Introduction to microeconomics:
Gespeichert in:
Vorheriger Titel: | Laidler, David E. W. Introduction to microeconomics |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York u. a.
Harvester Wheatsheaf
1995
|
Ausgabe: | 4. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Bis 3. Aufl. u.d.T.: Laidler, David E.: Introduction to microeconomics. - 5. Aufl. u.d.T.: Estrin, Saul: Microeconomics |
Beschreibung: | XXVI, 505 S. zahlr. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0745014666 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | ¦
Brief Contents
1 Introduction 1
PART I Elements of the Theory of Consumer Behaviour 5
2 The Basic Theory of Consumer Choice 7
3 Further Analysis and Applications of the Theory of Consumer Choice 27
4 Consumer s Surplus and Marshallian Consumer Theory 47
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 2 4 63
PART II Consumer Theory: Further Topics 69
5 The Individual s Supply of Labour 71
6 The Allocation of Consumption over Time 84
7 Intertemporal Choice with Production Opportunities and the Role
of the Capital Market 92
8 Choice in the Face of Risk 103
9 Goods and their Attributes 114
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 5 9 123
PART III Production and Costs 127
10 Production and the Firm 129
11 Properties of the Production Function 133
12 Cost Functions 154
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 10 12 170
VII
viii Contents
PART IV Competition and Monopoly 173
13 Perfect Competition 175
14 More on the Theory of Supply in Perfect Competition 188
15 Monopoly 201
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 13 15 214
PART V Industrial Organisation: Further Topics 219
16 Price Discrimination and Product Differentiation 221
17 Oligopoly — An Introduction 23°
18 Oligopoly — Further Analysis 247
19 Game Theory 267
20 Alternative Objectives for the Firm 282
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 16 20 303
PART VI Factor Markets 307
21 The Demand for Factors of Production in Competition 309
22 The Demand for Factors of Production: Monopoly and Monopsony 325
23 Some Aspects of the Theory of Factor Supply 33
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 21 23 341
PART VII Further Topics in the Analysis of Factor and
Product Markets 343
24 Production Functions, Cost Functions, and the Demand for Factors of
Production 3
25 The Economic Analysis of Trade Unions and Bargaining 365
26 Economics of Information 3°°
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 24 26 4 2
PART VIII General Equilibrium and Welfare 405
27 An Overview 407
28 General Equilibrium in an Exchange Economy 41(^
29 General Equilibrium with Production 423
30 The Pareto Criterion and Competitive Equilibrium 437
31 Taxes, Externalities and Public Goods 447
32 The Pareto Criterion and Distributional Questions 456
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 27 32 465
Contents i
PART IX Some Aspects of Public Choice Analysis 469
33 Public Choice — A Brief Overview 471
34 Voting and the Median Voter 474
35 Interest Groups and Rent Seeking 487
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 33—35 495
Index 497
¦
Full Contents
Preface to the Fourth Edition xxv
1 Introduction 1
Key words and phrases 1
Scarcity and economics 1
An outline of the book 3
Summary 4
PART I Elements of the Theory of Consumer Behaviour 5
2 The Basic Theory of Consumer Choice 7
Key words and phrases 7
Introduction 7
The subject matter of this chapter 8
The objects of choice 8
The budget constraint 9
The consumer s tastes 10
More on tastes — ordinal and cardinal utility 12
The solution to the choice problem 13
* An algebraic solution to the choice problem 15
The income consumption curve 17
Price consumption curves 19
The Engel curve 20
The demand curve 21
* An asterisk signifies those sections that make use of calculus and game theory, with a greater degree
of difficulty signified by two asterisks.
xii Contents
* A formal derivation of demand functions 23
Concluding comment 25
Summary 25
3 Further Analysis and Applications of the Theory of
Consumer Choice 27
Key words and phrases 27
Introduction 27
The effect of a change in income 27
The effect of a change in the price of the other good 28
The income effect and substitution effect 28
Money income and real income 31
Constant real income and the compensating variation in money
income 32
Two measures of real income 33
Constant real income and the equivalent variation in money
income 36
Income and substitution effects without indifference curves —
the idea of revealed preference 38
* The Slutsky equation 40
The standard of living and the cost of living 41
Measuring changes in the cost of living 43
Concluding comment 46
Summary 46
4 Consumer s Surplus and Marshallian Consumer Theory 47
Key words and phrases 47
Introduction 47
The concept of consumer s surplus 47
An application of consumer s surplus 49
Marshallian consumer theory 50
Marshallian analysis in terms of indifference curves 53
The impossibility of comparing utility between persons 55
* The algebra of Marshallian analysis 56
** A more general treatment of equivalent variation,
compensating variation and consumer s surplus — the idea
of duality 57
Concluding comment 61
Summary 62
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 2 4 63
Contents xiii
PART II Consumer Theory: Further Topics 69
5 The Individual s Supply of Labour 71
Key words and phrases 71
Introduction 71
The nature of the choice problem 71
Variations in the wage rate 73
Overtime payments 76
The effect of fixing the length of the working week 77
Household production: the simple case 78
Household production and the labour market 79
Household production and the labour supply function 81
Concluding comment 82
Summary 83
6 The Allocation of Consumption over Time 84
Key words and phrases 84
Introduction 84
The framework of choice without production 84
Time preference and the solution to the choice problem 86
Saving and the level of the rate of interest 87
Saving and changes in the rate of interest 88
Concluding comment 90
Summary 91
7 Intertemporal Choice with Production Opportunities and the Role
of the Capital Market 92
Key words and phrases 92
Introduction 92
The production opportunity curve and the internal rate of return 93
Access to a perfect capital market 94
The separation of investment and consumption decisions 96
Rules for selecting the optimal investment —production plan 97
Interdependent production opportunities 98
Capital market imperfection 99
Concluding comment 10]
Summary 101
8 Choice in the Face of Risk 103
Key words and phrases 103
Introduction 103
The idea of expected utility 103
xiv Contents
Probability and cardinal utility 104
Diminishing marginal utility and expected utility 106
Insurance and gambling 107
Insurance and gambling: further analysis 108
A note on moral hazard and adverse selection 112
Concluding comment 112
Summary 113
9 Goods and their Attributes 114
Key words and phrases 114
Introduction 114
Goods, attributes and choice 114
The basic framework 115
A simple application — brand loyalty 116
An elaboration — combining brands 117
Product differentiation and market research 119
Advertising 120
Concluding comment 121
Summary 121
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 5—9 123
PART III Production and Costs 127
10 Production and the Firm 129
Key words and phrases 129
Introduction 129
Production 129
The firm and the entrepreneur 130
Concluding comment 132
Summary 132
I I Properties of the Production Function 133
Key words and phrases 133
Introduction 133
Activities and the isoquant I34
The production function I35
Long run and short run analysis I37
The long run production function: some preliminaries 138
Returns to scale 13§
Factors leading to variable returns to scale 140
Contents xv
Substitutability 141
The elasticity of substitution 143
The short run production function and returns to a factor 144
More on diminishing returns 146
* A specific production function: the Cobb—Douglas case 148
Concluding comment 151
Summary 152
12 Cost Functions 154
Key words and phrases 154
Introduction 154
Expenditure on inputs and the cost function 155
Long run cost minimisation 155
Long run total cost and the expansion path 157
* The Cobb—Douglas case again 158
Average and marginal costs in the long run 159
Long run costs with varying returns to scale 159
The concept of the short run 161
Short run cost functions 162
Short and long run average cost — the envelope 164
Fixed and variable costs 1 65
* From production to cost functions in the short run —
a formal treatment 167
Concluding comment 168
Summary 169
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 10 — 12 170
PART IV Competition and Monopoly 173
13 Perfect Competition 175
Key words and phrases I7S
Introduction 175
The profit maximisation hypothesis 176
The perfectly competitive firm s demand function 176
Total, average and marginal revenue 177
The firm s short run supply curve 178
! A formal treatment 180
Price determination in the short run 181
The firm and the industry in the long run 18.3
Concluding comment •— the properties of the competitive industry 185
Summary 186
xvi Contents
14 More on the Theory of Supply in Perfect Competition 188
Key words and phrases 188
Introduction 188
Alternative assumptions about returns to scale 188
Returns to scale and profitability in the Cobb—Douglas case 190
The U shaped average cost curve and managerial inputs 193
Inter firm differences in efficiency 194
Variations in factor prices in the short run 196
Factor price variations in the long run 198
Perfect competition and the supply curve 199
Summary 199
15 Monopoly 201
Key words and phrases 201
Introduction 201
The demand curve, total revenue and marginal revenue 201
Profit maximising price and output 203
Producer s surplus and the cost of monopoly 206
Natural monopoly 207
! A formal treatment of the relationship between demand and
marginal revenue: some examples 210
* A formal treatment of monopoly equilibrium 211
Concluding comment 212
Summary 213
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 13 15 214
PART V Industrial Organisation: Further Topics 219
16 Price Discrimination and Product Differentiation 221
Key words and phrases 221
Introduction 221
Price discrimination 222
Demand elasticity and price discrimination 223
Perfect price discrimination 225
Multipart tariffs 226
Classifying types of price discrimination 228
* Price discrimination of the third degree and demand
elasticity: A formal treatment 229
Product differentiation and monopolistic competition
— an introduction 230
Differentiated products 230
Contents xvii
The firm in monopolistic competition 231
Monopolistic competition and efficiency 233
* A more formal analysis 233
Mark up pricing 235
Criticisms of monopolistic competition 236
Concluding comment 237
Summary 238
17 Oligopoly — An Introduction 239
Key words and phrases 239
Introduction 239
Collusive and non collusive behaviour 239
The oligopoly problem 240
An illustration of the oligopoly problem: the kinked
demand curve 241
Collusive behaviour — cartels 243
Cheating and retaliation 245
Concluding comment 246
Summary 246
18 Oligopoly — Further Analysis 247
Key words and phrases 247
Introduction 247
The Cournot model 248
Isoprofit curves and reaction functions 248
* A more formal treatment of the Cournot model 251
More on the non collusive approach 254
The Bertrand model 254
Price leadership 256
Stackelberg equilibrium 258
* A formal treatment of the Stackelberg model 260
Collusive and non collusive behaviour compared — the
contract curve 261
* Conjectural variations 263
Concluding comment 265
Summary 266
19 Game Theory 267
Key words and phrases 267
Introduction 267
Dominant strategies 268
Nash equilibrium 269
The prisoner s dilemma 271
xvni Contents
Repeated games 272
Credibility and punishment in cartels 273
Tit for tat 275
Sequential games 276
Entry deterrence and predatory pricing 276
Credibility and commitment 279
Concluding comment 280
Summary 281
20 Alternative Objectives for the Firm 282
Key words and phrases 282
Introduction 282
Revenue maximisation in a competitive market 283
The revenue maximising hypothesis under monopoly 284
The effects of lump sum taxes 285
* A formal treatment of revenue maximisation 286
The competitive labour managed firm — an introduction 287
Maximising income per worker 288
Enterprise choices in the short run 289
* A more formal treatment 291
A comparison of income per worker maximising and
profit maximising firms 292
The short run supply curve 294
* A more formal treatment of the short run supply curve under
labour management 296
The labour managed firm in the long run 297
Labour managed and profit maximising firms with free entry 299
Concluding comment 301
Summary 301
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 16—20 303
PART VI Factor Markets 307
21 The Demand for Factors of Production in Competition 309
Key words and phrases 309
Introduction 309
Physical products and revenue products 309
Factor demand in the short run 312
The firm s factor demand in the long run 313
Industry demand for labour 315
Influences on the elasticity of factor demand 316
Contents xix
Factor payments, the value of output and the Euler theorem 317
* The firm s factor demand in the long run — a formal
analysis 319
Concluding comment 324
Summary 324
22 The Demand for Factors of Production: Monopoly and Monopsony 325
Key words and phrases 325
Factor demand under monopoly 325
The monopolist s factor demand curves 325
* A formal treatment 327
Monopsony 328
Discriminating monopsony 330
Concluding comment 332
Summary 332
23 Some Aspects of the Theory of Factor Supply 334
Key words and phrases 334
Introduction 334
Flows, stocks and their relationship 334
Supply to the firm and the industry 335
Transfer price and rent 336
Quasi rent 338
Factor prices and the distribution of income 339
Summary 339
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 21—23 341
PART VII Further Topics in the Analysis of Factor and
Product Markets 343
24 Production Functions, Cost Functions, and the Demand
for Factors of Production 345
Key words and phrases 345
Introduction 345
* From production to cost functions in the long run 347
* Fixed proportions technology 350
* Perfect substitutability 352
* Cobb—Douglas technology 353
The idea of conditional factor demand functions 356
Costs when input prices change 356
Contents
The cost function and conditional factor demand functions 358
Some properties of conditional factor demand functions 358
* The effect of changes in input prices on average and marginal
costs 361
Concluding comment 363
Summary 363
25 The Economic Analysis of Trade Unions and Bargaining 365
Key words and phrases 365
Introduction 365
An overview of union behaviour 366
Basic analysis of the monopoly union model 367
Wages bill maximisation 368
Rent maximisation 370
* Maximising expected utility of the representative worker 370
The monopoly union model — a final comment 374
Bargaining between unions and firms 376
Efficient bargaining 376
* A further extension of game theory: bargaining 380
* Different union objectives and efficient bargaining 382
Concluding comment 384
Summary 384
26 Economics of Information 386
Key words and phrases 386
Introduction 386
The idea of asymmetric information 387
The market for lemons 388
Adverse selection, quality choice and informed consumers 392
Adverse selection and moral hazard 394
Solutions to adverse selection: signals 395
Signalling in the labour market 397
Concluding comment 400
Summary 400
End of part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 24—26 402
PART VIII General Equilibrium and Welfare 405
27 An Overview 407
Key words and phrases 407
Scarcity and the co ordination of choices 407
Contents xxi
Partial and general equilibrium 407
General equilibrium analysis — an outline of subsequent
chapters 408
Summary 409
28 General Equilibrium in an Exchange Economy 410
Key words and phrases 410
Introduction 410
A simple exchange economy — the box diagram 411
The contract curve, trade and the core 412
Competitive prices and the auctioneer 413
Properties of competitive equilibrium 415
Blocking coalitions and the core 416
* Competitive equilibrium — a more formal treatment 417
The existence, uniqueness and stability of equilibrium 419
Market mechanisms and planning 420
Concluding comment 421
Summary 421
29 General Equilibrium with Production 423
Key words and phrases 423
Introduction 423
The production sector 423
Production possibilities and the transformation curve 425
Simultaneous equilibrium in consumption and production 428
* The representative agent (or Robinson Crusoe) economy 429
Concluding comment 435
Summary 436
30 The Pareto Criterion and Competitive Equilibrium 437
Key words and phrases 437
Introduction 437
The Pareto criterion and Pareto optimality 438
The Pareto criterion and competitive equilibrium in an
exchange economy 439
Pareto optimality in production 440
The Pareto optimality of competitive equilibrium
in a production economy 441
Competitive equilibrium and Pareto optimality 443
The two fundamental theorems of welfare economics 444
Concluding comment 445
Summary 445
7/ Contents
3 I Taxes, Externalities and Public Goods 447
Key words and phrases 447
Introduction 447
Taxation and Pareto optimality 448
The second best principle 449
Externalities and absence of markets 449
Property rights and the Coase theorem 450
Public goods 451
The free rider problem 452
Public goods and government intervention 453
Concluding comment 454
Summary 455
32 The Pareto Criterion and Distributional Questions 456
Key words and phrases 456
Introduction 456
Some illustrations 456
Compensation criteria 458
The compensation criteria in an ambiguous case 460
The utility frontier 461
The distribution of welfare 462
Concluding comment 463
Summary 464
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 27 32 465
PART IX Some Aspects of Public Choice Analysis 469
33 Public Choice — A Brief Overview 471
Key words and phrases 471
Introduction 471
The traditional view of economic policy 471
Concluding comment — policy makers as
self interested maximisers 472
Summary 473
34 Voting and the Median Voter 474
Key words and phrases 474
Introduction 474
Why vote at all? 474
The voting paradox 475
Contents xxiii
The median voter 476
The median voter and income redistribution 478
The influence of the tax rate on mean income and tax revenue 481
The median voter s problem 482
Redistribution through the provision of public goods 482
Variations in productivity and the extent of redistribution 483
Concluding comment — the significance and limitation of the
median voter theorem 484
Summary 485
35 Interest Groups and Rent Seeking 487
Key words and phrases 487
Introduction 487
Costly information 487
Interest group politics 488
Rent seeking 489
Minimum prices and output quotas 489
Competitive rent seeking 491
The economic significance of rent seeking 492
Concluding comment — the place of public choice in
economic analysis 493
Summary 494
End of Part Exercises and Further Reading for Chapters 33 — 35 495
Index 497
j
j
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Estrin, Saul 1952- Laidler, David E. W. 1938- |
author_GND | (DE-588)129230812 (DE-588)121225976 |
author_facet | Estrin, Saul 1952- Laidler, David E. W. 1938- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Estrin, Saul 1952- |
author_variant | s e se d e w l dew dewl |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV010182605 |
classification_rvk | QC 100 |
classification_tum | WIR 020f |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)832189908 (DE-599)BVBBV010182605 |
dewey-full | 338.5 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 338 - Production |
dewey-raw | 338.5 |
dewey-search | 338.5 |
dewey-sort | 3338.5 |
dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 4. ed. |
format | Book |
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illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T17:47:57Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0745014666 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-006764434 |
oclc_num | 832189908 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91 DE-BY-TUM DE-634 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-91 DE-BY-TUM DE-634 DE-188 |
physical | XXVI, 505 S. zahlr. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 1995 |
publishDateSearch | 1995 |
publishDateSort | 1995 |
publisher | Harvester Wheatsheaf |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Estrin, Saul 1952- Verfasser (DE-588)129230812 aut Introduction to microeconomics Saul Estrin ; David Laidler 4. ed. New York u. a. Harvester Wheatsheaf 1995 XXVI, 505 S. zahlr. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Bis 3. Aufl. u.d.T.: Laidler, David E.: Introduction to microeconomics. - 5. Aufl. u.d.T.: Estrin, Saul: Microeconomics Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd rswk-swf 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content 2\p (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 s DE-604 Laidler, David E. W. 1938- Verfasser (DE-588)121225976 aut Früher u.d.T. Laidler, David E. W. Introduction to microeconomics HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=006764434&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk 2\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Estrin, Saul 1952- Laidler, David E. W. 1938- Introduction to microeconomics Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4039225-9 (DE-588)4151278-9 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Introduction to microeconomics |
title_auth | Introduction to microeconomics |
title_exact_search | Introduction to microeconomics |
title_full | Introduction to microeconomics Saul Estrin ; David Laidler |
title_fullStr | Introduction to microeconomics Saul Estrin ; David Laidler |
title_full_unstemmed | Introduction to microeconomics Saul Estrin ; David Laidler |
title_old | Laidler, David E. W. Introduction to microeconomics |
title_short | Introduction to microeconomics |
title_sort | introduction to microeconomics |
topic | Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Mikroökonomie Einführung Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=006764434&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT estrinsaul introductiontomicroeconomics AT laidlerdavidew introductiontomicroeconomics |