (the firm can hire 0 to many workers), but capital (the restaurant building, kitchen, dining area) is fixed in size.
  • If the firm cannot build a new restaurant or expand the existing one, it is operating in the short run.
  • The short run lasts as long as it takes to make all inputs variable.

⏱️ Long run: all inputs variable

Long run: a period during which all factors of production are variable.

  • In the pizzeria example, if it takes 6 months to construct a new restaurant, then any period longer than 6 months is the long run.
  • Both capital and labor can be adjusted in the long run.
  • Don't confuse: "long run" does not mean "a long time" in absolute terms; it means "enough time for all inputs to become adjustable."

🏭 Industry-specific time horizons

  • The specific calendar periods for short run and long run vary by industry.
  • Example: It may take 2 years to build a new production plant in one industry but only 6 months to construct a factory in another.
  • The time depends on how long it takes for all inputs to become variable, not on a universal standard.
Industry characteristicShort run durationLong run starts when
Pizzeria (excerpt example)Up to 6 monthsAfter 6 months (new restaurant can be built)
Manufacturing plant (excerpt example)Up to 2 yearsAfter 2 years (new plant can be built)
General principleUntil at least one input is fixedAll inputs can be varied

🔗 How technology and cost relate

🔗 Unidirectional logic

  • The excerpt states that neoclassical thinking uses "unidirectional logic" in this case.
  • Technology is used to determine the cost structure that firms face.
  • This means: first, technology defines what is possible (how inputs combine to produce output); second, cost follows from the quantities of inputs needed.
  • Example: If a pizzeria's technology requires a certain kitchen size and number of workers to produce 100 pizzas, that input requirement determines the cost of producing 100 pizzas.

🔗 Short run and long run cost derivation

  • The excerpt mentions that short run production technology generates short run production cost, and long run production technology generates long run production cost.
  • The relationship between short run and long run production cost is also analyzed in the neoclassical tradition.
  • Don't confuse: the cost structure is derived from technology, not the other way around; technology is the starting point in this framework.
17

Theories of Production Technology and Cost of Production

Chapter 17. Monetary Theories and the Role of the Central Bank

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Neoclassical production theory uses the distinction between short run (at least one fixed input) and long run (all inputs variable) to determine how technology shapes firm cost structures, while production technology itself remains constant in both periods.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Production technology defined broadly: all accumulated knowledge and technical skills used in producing goods and services.
  • Short run vs long run: short run has at least one fixed factor; long run has all factors variable; the time boundary varies by industry.
  • Common confusion: the short/long run distinction is not about calendar time but about whether all inputs can be adjusted—six months may be short run in one industry but long run in another.
  • Unidirectional logic: technology determines cost structure (technology → cost), consistent with neoclassical reasoning.
  • Key assumption: production technology (knowledge and skills) remains fixed in both short run and long run analysis.

🏭 What production technology means

🏭 Broad definition

Production technology: all of the accumulated knowledge and technical skills that are used in the production of goods and services.

  • This is not just machines or equipment; it includes all knowledge and skills.
  • The excerpt emphasizes the breadth: "defined very broadly."
  • Technology is treated as an input to the analysis, not an outcome.

➡️ Unidirectional logic

  • Technology is used to determine the cost structure that firms face.
  • The causal flow is one-way: technology → cost.
  • This reflects the neoclassical approach: start with technology, derive cost from it.

⏱️ Short run vs long run distinction

⏱️ Short run

Short run: a period in which at least one factor of production is fixed.

  • "At least one" means one or more inputs cannot be changed.
  • Example: A pizzeria uses capital (K) and labor (L). Labor is variable (can hire 0 to many workers), but capital (the restaurant building, kitchen, dining area) is fixed in size.
  • If the firm cannot build a new restaurant or expand the existing one, it is operating in the short run.
  • The short run lasts as long as it takes to make all inputs variable.

⏳ Long run

Long run: a period during which all factors of production are variable.

  • All inputs can be adjusted—no fixed factors remain.
  • Example: If it takes 6 months to construct a new restaurant, then the long run is any period longer than 6 months, because both capital and labor become variable.
  • The long run is not a fixed calendar duration; it depends on the industry.

🔄 How to distinguish them

  • Not about absolute time: the key is whether all inputs are adjustable, not the number of months or years.
  • Industry-specific: the excerpt notes that it may take two years to build a plant in one industry and only six months in another.
  • Don't confuse: "short run" does not mean "a few months" universally; it means "the period during which at least one input is fixed."
PeriodDefinitionExample (pizzeria)
Short runAt least one factor fixedLabor variable, capital (building) fixed; lasts up to 6 months if that's how long construction takes
Long runAll factors variableBoth labor and capital variable; any period longer than 6 months

🔒 Key assumption: technology is fixed

🔒 Technology does not change

  • The excerpt states: "production technology remains fixed in both the short run and the long run."
  • Knowledge and skills related to production do not change during the analysis.
  • This is a "key entry point of neoclassical theory"—technology is held constant so that the analysis can focus on how firms adjust inputs given that technology.

🧩 Why this matters

  • By holding technology constant, neoclassical theory isolates the effect of input adjustments on cost.
  • The analysis asks: given a fixed set of knowledge and skills, how do firms choose inputs and what costs do they face?
  • This assumption is consistent with the neoclassical approach of treating technology as an exogenous (external) factor.

📐 From technology to cost structure

📐 The logic flow

  • The excerpt emphasizes that "the unidirectional logic that is so central to neoclassical thinking applies in this case."
  • Technology → determines cost structure.
  • The firm's cost depends on:
    • What technology is available (knowledge and skills).
    • Which inputs are fixed (short run) or variable (long run).
  • Example: If a pizzeria's kitchen size is fixed, the cost of producing more pizzas depends on how many workers can be added and how productive they are given the fixed kitchen.

🔍 What comes next

  • The excerpt introduces the framework but does not yet detail the mechanisms (e.g., diminishing marginal returns, cost curves).
  • The goals listed at the start indicate that the chapter will:
    • Describe short run production technology.
    • Define the law of diminishing marginal returns.
    • Explain how short run technology generates short run cost.
    • Analyze long run production technologies.
    • Derive long run cost from long run technology.
    • Demonstrate the relationship between short run and long run cost.
    • Investigate alternative theories (Schumpeterian and Marxian).
18

Theories of Government Budget Deficits and Debt

Chapter 18. Theories of Government Budget Deficits and Debt

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Government budget deficits and surpluses have complex macroeconomic effects that depend on how the central bank responds, what tax system is in place, and whether fiscal policy aims for full employment or budget balance—with Keynesian, neoclassical, and Marxian perspectives offering competing interpretations of borrowing, crowding out, and debt accumulation.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Budget concepts: A deficit occurs when outlays exceed receipts; a surplus when receipts exceed outlays; the federal debt is the accumulated stock of past deficits minus repayments.
  • Fiscal policy tools: Expansionary policy (tax cuts and/or spending increases) boosts aggregate demand; contractionary policy (tax hikes and/or spending cuts) restrains it.
  • Crowding out vs. accommodation: Government borrowing can completely crowd out private investment (if the central bank restricts money supply), partially crowd out (if supply is unchanged), or cause no crowding out (if the Fed fully accommodates demand for loanable funds).
  • Common confusion—actual vs. full-employment budget: The actual budget reflects automatic changes in tax revenue during recessions/booms; the full-employment budget isolates deliberate policy by showing what the budget would be at full employment.
  • Competing policy views: Keynesian full-employment policies accept deficits to restore output and jobs; neoclassical/neoliberal austerity policies prioritize balanced budgets even during recessions, risking deeper contractions.

💰 Budget structure and debt basics

💰 What the federal budget includes

The unified federal budget aggregates all receipts and outlays, divided into on-budget and off-budget categories.

  • Off-budget items (e.g., Social Security, U.S. Postal Service) are separated to protect them from annual political decisions or to track their independent balance.
  • Unified deficit/surplus = on-budget balance + off-budget balance.
  • Example (FY2015): on-budget deficit of $465.8 billion + off-budget surplus of $27.3 billion = unified deficit of $438.5 billion.

Why it matters: Reporting off-budget surpluses separately reveals that the "controllable" deficit is often larger than the unified number suggests.

💸 Major spending and revenue categories

OutlaysReceipts
Appropriated/discretionary programs (defense, education, etc.)Individual income taxes (largest share)
Mandatory spending (Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid)Social Security payroll taxes
Net interest on debtCorporate income taxes, excise taxes, customs duties, Fed profit distributions
  • FY2015 total outlays: ~$3.69 trillion; total receipts: ~$3.25 trillion.

📚 Federal debt vs. deficits

Federal debt: the entire accumulated debt of the federal government minus whatever has been repaid over the years.

  • Flow vs. stock: Deficits/surpluses are annual flows; debt is a stock measured at a point in time.
  • End of FY2015: gross federal debt ~$18.1 trillion.
  • Who holds it?
    • ~41% held by U.S. government accounts (e.g., Social Security Trust Fund) and the Federal Reserve.
    • ~1/3 held by foreign investors (China and Japan each held >$1.1 trillion in FY2015).
    • Remainder held by domestic private investors.

Don't confuse: A deficit is the gap in a single year; the debt is the cumulative result of all past deficits and surpluses.


📈 Expansionary vs. contractionary fiscal policy

📈 Expansionary fiscal policy

Goal: Promote higher output and employment during a recession.

Tools:

  • Cut taxes (lump-sum or rate cuts).
  • Increase government spending.
  • Combine both.

Mechanism:

  • Tax cut of $50 billion with mpc = 3/4 → lump-sum tax multiplier = –3 → real output rises by $150 billion.
  • Spending increase of $50 billion with mpc = 3/4 → government expenditures multiplier = 4 → real output rises by $200 billion.
  • Combined policy (e.g., $20 billion spending + $40 billion tax cut) can achieve the same $200 billion output gain.

Key assumption: Full multiplier effect operates only if prices are sticky in the short run (Keynesian view). If prices are partly or fully flexible (neoclassical view), some of the AD increase translates into higher prices rather than higher output, weakening the multiplier.

📉 Contractionary fiscal policy

Goal: Restrain output and employment to combat inflation.

Tools:

  • Raise taxes.
  • Cut government spending.
  • Combine both.

Mechanism:

  • Tax increase of $50 billion → real output falls by $150 billion.
  • Spending cut of $50 billion → real output falls by $200 billion.
  • The multiplier works in reverse: households have less income to spend, triggering further reductions in consumption.

Price flexibility caveat: If prices are downwardly flexible, some of the AD reduction shows up as deflation rather than lower output; if prices are completely flexible (vertical AS curve), output stays at full employment and only the price level falls.


🏦 Government borrowing, crowding out, and the loanable funds market

🏦 Three scenarios for crowding out

When the government borrows to finance a deficit, the impact on private investment and consumption depends on the central bank's response.

ScenarioCentral bank actionInterest rateEquilibrium quantityPrivate investment/consumptionMultiplier effect
Complete crowding outReduces supply of loanable funds to offset government demandRises sharplyReturns to original levelCompletely crowded outInoperative
Partial crowding outDoes not alter supplyRises moderatelyIncreasesPartially crowded outWeakened
Complete accommodationIncreases supply to match government demandUnchangedIncreasesNo crowding outFully operative (if prices sticky)

Example—complete crowding out: Government borrowing shifts demand for loanable funds right; Fed shifts supply left → interest rate rises, private borrowing falls by exactly the amount government borrows → composition of output changes (more G, less I) but total output unchanged.

Example—complete accommodation (Post-Keynesian endogenous money view): Fed increases money supply to keep interest rate stable → no crowding out, full multiplier effect on output (if prices are sticky).

🌍 Exchange rate effects on net exports

Higher interest rates from government borrowing attract foreign capital → higher demand for U.S. dollars → dollar appreciates (in flexible exchange rates) → U.S. exports become more expensive, imports cheaper → net exports fall → AD shifts left, partially offsetting the expansionary effect of deficit spending.

Central bank options:

  • Fixed exchange rates: Fed sells dollars to stabilize the exchange rate → net exports not negatively affected, but partial crowding out still occurs.
  • Stabilize quantity of dollars traded: Fed reduces dollar supply → exchange rate appreciates further → net exports fall even more.

Don't confuse: Crowding out of investment vs. crowding out of net exports—both can occur simultaneously, compounding the contractionary offset to deficit spending.

💵 Budget surplus and debt repayment

When the government runs a surplus and repays debt, bondholders receive funds they will likely lend again → supply of loanable funds increases → interest rate falls → investment and consumer spending rise → AD shifts right.

Risk: If the economy is near full employment, the increased AD can cause demand-pull inflation.


🧾 Tax systems: marginal vs. average rates

🧾 Marginal and average tax rates defined

Marginal tax rate (MTR): the rate at which an additional dollar of income is taxed.

Average tax rate (ATR): total taxes paid divided by total income.

Income tax bracket: the range of income to which a specific marginal tax rate applies.

Example (2017 single taxpayer):

  • First $9,325 taxed at 10%; next increment ($9,325–$37,950) at 15%; and so on.
  • For median income in the 28% bracket ($141,775), taxes owed are calculated by applying each MTR to the corresponding income slice, not by multiplying $141,775 × 0.28.
  • ATR = total taxes owed ÷ income.

🧾 Three types of tax systems

SystemHow ATR changes with incomeImplication
ProgressiveATR risesHigher earners pay a larger percentage; enables income redistribution
Proportional (flat tax)ATR constantSingle rate applies to all income; no redistribution effect
RegressiveATR fallsLower earners pay a larger percentage; criticized as unfair and destabilizing

Don't confuse: MTR vs. ATR—even in a progressive system, the MTR in your bracket is higher than your ATR because lower brackets are taxed at lower rates.


🔧 Flat tax in the Keynesian Cross model

🔧 How a flat tax modifies the consumption function

Without a tax: C = C₀ + mpc·Y
With a flat tax rate t: T = t·Y, so after-tax income = (1 – t)Y
→ C = C₀ + mpc·(1 – t)Y

Effect: The consumption function becomes flatter—slope changes from mpc to (1 – t)·mpc.

Aggregate expenditures: A = C₀ + (1 – t)·mpc·Y + I + G + Xₙ

  • The A curve also becomes flatter.
  • Equilibrium output (where A = Y) is lower than without the tax.

🔧 Modified government expenditures multiplier

Formula: 1 / [1 – (1 – t)·mpc]

  • Higher tax rate t → larger denominator → smaller multiplier.
  • Intuition: Tax reduces the amount of additional income available for consumption, so each round of spending is smaller.

Example: If mpc = 0.75 and t = 0.2, multiplier = 1 / [1 – 0.6] = 2.5 (vs. 4 without the tax).


⚖️ Tax systems and macroeconomic stability

⚖️ Progressive tax: most stable

How it works:

  • Tax revenue (T) rises steeply as income (Y) rises → both MTR and ATR increase with income.
  • At full employment (Yf), budget is balanced (G = T).
  • Recession (Y < Yf): T falls sharply → automatic deficit → expansionary effect stabilizes the economy.
  • Boom (Y > Yf): T rises sharply → automatic surplus → contractionary effect cools the economy.

Why it's stabilizing: Large automatic changes in tax revenue create large deficits/surpluses that counteract the business cycle.

⚖️ Proportional (flat) tax: somewhat stable

How it works:

  • T rises at a constant rate → MTR and ATR are constant.
  • Recession: T falls, but not as much as in a progressive system → smaller automatic deficit.
  • Boom: T rises, but not as much → smaller automatic surplus.

Why it's less stabilizing: Automatic stabilizers are weaker because tax revenue changes proportionally with income.

⚖️ Regressive tax: least stable (potentially destabilizing)

How it works:

  • T rises then falls as income rises → MTR and ATR both fall with income.
  • At two income levels (Y₁ and Y₂), budget is balanced.
  • At Y₁: Recession → deficit → stabilizing. Boom → surplus → stabilizing.
  • At Y₂: Recession → surplus → destabilizing (worsens recession). Boom → deficit → destabilizing (worsens inflation).

Why it's destabilizing: At higher income levels, automatic stabilizers work in reverse, amplifying rather than dampening fluctuations.

Don't confuse: The shape of the T curve (linear, steep, or inverted-U) determines the type of tax system and its stability properties.


🎯 Full-employment budget concept

🎯 Actual vs. full-employment budget

Full-employment budget: the state of the budget (deficit, surplus, or balance) at the full-employment level of output, isolating deliberate fiscal policy from automatic changes in tax revenue.

Actual budget: the observed budget balance, which includes the effects of automatic stabilizers.

Why it matters: During a recession, the actual budget may show a large deficit even if the government is not actively pursuing expansionary policy—tax revenues fall automatically. The full-employment budget reveals the government's true policy stance.

Example:

  • Full-employment budget is balanced at Yf.
  • Recession → actual deficit arises (Y < Yf, so T < G).
  • Boom → actual surplus arises (Y > Yf, so T > G).
  • In both cases, the full-employment budget remains balanced, indicating a neutral policy stance.

🎯 Full-employment deficit or surplus

Full-employment deficit: Government is deliberately pursuing expansionary policy; actual deficit will be even larger during a recession.

Full-employment surplus: Government is deliberately pursuing contractionary policy; actual surplus will be even larger during a boom.

Graphical tool: The "full-employment balanced budget reference line" shows where G = T at Yf; the vertical distance between the actual budget line (T – G) and the reference line measures the full-employment budget gap.


🚨 Balanced budget amendments and their consequences

🚨 What balanced budget amendments require

Most U.S. states have constitutional requirements to balance their budgets annually.

🚨 During a recession

Two options to balance the budget:

  1. Cut government spending (G ↓) → contractionary → worsens recession.
  2. Raise taxes (T ↑) → contractionary → worsens recession.

Result: Balanced budget achieved, but at great cost to output and employment.

🚨 During an inflationary boom

Two options to balance the budget:

  1. Increase government spending (G ↑) → expansionary → worsens inflation.
  2. Cut taxes (T ↓) → expansionary → worsens inflation.

Result: Balanced budget achieved, but inflation accelerates.

Conclusion: Strict adherence to balanced budget rules is procyclical—it amplifies recessions and booms rather than stabilizing the economy.


🔀 Keynesian full-employment policy vs. neoclassical austerity

🔀 The policy dilemma

Starting point: Economy in unemployment equilibrium (Yu*) with a large budget deficit.

Two competing approaches:

PolicyGoalMethodOutcome
Keynesian full-employmentRestore full employment (Yf*)Increase G (or cut T)Output rises to Yf*, but deficit doubles
Neoclassical austerityBalance the budgetCut G (or raise T) to make G = tYBudget balanced, but output falls further (Ya* < Yu*)

🔀 Keynesian full-employment policy (numerical example)

Given: C = 100 + 0.6(Y – T), I = 200, G = 400, T = 0.2Y, Yu* = 1400, Yf* = 2000.

Initial deficit: G – T = 400 – 280 = 120.

To achieve Yf = 2000*: Solve for new G:
2000 = [100 + 200 + G + (–0.6)(0.2)(2000)] / [1 – 0.6(1 – 0.2)]
→ G = 500.

New deficit: 500 – 400 = 100 increase → total deficit = 240 (doubled).

Trade-off: Full employment achieved, but deficit critics are alarmed.

🔀 Austerity policy (numerical example)

Balanced budget condition: G = tY = 0.2Y.

New aggregate expenditures: A = 100 + 0.6(1 – 0.2)Y + 200 + 0.2Y = 300 + 0.68Y.

Equilibrium: Y = 300 / (1 – 0.68) = 937.5 (Ya*).

Result: Budget is balanced (G = T = 187.5), but output has fallen from 1400 to 937.5—recession deepens.

Keynesian conclusion: No easy solution exists if the goal is to achieve both full employment and a balanced budget simultaneously during a recession.


🔨 Marxian analysis of government borrowing and debt

🔨 Scenario 1: Government borrows to finance state-owned enterprises (SOEs)

Setup: Government borrows a fraction (1 – φ) of total loan capital; uses it as capital to produce commodities in SOEs.

Result:

  • SOEs hire workers, create surplus value, and appropriate profits.
  • Total social product unchanged; composition shifts (part now produced by SOEs instead of private firms).
  • Complete crowding out of private investment: same total capital, just reallocated.
  • Government can repay debt principal and interest from SOE profits.

Marxian interpretation: Workers are still exploited; exploiters now include both private industrialists and state managers.

🔨 Scenario 2: Government borrows to purchase commodities (not as capital)

Setup: Government borrows (1 – φ) of loan capital and spends it entirely on commodities produced in the industrial sector.

Key difference: Government does not advance the funds as capital—it consumes the entire amount.

Induced private investment: Government contracts encourage new non-borrowed capital (KGC) to enter the industrial sector.
Formula: (1 – φ)[BL + (1 – R)D] = KGC + rKGC
→ KGC = [(1 – φ)(BL + (1 – R)D)] / (1 + r)

Result:

  • Total social product falls (because government spending does not function as capital).
  • Government accumulates debt and owes interest (IG) to the financial sector.
  • Government cannot pay interest from profits (it didn't produce any); must impose taxes.

🔨 Taxation options to pay interest

Option 1—Tax only profits:
Tax rate on profits: tπ = IG / πA

Option 2—Tax only wages:
Tax rate on wages: tw = IG / WA
(Assumes WA = ⅔ KA)

Option 3—Tax both wages and profits at the same rate:
t = IG / (WA + πA)

Trade-off line: tw = (IG / WA) – (πA / WA)·tπ

  • Shows all combinations of profit and wage tax rates that generate enough revenue to pay interest.
  • Slope = –πA / WA.

Marxian critique:

  • Workers create all new value (wages + profits).
  • If wages are taxed, workers not only lose the surplus value they produced (profits) but also part of their wage income.
  • After-tax wages may fall below the value of labor-power, reducing workers' living standards.

🔨 Budget deficit and debt accumulation

Government outlays: G = TPGC + IG (spending on commodities + interest).

Government receipts: R = tax revenue = IG (by design).

Budget deficit: G – R = TPGC.

Debt increase: The deficit equals the amount borrowed from the financial sector, adding to the government debt stock.

Marxian conclusion: Government borrowing for consumption (not production) creates a debt burden that must be serviced through taxation of wages and/or profits, with workers bearing the ultimate cost.


📰 Policy debate: deficits and the national debt

📰 Arguments for concern (Tom Campbell, LA Times 2019)

Projection: CBO estimates deficits >$1 trillion/year for the next decade; national debt will grow from $22 trillion to $34 trillion by the end of the 2020s.

Risks:

  1. Foreign creditor risk: China holds $1.2 trillion in U.S. bonds; a massive sell-off could crash bond prices, raise interest rates, and trigger a recession (though Campbell notes this is unlikely).
  2. Crisis vulnerability: High debt limits the government's ability to borrow massively in a future crisis without driving up interest rates further.
  3. Intergenerational burden: Current deficits fund consumption (tax cuts, entitlements, wars) rather than productive investments (infrastructure, education); future generations pay interest on debt without receiving corresponding benefits.

Campbell's view: Deficit spending can be justified if it finances lasting increases in aggregate supply (e.g., "great public universities, better roads and airports"), but not if it merely boosts short-term aggregate demand through consumption.

Don't confuse: Short-term demand stimulus vs. long-term supply enhancement—Campbell argues the former imposes costs on future generations without compensating benefits, while the latter represents a fair exchange.


📋 Summary of key mechanisms

  1. Budget arithmetic: Unified deficit = on-budget deficit + off-budget surplus (or deficit); debt is the stock, deficits/surpluses are flows.
  2. Fiscal multipliers: Tax multiplier = –mpc/(1 – mpc); government spending multiplier = 1/(1 – mpc); both are weakened by a flat tax rate t.
  3. Crowding out: Depends on central bank response—complete (if Fed restricts supply), partial (if Fed does nothing), or none (if Fed accommodates).
  4. Exchange rate channel: Higher interest rates → dollar appreciates → net exports fall → AD partially offset.
  5. Tax system stability: Progressive (most stable) > proportional (somewhat stable) > regressive (potentially destabilizing).
  6. Full-employment budget: Isolates deliberate policy from automatic stabilizers; reveals true fiscal stance.
  7. Balanced budget amendments: Procyclical—worsen recessions and booms.
  8. Keynesian vs. austerity: Full-employment policy restores output but increases deficits; austerity balances the budget but deepens recessions.
  9. Marxian view: Government borrowing for SOEs reallocates capital; borrowing for consumption creates debt that workers ultimately pay through taxes.
19

Theories of International Trade

Chapter 19. Theories of International Trade

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

International trade theory demonstrates that nations can mutually benefit from specialization and exchange based on comparative advantage, yet hidden assumptions and alternative radical theories reveal that trade can also produce unequal outcomes, deadweight losses from protectionism, and systematic transfers of value from poor to rich nations.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Comparative advantage vs. absolute advantage: A nation benefits from trade even if another nation produces everything more efficiently, as long as each has a comparative (relative cost) advantage in at least one good.
  • Constant vs. increasing opportunity costs: Homogeneous resources lead to complete specialization and constant costs; heterogeneous resources lead to partial specialization and increasing costs.
  • Hidden assumptions critique: Fletcher identifies eight assumptions (e.g., sustainability, no externalities, factor mobility, capital immobility) that, when violated, undermine the mutual-gains-from-trade conclusion.
  • New Trade Theory and retainable industries: Economies of scale can lock out superior producers and turn trade into a zero-sum game in some regions, contradicting the traditional positive-sum view.
  • Radical alternatives: Dependency theory and unequal exchange theory argue that competitive trade can systematically transfer surplus and value from poor to rich nations, worsening global inequality.

📐 Ricardian and modern comparative advantage

📐 Ricardian labor-time framework

Absolute advantage: A nation can produce one unit of a commodity with less labor time than another nation.

Comparative advantage (Ricardian): A nation's absolute advantage is relatively greater for one commodity; the other nation has a smaller absolute disadvantage in the other commodity.

  • Ricardo (1817) showed that even if England produces both wine and cloth in less time than Portugal, Portugal should specialize in the commodity where its absolute disadvantage is smallest (wine), and England should specialize where its absolute advantage is greatest (cloth).
  • Example from the text: England requires 3 hours for wine and 2 hours for cloth; Portugal requires 5 hours for wine and 6 hours for cloth. Portugal's disadvantage is smaller in wine (5/3 ≈ 1.67 times England's time) than in cloth (6/2 = 3 times), so Portugal has a comparative advantage in wine.
  • Both nations gain from trade by specializing and exchanging.

📐 Modern production-possibilities framework

Absolute advantage (modern): A nation can produce absolutely more of a commodity in a given time period.

Comparative advantage (modern): A nation has a lower marginal opportunity cost (domestic terms of trade) for producing that commodity.

  • The slope of the production possibilities frontier (PPF) reflects marginal opportunity cost.
  • Example: U.S. can produce 50 tons of sugar or 50 tons of corn (slope = –1S/1C); Thailand can produce 30 tons of sugar or 10 tons of corn (slope = –3S/1C). The U.S. has a comparative advantage in corn (opportunity cost 1S vs. 3S in Thailand); Thailand has a comparative advantage in sugar (opportunity cost 1/3C vs. 1C in the U.S.).
  • Don't confuse: Absolute advantage (who produces more) with comparative advantage (who sacrifices less of the other good).

🔄 Constant vs. increasing opportunity cost cases

🔄 Constant opportunity cost (homogeneous resources)

Homogeneous resources: Resources are equally well-suited to all lines of production and easily transferable, generating constant marginal opportunity costs and linear PPFs.

  • Each nation completely specializes in the commodity where it has a comparative advantage.
  • The international terms of trade (world exchange ratio) must lie between the two nations' domestic terms of trade (the limits to the terms of trade).
  • Example: If U.S. domestic price is 1S/1C and Thailand's is 3S/1C, the world price might settle at 2S/1C (between 1 and 3).
  • Each nation's trading possibilities frontier (TPF) lies outside its PPF, allowing consumption combinations previously unattainable.
  • If the international terms of trade coincide with one nation's domestic price, that nation gains nothing and the other captures all gains.

🔄 Increasing opportunity cost (heterogeneous resources)

Heterogeneous resources: Resources are not equally suited to all production, so shifting resources raises marginal opportunity cost, producing a bowed-out PPF.

  • As each nation specializes, its marginal opportunity cost rises (less suitable resources are drawn in).
  • Specialization stops when the two nations' marginal opportunity costs become equal—this is partial specialization.
  • The equilibrium international terms of trade is unique and equals the common domestic marginal opportunity cost at the point where both nations stop specializing.
  • Offer curves show how much of one good a nation is willing to supply for a given quantity of the other, reflecting both rising production costs and consumer demand.
  • Equilibrium occurs where the two offer curves intersect: quantities supplied and demanded are equal, and trade is balanced (value of exports = value of imports).

🔄 Balanced trade and price adjustment

  • The relative price ratio P_C / P_S can be represented as the slope of a ray from the origin (S/C).
  • If excess demand for corn exists, the relative price of corn rises (the ray steepens) until equilibrium is reached.
  • If excess supply of corn exists, the relative price of corn falls (the ray flattens) until equilibrium is reached.
  • Don't confuse: The terms-of-trade limits (constant cost case) with the unique equilibrium terms of trade (increasing cost case).

🧩 Fletcher's eight hidden assumptions and critiques

🧩 Sustainability (assumption 1)

  • The theory assumes trade is sustainable over time.
  • Problem: A nation may finance imports by selling assets (bonds) rather than exporting goods, accumulating unsustainable debt.
  • A nation may specialize in a non-renewable resource (e.g., guano in Nauru, oil in the Middle East) and face economic collapse when the resource is depleted.
  • Example: Nauru exported guano 1908–2002, boomed in the 1960s–70s, then collapsed when reserves ran out.

🧩 No externalities (assumption 2)

  • The theory assumes prices reflect all costs and benefits.
  • Problem: If production causes air pollution (negative externality), the commodity is under-priced and over-produced; third parties are harmed and not compensated.
  • Efficiency requires corrective pricing to internalize externalities.

🧩 Easy factor mobility (assumption 3)

  • The theory assumes resources shift smoothly from one industry to another.
  • Problem: Factories must be converted, workers retrained—this is expensive and time-consuming, leading to unemployment and idle capacity.
  • The static model ignores the passage of time and adjustment costs.

🧩 Universal welfare gains (assumption 4)

  • The theory assumes trade raises welfare for everyone in the nation.
  • Problem: Some workers and capital owners lose income as industries contract; gains are not equally shared.
  • The Kaldor-Hicks criterion says a change is an improvement if winners could hypothetically compensate losers (even if compensation does not occur), but this does not mean everyone actually benefits.

🧩 Capital immobility (assumption 5)

  • Ricardo assumed capital cannot leave the nation.
  • Problem: In the modern world, capital is highly mobile; if capital flows out, the PPF shifts inward and the comparative advantage results no longer apply.

🧩 Short-term efficiency vs. long-term growth (assumption 6)

  • The static model says nothing about long-term growth.
  • Problem: A nation may specialize in a commodity that does not promote innovation or productivity growth.
  • Example: Ricardo's Britain specialized in textiles (promoted steam engines, machine tools) while Portugal specialized in wine (traditional methods, no innovation). Portugal is now the poorest nation in Western Europe.
  • Static efficiency may come at the expense of long-term development.

🧩 No adverse foreign productivity growth (assumption 7)

  • The theory assumes foreign productivity growth does not harm the home nation.
  • Problem: Trade may help foreign industries grow and shift their comparative advantage, so they no longer supply the goods they used to.
  • Example: Japan in the 1950s–60s transitioned from cheap manufactures to sophisticated products.
  • This is less serious because nations still gain, just perhaps not as much.

🧩 No economies of scale (assumption 8)

  • The theory assumes constant or increasing costs, not economies of scale.
  • Problem: If large-scale production lowers per-unit costs, the first nation to reach high volume can lock out competitors, even if the competitor would be more efficient at the same scale.
  • This leads to New Trade Theory and the concept of retainable industries.

🏭 New Trade Theory and retainable industries

🏭 Retainable industries and the lockout phenomenon

Retainable industries: Industries a nation captures and retains due to a cost advantage from economies of scale; the nation that reaches large volume first locks out competitors.

Lockout phenomenon: A superior producer fails to enter the market because scale economies serve as a barrier to entry.

  • Example: Japan produces at quantity Q_J with low per-unit cost; China is a superior producer (lower cost at any output level) but produces only Q_C at higher per-unit cost. If China expanded to Q_J, its cost would be lower, but it cannot compete at its current small scale.
  • Fletcher's example: Bangladesh exports many T-shirts but few soccer balls; Pakistan exports many soccer balls but few T-shirts—scale economies allowed each to capture specific industries.

🏭 Positive-sum vs. zero-sum trade

Positive-sum game: All players can gain without anyone losing (traditional comparative advantage view).

Zero-sum game: One player's gain comes at another player's expense.

  • New Trade Theory shows trade is sometimes positive-sum and sometimes zero-sum, depending on how many retainable industries each nation captures.
  • A nation's GDP rises as it captures more retainable industries, but only up to a point; beyond that, GDP falls (overreaching).
  • Three regions:
    • Area 1: Nation A captures more industries, both A and B gain (B was overreaching).
    • Area 2: Mutual conflict—A's gain is B's loss, and vice versa (zero-sum).
    • Area 3: Nation A loses by overreaching; giving up industries benefits both A and B (positive-sum).
  • Don't confuse: Traditional comparative advantage (always positive-sum) with New Trade Theory (sometimes zero-sum in Area 2).

🏭 Policy implications: rational protectionism

  • Fletcher advocates rational protectionism: free trade for Ricardian industries (no scale economies), but protectionism for retainable industries.
  • Tools: subsidies for new industries with large scale economies; infant industry tariffs (taxes on imports to protect fledgling domestic industries).
  • Challenges: knowing which industries to target; many modern corporations are multinational, making it hard to identify the "home nation."

🚧 Neoclassical critique of tariffs and quotas

🚧 Import tariffs

Import tariff: A tax on imported goods (per unit of physical product).

  • Example: World price $1.50/unit; tariff $0.75/unit → new world price $2.25/unit.
  • Effects:
    • Quantity demanded falls (e.g., 100 → 90 units).
    • Domestic production rises (e.g., 20 → 30 units).
    • Imports fall (e.g., 80 → 60 units).
  • Welfare effects:
    • Consumers lose surplus (the area below demand, above the old price, up to the new price).
    • Domestic producers gain surplus (the area above supply, below the new price, down to the old price).
    • Deadweight loss 1: Excess production costs (domestic producers produce inefficiently from unit 20 to 30).
    • Deadweight loss 2: Lost consumption (10 fewer units consumed, so no surplus realized).
    • Tariff revenue: (tariff per unit) × (quantity of imports) = government revenue, not a deadweight loss if used for public services.

🚧 Import quotas

Import quota: A quantitative limit on the amount of a good that may be imported.

  • Example: Quota of 60 units → domestic supply curve shifts right by 60 units → new equilibrium price $2.25, quantity 90 units.
  • Welfare effects: Similar to tariff (excess production costs, lost consumption).
  • Key difference: The rectangle of lost consumers' surplus (windfall profit) goes to:
    • Foreign exporters (if they collude and demand $2.25),
    • Domestic importers (if they collude and pay only $1.50, then sell at $2.25), or
    • The government (if it sells import licenses at the maximum fee).
  • If the government captures the windfall, the quota is identical to a tariff.
  • Don't confuse: Tariff revenue (always goes to government) with quota windfall (depends on market power and licensing).

🌍 Radical theories: dependency and unequal exchange

🌍 Dependency theory (Andre Gunder Frank)

Dependency theory: Rich capitalist nations exploit poor developing nations by appropriating their surplus production, creating chronic underdevelopment and economic dependence.

Metropolis and satellites (or center and periphery): The metropolis (center) acquires raw materials cheaply from satellites (periphery), produces finished goods, and exports them back, continuing surplus appropriation.

  • The world capitalist economy is divided into hierarchical networks: national metropolises → regional centers → local centers → large landowners/merchants → small peasants/tenants → landless laborers.
  • At each level, the higher node appropriates surplus from the lower node (upward flows > downward flows).
  • Monopoly power is essential: monopolistic merchant's capital (merchants buy and export) and modern monopoly capital (large-scale production with advanced technology).
  • The lumpenbourgeoisie (local ruling class in satellites) ensures the system persists by capturing part of the surplus.
  • Critique of the theory: Economic growth in Latin America (late 1960s–early 1970s) and East Asia (1980s–1990s) contradicts Frank's prediction that no real development is possible within capitalism. However, stagnation in the 1980s and recent crises suggest the theory may still capture limits to peripheral development.

🌍 Unequal exchange theory (Arghiri Emmanuel)

Unequal exchange: Competitive interaction in the global marketplace causes a transfer of value from low-wage to high-wage nations when profit rates equalize but wage rates do not.

  • Assumptions:
    • Two nations, same organic composition of capital (C/V ratio).
    • Profit rates equalize (capital is mobile).
    • Wage rates differ significantly (labor is immobile due to immigration restrictions).
    • Rates of surplus value (S/V) differ: higher in the low-wage nation.
  • Key result: The production price ratio (p_A / p_B) exceeds the value ratio (w_A / w_B), meaning the high-wage nation's commodity is priced relatively higher than its labor content justifies.
  • Example from the text:
NationCVSq
U.S. (A)600300200130
Mexico (B)300150300110
  • Organic composition: C/V = 2 (same in both).
  • Rate of surplus value: U.S. 200/300 ≈ 0.67; Mexico 300/150 = 2 (higher in Mexico).
  • Value ratio: (600+300+200)/130 ÷ (300+150+300)/110 ≈ 1.24.
  • Rate of profit: 500 / (900+450) ≈ 0.37.
  • Production price ratio: [600+300+0.37(900)] / 130 ÷ [300+150+0.37(450)] / 110 ≈ 1.69.
  • Since 1.69 > 1.24, the U.S. commodity is overpriced relative to its value; value is transferred from Mexico to the U.S.
  • Implication: Unequal exchange worsens global inequality over time, even without monopoly power or military intervention—it arises from competitive trade.
  • Don't confuse: Marx's claim that surplus value is produced even when commodities exchange at their values (exploitation within production) with Emmanuel's claim that unequal exchange redistributes value between nations (exploitation through trade).

📰 Policy application: India's export strategy

📰 Panagariya's argument (Economic Times)

  • India's share of global merchandise exports is only 1.7%; rapid growth requires greater presence in global markets.
  • Three strategies to eliminate:
    1. Import substitution: Promoting domestic substitutes for imports. Even if successful, capturing too many retainable industries risks moving into the mutual-loss zone (Area 3 or overreaching in Area 2).
    2. Emphasis on small enterprises: Small-scale production cannot achieve economies of scale needed to capture retainable industries.
    3. Overvalued rupee: A weaker rupee makes exports cheaper and more competitive, helping capture retainable industries.
  • Lesson from New Trade Theory: India should capture some retainable industries (expanding exports) but also allow trade partners to capture some (expanding imports), avoiding overreach. Example: Rapid export expansion in the 2000s financed cell phone imports, enabling India's cell phone revolution.

📋 Summary table: Comparing trade theories

TheoryCore claimKey mechanismPolicy implication
Comparative advantageMutual gains from specialization based on relative costLower opportunity cost → specialize → tradeFree trade always benefits all nations
Fletcher's critiqueEight hidden assumptions undermine mutual-gains conclusionExternalities, factor immobility, capital mobility, etc.Free trade is not always optimal
New Trade TheoryEconomies of scale create retainable industries; trade can be zero-sumFirst mover locks out competitors via scale economiesRational protectionism for retainable industries
Dependency theoryRich nations exploit poor nations via monopoly powerMetropolis appropriates surplus from satellitesChallenge the global capitalist order
Unequal exchangeCompetitive trade transfers value from low-wage to high-wage nationsProfit rate equalization + wage differentials → price > valueTrade worsens global inequality even without coercion

🔑 Key distinctions to remember

🔑 Absolute vs. comparative advantage

  • Absolute: Who produces more (or with less labor time).
  • Comparative: Who sacrifices less of the other good (lower opportunity cost).
  • A nation can have an absolute disadvantage in both goods but still have a comparative advantage in one.

🔑 Constant vs. increasing opportunity cost

  • Constant (homogeneous resources): Complete specialization, linear PPF, international terms of trade lie between domestic limits.
  • Increasing (heterogeneous resources): Partial specialization, bowed-out PPF, unique equilibrium terms of trade where marginal costs equalize.

🔑 Positive-sum vs. zero-sum trade

  • Traditional view: Trade is always positive-sum (mutual gains).
  • New Trade Theory: Trade is positive-sum in some regions (Areas 1 and 3) and zero-sum in others (Area 2, where nations compete for retainable industries).

🔑 Tariff vs. quota

  • Tariff: Tax per unit; government collects revenue.
  • Quota: Quantity limit; windfall profit goes to exporters, importers, or government (depending on market power and licensing).
  • Both create deadweight losses (excess production costs + lost consumption).

🔑 Dependency vs. unequal exchange

  • Dependency: Monopoly power and hierarchical networks cause surplus appropriation.
  • Unequal exchange: Competitive trade with profit-rate equalization and wage differentials causes value transfer.
  • Dependency emphasizes power; unequal exchange emphasizes competitive mechanisms.
20

Balance of Payments Accounting and Theories of Currency Markets

Chapter 20. Balance of Payments Accounting and Theories of Currency Markets

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Balance of payments accounting records all international transactions between a nation and the rest of the world, while foreign exchange markets determine currency values through supply and demand forces that reflect trade flows, capital movements, and speculative behavior.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Balance of payments structure: Every international transaction is recorded as either a credit (payment received) or debit (payment made), with the current account tracking goods/services/transfers and the capital/financial account tracking asset purchases/sales.
  • Exchange rate determination: Foreign exchange rates are prices of currencies determined by supply and demand, influenced by consumer preferences, income levels, relative price levels, interest rates, and speculation.
  • Fixed vs floating regimes: Under floating rates, exchange rates adjust automatically to balance payments; under fixed rates, central banks intervene by buying/selling reserves to maintain a target rate.
  • Common confusion: A current account deficit necessarily implies a capital/financial account surplus of equal size (and vice versa), because the balance of payments must always sum to zero through double-entry bookkeeping.
  • Alternative perspectives: Marxist theories emphasize imperialism and surplus capital seeking profitable outlets abroad, while using labor-time ratios (MELTs) to explain long-run exchange rate levels.

💰 Balance of payments framework

💰 What balance of payments accounting measures

Balance of payments accounting: the method of accounting for all international transactions that occur between one nation and the rest of the world.

  • Similar to national income accounting but for international flows.
  • Uses double-entry bookkeeping: every credit has a corresponding debit.
  • Records payments received (credits, positive values) and payments made (debits, negative values).
  • Example: When the U.S. exports computers to France and receives Euros, the export is a credit; depositing those Euros in a French bank (buying a foreign asset) is the offsetting debit.

💰 Credits and debits

Transactions recorded as credits (payments received):

  • Exports of goods and services
  • Interest received from foreign borrowers
  • Compensation received by domestic workers from foreign firms
  • Transfer payments (remittances) received from abroad
  • Sales of domestic assets to foreigners

Transactions recorded as debits (payments made):

  • Imports of goods and services
  • Interest paid to foreign lenders
  • Compensation paid to foreign workers
  • Transfer payments (aid) sent abroad
  • Purchases of foreign assets

💰 The three main subaccounts

SubaccountWhat it recordsExamples
Current accountTransactions not involving income-earning assetsGoods/services trade, interest payments, wages, transfers
Capital accountNon-financial asset transactionsCopyrights, patents, trademarks
Financial accountFinancial asset transactionsStocks, bonds, foreign direct investment, official reserves

💰 Balances and their meaning

  • Current account balance = credits minus debits in current account
    • Surplus: credits > debits (nation receives more than it spends)
    • Deficit: debits > credits (nation spends more than it receives)
  • Trade balance = exports minus imports of goods and services
    • Trade surplus: exports > imports
    • Trade deficit: imports > exports
    • Balanced trade: exports = imports (extremely rare)
  • Capital and financial account balance = credits minus debits in capital and financial accounts

Critical relationship: The excerpt shows mathematically that (CA_c - CA_d) + (KA+FA_c - KA+FA_d) = 0, meaning a current account surplus necessarily implies a capital/financial account deficit of equal size, and vice versa.

Don't confuse: The overall balance of payments is always zero in theory due to double-entry bookkeeping, even though individual subaccounts show surpluses or deficits. Statistical discrepancy accounts for measurement errors.

📊 Net international investment position

📊 Stocks vs flows

  • Balance of payments records flows during a period (e.g., a year).
  • Net International Investment Position records stocks at a point in time.

Net investment position: the difference between a nation's foreign financial assets and its foreign financial liabilities at a point in time.

📊 Net creditor vs net debtor

  • Net creditor: foreign assets exceed foreign liabilities (positive net investment position)
  • Net debtor: foreign liabilities exceed foreign assets (negative net investment position)
  • Example: The U.S. had a negative net investment position exceeding $7 trillion in 2014, meaning it was a net debtor.

📊 Connection to current account

  • A current account surplus → nation lends to rest of world → buys foreign assets → improves net investment position → moves toward net creditor status
  • A current account deficit → nation borrows from rest of world → sells assets to foreigners → worsens net investment position → moves toward net debtor status

📊 Relationship to domestic gaps

The excerpt derives: Trade balance ≈ (S - I) + (T - G)

Where S = saving, I = investment, T = taxes, G = government spending.

  • Current account surplus can result from: private sector net saving (S > I) and/or government budget surplus (T > G)
  • Current account deficit can result from: private sector net borrowing (S < I) and/or government budget deficit (T < G)

💱 Foreign exchange rates basics

💱 What exchange rates represent

  • Foreign exchange rates are prices of one nation's currency in terms of another.
  • Can be expressed two ways (reciprocals of each other):
    • Dollars per foreign currency ($/FX): e.g., $1.4842 per Euro
    • Foreign currency per dollar (FX/$): e.g., 0.6738 Euros per dollar

💱 Appreciation and depreciation

Depreciation: when a currency's value declines relative to another currency. Appreciation: when a currency increases in value relative to another currency.

Example from the excerpt: From January 15 to 16, 2008:

  • Euro price fell from $1.4842 to $1.4643 → Euro depreciated against the dollar
  • Dollar price rose from 0.6738 to 0.6829 Euros → Dollar appreciated against the Euro

Key insight: If one currency depreciates against another, the other must appreciate against it—this is mathematically necessary because the exchange rates are reciprocals.

Don't confuse: The same market can be viewed from two perspectives (Euro market or dollar market), but they are mirror reflections showing the same equilibrium.

📈 Supply and demand model of foreign exchange

📈 Demand for foreign exchange

The demand curve for foreign exchange slopes downward: as the exchange rate ($/FX) falls, quantity demanded rises.

Why the downward slope?

  1. Cheaper imports: Lower exchange rate → foreign goods/services become cheaper → buy more foreign currency to purchase them
  2. Cheaper foreign assets: Lower exchange rate → foreign stocks/bonds become cheaper → buy more foreign currency to invest
  3. Speculation: Lower exchange rate → speculators expect future appreciation → buy more now to profit from capital gain

Example: If the dollar-per-Euro rate falls, European goods become cheaper for Americans, so Americans demand more Euros to buy those goods.

📈 Supply of foreign exchange

The supply curve for foreign exchange slopes upward: as the exchange rate ($/FX) rises, quantity supplied rises.

Why the upward slope?

  1. Cheaper U.S. exports: Higher exchange rate → U.S. goods/services become cheaper to foreigners → foreigners sell more foreign currency to buy dollars
  2. Cheaper U.S. assets: Higher exchange rate → U.S. stocks/bonds become cheaper to foreigners → foreigners sell more foreign currency to invest in U.S.
  3. Speculation: Higher exchange rate → speculators expect future depreciation → sell more now to avoid capital loss

📈 Mirror reflection principle

The two markets (e.g., Euro market and dollar market) are mirror reflections:

  • Buyers of Euros = sellers of dollars
  • Sellers of Euros = buyers of dollars
  • Rightward shift of demand for Euros = rightward shift of supply of dollars
  • This explains why appreciation of one currency means depreciation of the other

📈 Equilibrium determination

  • Equilibrium exchange rate: where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied
  • Surplus (exchange rate too high) → competition drives rate down
  • Shortage (exchange rate too low) → competition drives rate up
  • Equilibrium quantity exchanged: the amount of foreign currency traded at equilibrium

🔄 Shifts in supply and demand

🔄 Five factors that shift demand for foreign exchange

FactorChangeEffect on demandExample
Consumer preferencesStronger preference for foreign goodsIncrease (shift right)Americans develop taste for European cars
Consumer incomesHome nation income risesIncrease (shift right)U.S. economic expansion → more imports
Relative price levelsHome price level rises or foreign fallsIncrease (shift right)U.S. inflation → foreign goods relatively cheaper
Relative interest ratesForeign rates rise or home rates fallIncrease (shift right)Higher European interest rates → better investments
SpeculationExpect foreign currency to appreciateIncrease (shift right)Speculators anticipate Euro will rise

🔄 Five factors that shift supply of foreign exchange

The same five factors affect supply, but from the foreign perspective:

  • Foreign consumer preferences for U.S. goods
  • Foreign consumer incomes
  • Relative price levels (same effect)
  • Relative interest rates (same effect)
  • Foreign speculation about the currency

🔄 Movement vs shift distinction

Critical distinction:

  • Movement along the curve (change in quantity demanded/supplied): caused only by a change in the exchange rate itself
  • Shift of the curve (change in demand/supply): caused by changes in any other factors (preferences, income, prices, interest rates, expectations)

Don't confuse: Speculation can cause both movements (responding to current rate changes) and shifts (responding to changed expectations about future rates).

🔄 Comparative statics examples

Example 1: Americans discover a popular new European automobile

  • Demand for Euros shifts right → shortage of Euros → exchange rate rises → Euro appreciates, dollar depreciates
  • New equilibrium: higher exchange rate (e₂) and higher quantity exchanged (Q₂)

Example 2: Japanese interest rates fall relative to U.S. rates

  • Demand for Yen shifts left → surplus of Yen → exchange rate falls → Yen depreciates, dollar appreciates
  • New equilibrium: lower exchange rate (e₂) and lower quantity exchanged (Q₂)

Example 3: Speculators expect Mexican peso to depreciate

  • Supply of pesos shifts right → surplus of pesos → exchange rate falls → peso depreciates
  • This is a self-fulfilling prophecy: the belief causes the depreciation

Example 4: U.S. price level rises relative to Britain

  • Supply of pounds shifts left → shortage of pounds → exchange rate rises → pound appreciates, dollar depreciates
  • New equilibrium: higher exchange rate (e₂) and lower quantity exchanged (Q₂)

⚖️ Exchange rate regimes

⚖️ Floating exchange rate regime

Floating exchange rate regime: exchange rates move freely to their equilibrium levels determined by market forces.

  • Competition quickly adjusts rates when supply or demand shifts.
  • No central bank intervention required.
  • Automatically eliminates balance of payments surpluses or deficits.
  • Example: If demand for Euros rises, the Euro appreciates until quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.

⚖️ Fixed exchange rate regime

Fixed exchange rate regime: governments and central banks commit to a specific exchange rate value and intervene to maintain it.

How it works:

  • Central bank buys or sells foreign currency to keep rate at target level.
  • Affects the central bank's official reserve holdings.

Case 1: Potential balance of payments deficit (shortage of foreign currency)

  • Upward pressure on foreign currency → central bank sells foreign reserves → supply shifts right → maintains fixed rate
  • Official reserves decrease
  • Credits increase to match debits

Case 2: Potential balance of payments surplus (surplus of foreign currency)

  • Downward pressure on foreign currency → central bank buys foreign currency → supply shifts left → maintains fixed rate
  • Official reserves increase
  • Credits decrease to match debits

⚖️ Related concepts

  • Devaluation: government/central bank reduces the fixed exchange rate value
  • Revaluation: government/central bank increases the fixed exchange rate value
  • Managed floating exchange rates: system allowing rates to find equilibrium but with occasional central bank intervention to stabilize currencies (became the norm since early 1970s)

⚖️ Currency crises

Currency crisis: investors rapidly sell a currency, causing its foreign exchange value to plummet.

How crises unfold:

  • Chronic balance of payments deficits → rapid depletion of foreign exchange reserves
  • Central bank loses control → exchange rate continues falling
  • Example: Thai baht collapsed 25% overnight on July 2, 1997, triggering the East Asian financial crisis

Mechanism in Thailand crisis:

  • Demand for U.S. dollars rose → shortage of dollars → balance of payments deficit
  • Thai central bank sold dollar reserves to prevent baht depreciation
  • Repeated increases in dollar demand → reserves exhausted → forced to abandon dollar peg → baht collapsed

🌍 Purchasing power parity theory

🌍 The basic principle

Theory of purchasing power parity: a single price for a commodity or asset will emerge in a global market economy even though many different currencies exist.

  • Based on arbitrage: buying low in one location and selling high in another.
  • Works through two mechanisms: commodity price adjustments and exchange rate adjustments.

🌍 Domestic arbitrage example

  • Commodity priced at $4 in market A, $6 in market B
  • Arbitrageurs buy in A, sell in B
  • Demand rises in A (price → $5), supply rises in B (price → $5)
  • Prices equalize at $5

🌍 International arbitrage with exchange rate adjustment

Initial situation:

  • U.S. price: $4
  • U.K. price: £3
  • Exchange rate: $2/£ (or £0.50/$)
  • U.K. price in dollars: £3 × $2/£ = $6

Arbitrage process:

  1. Buy commodity in U.S. for $4 (must first buy dollars in FX market)
  2. Transport to U.K. (assuming zero cost)
  3. Sell in U.K. for high price in pounds
  4. Sell pounds for dollars in FX market
  5. Repeat

Result (exchange rate adjustment):

  • Buying dollars and selling pounds → dollar appreciates, pound depreciates
  • New exchange rate: $1.3333/£ (or £0.75/$)
  • U.K. price in dollars: £3 × $1.3333/£ = $4
  • Prices now equal entirely due to exchange rate change

🌍 Limitations

  • Works well for easily tradeable commodities
  • Less applicable to non-tradeable services (e.g., haircuts)
  • Transportation costs can prevent arbitrage
  • Provides useful starting point but has practical limits

🏴 Marxist theories of imperialism and finance

🏴 Hobson's theory of imperialism

The excerpt summarizes J.A. Hobson's early 20th-century theory explaining late 19th-century colonization.

Rejected explanations:

  • NOT about spreading Christianity (a distortion hiding true motives)
  • NOT inherent human militaristic tendencies (must explain historical timing)
  • NOT irrational politicians (benefits certain classes even if appears irrational for the nation)

Hobson's explanation:

Imperialism: driven by massive capital accumulation concentrated in banks and financial houses, with no profitable domestic outlets for surplus capital despite enormous luxury spending by capitalists.

🏴 The imperialist mechanism

The cycle:

  1. Surplus capital problem: Great disparity between workers and capitalists → insufficient domestic demand
  2. Financial investment: Financial capitalists buy government bonds (finance military production) and shares in international cartels/monopolies
  3. Colonial production: Corporations invest in production in colonial possessions
  4. Infrastructure development: Build roads, bridges, railroads in colonies (using capital goods from imperialist nation)
  5. Transformation: Pre-capitalist societies become capitalist societies
  6. Resource extraction: Access to cheap raw materials and cheap colonial wage labor
  7. Market expansion: Large colonial wage labor force creates demand for imperialist consumer goods
  8. Profit boost: Alleviates insufficient aggregate demand at home, increases profits

Enabling factors:

  • Promote patriotism and nationalism in home population
  • Pro-war messages in newspapers (capitalist-supported)
  • Willing military recruits to seize and hold colonies

Consequence without imperialism: More severe business cycles and depressions at home due to lack of profitable outlets for surplus capital.

Modern application: Theory can be modified for neo-colonial period where imperialist nations use military aggression to support puppet regimes that grant production contracts and access to cheap resources/labor.

🏴 Marxian exchange rate determination

Using the Monetary Expression of Labor Time (MELT):

Monetary Expression of Labor Time (MELT): calculated by dividing the product of money supply and velocity (MV) by aggregate labor time embodied in circulating commodities (L); units are currency per hour of socially necessary abstract labor time.

Formula for exchange rate: If U.S. MELT = $16/hour and U.K. MELT = £8/hour, then:

  • Dollar-pound exchange rate (e) = $16/hour ÷ £8/hour = $2/£

Key points:

  • This determines the expected long-run exchange rate
  • Supply and demand cause short-run deviations (just as in commodity markets)
  • Over time, market exchange rates gravitate toward MELT-determined values
  • Complements (not replaces) the theory of imperialist finance
  • Focus remains on class conflict and social relationships in imperialist networks

Don't confuse: The MELT-based exchange rate theory explains average levels over time, while supply/demand explains short-run fluctuations around that average.

📰 Applying the model to real events

📰 Japanese yen case study

The excerpt analyzes a news article about yen-dollar exchange rate movements:

2012–2018 depreciation:

  • Bank of Japan implemented quantitative easing (2012) → increased money supply, reduced interest rates
  • Lower Japanese interest rates → yen-denominated assets less attractive to investors
  • Foreign investors reduced demand for yen; Japanese investors increased supply of yen
  • Result: yen depreciated from 79 yen/$ to 110 yen/$ (dollar appreciated)

Predicted appreciation factors:

  1. Tourism promotion: Japanese government increasing tourism → higher demand for yen → appreciation
  2. Olympic Games: Tokyo Olympics (July 2020) → higher demand for yen → appreciation
  3. Speculation: Foreigners in Japan anticipate appreciation → retain savings longer before converting to dollars → reduced supply of yen → appreciation (self-fulfilling prophecy)

Caveat: Bank of Japan might change interest rates in response, potentially reversing some effects.

Lesson: Exchange rate prediction is challenging because many variables can change simultaneously, making outcomes uncertain.

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