Microeconomics:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
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Wiley
2008
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Ausgabe: | 3. ed., internat. student version |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XX, 724, 8, 14 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780470234600 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | RIEF CONTENTS PARTI INTRODUCTION TO MICROECONOMICS PART 2 CONSUMER
THEORY PART 3 PRODUCTION AND COST THEORY PART 4 PERFECT COMPETITION PART
5 MARKET POWER PART 6 IMPERFECT COMPETITION AND STRATEGIC BEHAVIOR PART
7 SPECIAL TOPICS CHAPTER 2 ANALYZING ECONOMIC PROBLEMS 1 CHAPTER 2
DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS 22 APPENDIX PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND ALONG
A CONSTANT ELASTICITY DEMAND CURVE 68 CHAPTER 3 CONSUMER PREFERENCES AND
THE CONCEPT OF UTILITY 69 CHAPTER 4 CONSUMER CHOICE 98 APPENDIX THE
MATHEMATICS OF CONSUMER CHOICE 135 CHAPTER 5 THE THEORY OF DEMAND 136
CHAPTER 6 INPUTS AND PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS 185 APPENDIX THE ELASTICITY OF
SUBSTITUTION FOR A COBB-DOUGLAS PRODUCTION FUNCTION 223 CHAPTER 7 COSTS
AND COST MINIMIZATION 225 APPENDIX ADVANCED TOPICS IN COST MINIMIZATION
260 CHAPTER 8 COST CURVES 263 APPENDIX SHEPHARD S LEMMA AND DUALITY 301
CHAPTER 9 PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE MARKETS 304 APPENDIX PROFIT MAXIMIZATION
IMPLIES COST MINIMIZATION 358 CHAPTER 10 COMPETITIVE MARKETS:
APPLICATIONS 360 CHAPTER 22 MONOPOLY AND MONOPSONY 412 CHAPTER 1 2
CAPTURING SURPLUS 455 CHAPTER 13 MARKET STRUCTURE AND COMPETITION 495
APPENDIX THE COURNOT EQUILIBRIUM AND THE INVERSE ELASTICITY PRICING RULE
535 CHAPTER 24 GAME THEORY AND STRATEGIC BEHAVIOR 536 CHAPTER 25 RISK
AND INFORMATION 568 CHAPTER 26 GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM THEORY 607 APPENDIX
DERIVING THE DEMAND AND SUPPLY CURVES FOR GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM 649
CHAPTER 2 7 EXTERNALITIES AND PUBLIC GOODS 655 MATHEMATICAL APPENDIX 686
SOLUTIONS TO SELECTED PROBLEMS 705 GLOSSARY G-L INDEX L-L XTU ONTENTS
PART 7 INTRODUCTION TO MICROECONOMICS CHAPTER I ANALYZING ECONOMIC
PROBLEMS L MICVOECONCNNLCB AND/ GLOBED WARMING 1.1 WHY STUDY
MICROECONOMICS? 3 1.2 THREE KEY ANALYTICAL TOOLS 4 CONSTRAINED
OPTIMIZATION 5 EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS 11 COMPARATIVE STATICS 12 1.3
POSITIVE AND NORMATIVE ANALYSIS 16 LEARNING-BY-OO1NG EXERCISES 1.1
CONSTRAINED OPTIMIZATION: THE FARMER S FENCE 6 1.2 CONSTRAINED
OPTIMIZATION: CONSUMER CHOICE 7 1.3 COMPARATIVE STATICS WITH MARKET
EQUILIBRIUM IN THE U.S. MARKET FOR CORN 14 1.4 COMPARATIVE STATICS WITH
CONSTRAINED OPTIMIZATION CHAPTER 2 DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS 22 WHAT:
QIXEFR WOTH TH& PRICE* OF CORN? 2.1 DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKET
EQUILIBRIUM 25 DEMAND CURVES 26 SUPPLY CURVES 28 R MARKET EQUILIBRIUM 29
SHIFTS IN SUPPLY AND DEMAND 31 2.2 PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 38
ELASTICITIES ALONG SPECIFIC DEMAND CURVES 41 16 PRICE ELASTICITY OF
DEMAND AND TOTAL REVENUE 43 DETERMINANTS OF THE PRICE ELASTICITY OF
DEMAND 43 MARKET-LEVEL VERSUS BRAND-LEVEL PRICE ELASTICITIES OF DEMAND
45 2.3 OTHER ELASTICITIES 46 INCOME ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 46 CROSS-PRICE
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 47 PRICE ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY 49 2.4 ELASTICITY IN
THE LONG RUN VERSUS THE SHORT RUN 50 GREATER ELASTICITY IN THE LONG RUN
THAN IN THE SHORT RUN 50 GREATER ELASTICITY IN THE, SHORT RUN THAN IN
THE LONG RUN 50 2.5 BACK-OF-THE-ENVELOPE CALCULATIONS 55 FITTING LINEAR
DEMAND CURVES USING QUANTITY, PRICE, AND ELASTICITY INFORMATION 55
IDENTIFYING SUPPLY AND DEMAND CURVES ON THE BACK OF AN ENVELOPE 56
IDENTIFYING THE PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND FROM SHIFTS IN SUPPLY 59
APPENDIX PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND ALONG A CONSTANT ELASTICITY DEMAND
CURVE 68 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 2.1 SKETCHING A DEMAND CURVE 27 2.2
SKETCHING A SUPPLY CURVE 28 2.3 CALCULATING EQUILIBRIUM PRICE AND
QUANTITY 30 2.4 COMPARATIVE STATICS ON THE MARKET EQUILIBRIUM 33 2.5
PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 40 2.6 ELASTICITIES ALONG SPECIAL DEMAND
CURVES 43 PART 9 CONSUMER THEORY CHAPTER 3 CONSUMER PREFERENCES AND THE
CONCEPT OF UTILITY 69 WHY VO-YOW LCKESWHATYOU/LCKE 3.1 REPRESENTATIONS
OF PREFERENCES 71 ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT CONSUMER PREFERENCES 71 ORDINAL AND
CARDINAL RANKING 72 3.2 UTILITY FUNCTIONS 73 PREFERENCES WITH A SINGLE
GOOD: THE CONCEPT OF MARGINAL UTILITY 73 PREFERENCES WITH MULTIPLE
GOODS: MARGINAL UTILITY, INDIFFERENCE CURVES, AND THE MARGINAL RATE OF
SUBSTITUTION 77 SPECIAL UTILITY FUNCTIONS 87 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES
3.1 MARGINAL UTILITY 78 3.2 MARGINAL UTILITY THAT IS NOT DIMINISHING 79
3.3 INDIFFERENCE CURVES WITH DIMINISHING MRS XIY 86 3.4 INDIFFERENCE
CURVES WITH INCREASING MRS X Y 87 XIV CONTENTS XV CHAPTER 4 CONSUMER
CHOICE 98 HOW MUCH/OF MJHATYOW LIKE/ SHOULD/ YCRWBUY? 4.1 THE BUDGET
CONSTRAINT 100 HOW DOES A CHANGE IN INCOME AFFECT THE BUDGET LINE? 102
HOW DOES A CHANGE IN PRICE AFFECT THE BUDGET LINE? 102 4.2 OPTIMAL
CHOICE 105 USING THE TANGENCY CONDITION TO UNDERSTAND WHEN A BASKET IS
NOT OPTIMAL 107 FINDING AN OPTIMAL CONSUMPTION BASKET 108 TWO WAYS OF
THINKING ABOUT OPTIMALITY 109 CORNER POINTS 111 4.3 CONSUMER CHOICE WITH
COMPOSITE GOODS 114 APPLICATION: COUPONS AND CASH SUBSIDIES 114
APPUCATFON:JOINING A CLUB 118 APPLICATION: BORROWING AND LENDING 120
APPLICATION: QUANTITY DISCOUNTS 123 4.4 REVEALED PREFERENCE 125 ARE
OBSERVED CHOICES CONSISTENT WITH UTILITY MAXIMIZATION? 126 APPENDIX THE
MATHEMATICS OF CONSUMER CHOICE 135 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 4.1 GOOD
NEWS/BAD NEWS AND THE BUDGET LINE 105 4.2 FINDING AN INTERIOR OPTIMUM
109 4.3 FINDING A CORNER POINT SOLUTION 112 4.4 CORNER POINT SOLUTION
WITH PERFECT SUBSTITUTES 113 4.5 CONSUMER CHOICE THAT FAILS TO MAXIMIZE
UTILITY 127 4.6 OTHER USES OF REVEALED PREFERENCE 129 CHAPTER 5 THE
THEORY OF DEMAND 136 VOEY IT PAY TO-RALTF/ PRICE*? 5.1 OPTIMAL CHOICE
AND DEMAND 138 THE EFFECTS OF A CHANGE IN PRICE 138 THE EFFECTS OF A
CHANGE IN INCOME 140 THE EFFECTS OF A CHANGE IN PRICE OR INCOME: AN
ALGEBRAIC APPROACH 145 5.2 CHANGE IN THE PRICE OF A GOOD: SUBSTITUTION
EFFECT AND INCOME EFFECT 148 THE SUBSTITUTION EFFECT 148 THE INCOME
EFFECT 150 INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS WHEN GOODS ARE NOT NORMAL 151
5.3 CHANGE IN THE PRICE OF A GOOD: THE CONCEPT OF CONSUMER SURPLUS 159
UNDERSTANDING CONSUMER SURPLUS FROM THE DEMAND CURVE 159 UNDERSTANDING
CONSUMER SURPLUS FROM THE OPTIMAL CHOICE DIAGRAM: COMPENSATING VARIATION
AND EQUIVALENT VARIATION 161 5.4 MARKET DEMAND 168 5.5 NETWORK
EXTERNALITIES 170 5.6 THE CHOICE OF LABOR AND LEISURE 173 AS WAGES RISE,
LEISURE FIRST DECREASES, THEN INCREASES 173 THE BACKWARD-BENDING SUPPLY
OF LABOR 175 5.7 CONSUMER PRICE INDICES 178 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES
5.1 A NORMAL GOOD HAS A POSITIVE INCOME ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 144 5.2
FINDING A DEMAND CURVE (NO CORNER POINTS) 146 5.3 FINDING A DEMAND CURVE
(WITH A CORNER POINT SOLUTION) 147 5.4 FINDING INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION
EFFECTS ALGEBRAICALLY 154 5.5 INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS WITH A
PRICE INCREASE 156 5.6 INCOME AND SUBSTITUTION EFFECTS WITH A
QUASI-LINEAR UTILITY FUNCTION 157 5.7 CONSUMER SURPLUS: LOOKING AT THE
DEMAND CURVE 160 5.8 COMPENSATING AND EQUIVALENT VARIATIONS WITH NO
INCOME EFFECT 164 5.9 COMPENSATING AND EQUIVALENT VARIATIONS WITH AN
INCOME EFFECT 166 5.10 THE DEMAND FOR LEISURE AND THE SUPPLY OF LABOR
177 PART ^ PRODUCTION AND COST THEORY CHAPTER 6 INPUTS AND PRODUCTION
FUNCTIONS 185 CAN/ THEY VCRIT BETTER AND/ CHEAPER? 6.1 INTRODUCTION TO
INPUTS AND PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS 187 6.2 PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS WITH A
SINGLE INPUT 189 TOTAL PRODUCT FUNCTIONS 189 MARGINAL AND AVERAGE
PRODUCT 190 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MARGINAL AND AVERAGE PRODUCT 194 6.3
PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS WITH MORE THAN ONE INPUT 194 TOTAL PRODUCT AND
MARGINAL PRODUCT WITH TWO INPUTS 194 ISOQUANTS 196 ECONOMIC AND
UNECONOMIC REGIONS OF PRODUCTION 200 MARGINAL RATE OF TECHNICAL
SUBSTITUTION 201 6.4 SUBSTITUTABILITY AMONG INPUTS 203 DESCRIBING A
FIRM S INPUT SUBSTITUTION OPPORTUNITIES GRAPHICALLY 204 XVI CONTENTS
ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION 206 SPECIAL PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS 208 6.5
RETURNS TO SCALE 212 DEFINITIONS 212 RETURNS TO SCALE VERSUS DIMINISHING
MARGINAL RETURNS 214 , 6.6 TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS 216 APPENDIX THE
ELASTICITY OF SUBSTITUTION FOR A COBB-DOUGLAS PRODUCTION FUNCTION 223
LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 6.1 DERIVING THE EQUATION OF AN ISOQUANT 200
6.2 RELATING THE MARGINAL RATE OF TECHNICAL SUBSTITUTION TO MARGINAL
PRODUCTS 203 6.3 RETURNS TO SCALE FOR A COBB-DOUGLAS PRODUCTION FUNCTION
213 6.4 TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS 217 CHAPTER 7 COSTS AND COST MINIMIZATION
225 WHCTFFY BEHLAD TKE SELF-SERVTCE REVOLUTION? 7.1 COST CONCEPTS FOR
DECISION MAKING 227 OPPORTUNITY COST 227 ECONOMIC VERSUS ACCOUNTING
COSTS 230 SUNK (UNAVOIDABLE) VERSUS NONSUNK (AVOIDABLE) COSTS 231 7.2
THE COST-MINIMIZATION PROBLEM 233 LONG RUN VERSUS SHORT RUN 234 THE
LONG-RUN COST-MINIMIZATION PROBLEM 234 ISOCOST LINES 235 GRAPHICAL
CHARACTERIZATION OF THE SOLUTION TO THE LONG-RUN COST-MINIMIZATION
PROBLEM 235 CORNER POINT SOLUTIONS 238 7.3 COMPARATIVE STATICS ANALYSIS
OF THE COST-MINIMIZATION PROBLEM 240 COMPARATIVE STATICS ANALYSIS OF
CHANGES IN INPUT PRICES 240 COMPARATIVE STATICS ANALYSIS OF CHANGES IN
OUTPUT 243 SUMMARIZING THE COMPARATIVE STATICS ANALYSIS: THE INPUT
DEMAND CURVES 246 THE PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND FOR INPUTS 247 7.4
SHORT-RUN COST MINIMIZATION 250 CHARACTERIZING COSTS IN THE SHORT RUN
250 COST MINIMIZATION IN THE SHORT RUN 252 COMPARATIVE STATICS:
SHORT-RUN INPUT DEMAND VERSUS LONG-RUN INPUT DEMAND 253 MORE THAN ONE
VARIABLE INPUT IN THE SHORT RUN 254 APPENDIX ADVANCED TOPICS IN COST
MINIMIZATION 260 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 7.1 USING THE COST CONCEPTS
FOR A COLLEGE CAMPUS BUSINESS 232 7.2 FINDING AN INTERIOR
COST-MINIMIZATION OPTIMUM 237 7.3 FINDING A CORNER POINT SOLUTION WITH
PERFECT SUBSTITUTES 239 7.4 DERIVING THE INPUT DEMAND CURVES FROM A
PRODUCTION FUNCTION 247 7.5 SHORT-RUN COST MINIMIZATION WITH ONE FIXED
INPUT 253 7.6 SHORT-RUN COST MINIMIZATION WITH TWO VARIABLE INPUTS 254
CHAPTER 8 COST CURVES 263 HOW CCVVVHISEJW&GETWHCMDLE ORVC&IFO ? 8.1
LONG-RUN COST CURVES 265 LONG-RUN TOTAL COST CURVE 265 HOW DOES THE
LONG-RUN TOTAL COST CURVE SHIFT WHEN INPUT PRICES CHANGE? 267 LONG-RUN
AVERAGE AND MARGINAL COST CURVES 270 8.2 SHORT-RUN COST CURVES 279
SHORT-RUN TOTAL COST CURVE 279 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE LONG-RUN AND THE
SHORT-RUN TOTAL COST CURVES 281 SHORT-RUN AVERAGE AND MARGINAL COST
CURVES 282 RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE LONG-RUN AND THE SHORT-RUN AVERAGE
AND MARGINAL COST CURVES 283 8.3 SPECIAL TOPICS IN COST 288 ECONOMIES OF
SCOPE 288 ECONOMIES OF EXPERIENCE: THE EXPERIENCE CURVE 290 8.4
ESTIMATING COST FUNCTIONS 293 CONSTANT ELASTICITY COST FUNCTION 293
TRANSLOG COST FUNCTION 294 APPENDIX SHEPHARD S LEMMA AND DUALITY 301
LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 8.1 FINDING THE LONG-RUN TOTAL COST CURVE
FROM A PRODUCTION FUNCTION 266 8.2 DERIVING LONG-RUN AVERAGE AND
MARGINAL COST CURVES FROM A LONG-RUN TOTAL COST CURVE 271 8.3 DERIVING A
SHORT-RUN TOTAL COST CURVE 280 8.4 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SHORT-RUN
AND LONG-RUN AVERAGE COST CURVES 285 CONTENTS XVII PART LL PERFECT
COMPETITION ^CHAPTER 9 PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE MARKETS 304 HOW MCWXY
IZOIE^ SHOULD/CUIIOIE GROWER GROW? 9.1 WHAT IS PERFECT COMPETITION? 306
9.2 PROFIT MAXIMIZATION BY A PRICE-TAKING FIRM 307 ECONOMIC PROFIT
VERSUS ACCOUNTING PROFIT 307 THE PROFIT-MAXIMIZING OUTPUT CHOICE FOR A
PRICE-TAKING FIRM 309 9.3 HOW THE MARKET PRICE IS DETERMINED: SHORT-RUN
EQUILIBRIUM 312 THE PRICE-TAKING FIRM S SHORT-RUN COST STRUCTURE 312
SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR A PRICE-TAKING FIRM WHEN ALL FIXED COSTS ARE
SUNK 314 SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR A PRICE-TAKING FIRM WHEN SOME FIXED
COSTS ARE SUNK AND SOME ARE NONSUNK 316 SHORT-RUN MARKET SUPPLY CURVE
319 SHORT-RUN PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE EQUILIBRIUM 324 COMPARATIVE STATICS
ANALYSIS OF THE SHORT-RUN EQUILIBRIUM 325 9.4 HOW THE MARKET PRICE IS
DETERMINED: LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM 329 LONG-RUN OUTPUT AND PLANT-SIZE
ADJUSTMENTS BY ESTABLISHED FIRMS 329 THE FIRM S LONG-RUN SUPPLY CURVE
330 FREE ENTRY AND LONG-RUN PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE EQUILIBRIUM 331
LONG-RUN MARKET SUPPLY CURVE 332 CONSTANT-COST, INCREASING-COST, AND
DECREASING-COST INDUSTRIES 335 WHAT DOES PERFECT COMPETITION TEACH US?
341 9.5 ECONOMIC RENT AND PRODUCER SURPLUS 341 ECONOMIC RENT 342
PRODUCER SURPLUS 345 ECONOMIC PROFIT, PRODUCER SURPLUS, ECONOMIC RENT
351 APPENDIX PROFIT MAXIMIZATION IMPLIES COST MINIMIZATION 358
LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 9.1 DERIVING THE SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR
A PRICE-TAKING FIRM 316 9.2 DERIVING THE SHORT-RUN SUPPLY CURVE FOR A
PRICE-TAKING FIRM WITH SOME NONSUNK FIXED COSTS 318 9.3 SHORT-RUN MARKET
EQUILIBRIUM 324 9.4 CALCULATING A LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM 332 9.5
CALCULATING PRODUCER SURPLUS 350 CHAPTER 10 COMPETITIVE MARKETS:
APPLICATIONS 360 IYSUPPORT A GOOD/ THING ? 10.1 INTRODUCTION 362 10.2
THE INVISIBLE HAND 363 10.3 EXCISE TAXES 364 INCIDENCE OF A TAX 368 10.4
SUBSIDIES 372 10.5 PRICE CEILINGS (MAXIMUM PRICE REGULATION) 374 10.6
PRICE FLOORS (MINIMUM PRICE REGULATION) 382 10.7 PRODUCTION QUOTAS 389
10.8 PRICE SUPPORTS IN THE AGRICULTURAL SECTOR 392 ACREAGE LIMITATION
PROGRAMS 393 GOVERNMENT PURCHASE PROGRAMS 393 10.9 IMPORT QUOTAS AND
TARIFFS 396 QUOTAS 396 TARIFFS 400 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 10.1
IMPACT OF AN EXCISE TAX 368 10.2 IMPACT OF A SUBSIDY 374 10.3 IMPACT OF
A PRICE CEILING 381 10.4 IMPACT OF A PRICE FLOOR 387 10.5 COMPARING THE
IMPACT OF AN EXCISE TAX, A PRICE FLOOR, AND A PRODUCTION QUOTA 392 10.6
EFFECTS OF AN IMPORT TARIFF 403 PART ^ MARKET POWER CHAPTER 11 MONOPOLY
AND MONOPSONY 412 HOW VO-FIRMFRPLAY MONOPOLY? 11.1 PROFIT MAXIMIZATION
BY A MONOPOLIST 414 THE PROFIT-MAXIMIZATION CONDITION 414 A CLOSER LOOK
AT MARGINAL REVENUE: MARGINAL UNITS AND INFRAMARGINAL UNITS 417 AVERAGE
REVENUE AND MARGINAL REVENUE 418 THE PROFIT-MAXIMIZATION CONDITION SHOWN
GRAPHICALLY 420 A MONOPOLIST DOES NOT HAVE A SUPPLY CURVE 422 XVIII
CONTENTS 11.2 THE IMPORTANCE OF PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 423 PRICE
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND AND THE PROFIT-MAXIMIZING PRICE 423 MARGINAL
REVENUE AND PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND 424 , MARGINAL COST AND PRICE
ELASTICITY OF DEMAND: THE INVERSE ELASTICITY PRICING RULE 425 THE
MONOPOLIST ALWAYS PRODUCES ON THE ELASTIC REGION OF THE MARKET DEMAND
CURVE 427 THE IEPR APPLIES NOT ONLY TO MONOPOLISTS 428 QUANTIFYING
MARKET POWER: THE LERNER INDEX 430 11.3 COMPARATIVE STATICS FOR
MONOPOLISTS 430 SHIFTS IN MARKET DEMAND 430 SHIFTS IN MARGINAL COST 432
11.4 MONOPOLY WITH MULTIPLE PLANTS AND MARKETS 435 OUTPUT CHOICE WITH
TWO PLANTS 435 OUTPUT CHOICE WITH TWO MARKETS 437 PROFIT MAXIMIZATION BY
A CARTEL 438 11.5 THE WELFARE ECONOMICS OF MONOPOLY 440 THE MONOPOLY
EQUILIBRIUM DIFFERS FROM THE PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE EQUILIBRIUM 440
MONOPOLY DEADWEIGHT LOSS 441 RENT-SEEKING ACTIVITIES 442 11.6 WHY DO
MONOPOLY MARKETS EXIST? 442 NATURAL MONOPOLY 442 BARRIERS TO ENTRY 444
11.7 MONOPSONY 445 THE MONOPSONIST S PROFIT-MAXIMIZATION CONDITION 446
AN INVERSE ELASTICITY PRICING RULE FOR MONOPSONY 448 MONOPSONY
DEADWEIGHT LOSS 449 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 11.1 MARGINAL AND
AVERAGE REVENUE FOR A LINEAR DEMAND CURVE 420 11.2 APPLYING THE
MONOPOLIST S PROFIT-MAXIMIZATION CONDITION 422 11.3 COMPUTING THE
OPTIMAL MONOPOLY PRICE FOR A CONSTANT ELASTICITY DEMAND CURVE 426 11.4
COMPUTING THE OPTIMAL MONOPOLY PRICE FOR A LINEAR DEMAND CURVE 426 11.5
COMPUTING THE OPTIMAL PRICE USING THE MONOPOLY MIDPOINT RULE 432 11.6
DETERMINING THE OPTIMAL OUTPUT, PRICE, AND DIVISION OF PRODUCTION FOR A
MULTIPLANT MONOPOLIST 437 11.7 DETERMINING THE OPTIMAL OUTPUT AND PRICE
FOR A MONOPOLIST SERVING TWO MARKETS 438 11.8 APPLYING THE MONOPSONIST S
PROFIT-MAXIMIZATION CONDITION 447 CHAPTER 12 CAPTURING SURPLUS 455 WHY
VCD/YCMR TICKETCENTSO-MUCHLEW 12.1 CAPTURING SURPLUS 457 12.2
FIRST-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION: MAKING THE MOST FROM EACH CONSUMER
459 12.3 SECOND-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION: QUANTITY DISCOUNTS 463
BLOCK PRICING 464 SUBSCRIPTION AND USAGE CHARGES 469 12.4 THIRD-DEGREE
PRICE DISCRIMINATION: DIFFERENT PRICES FOR DIFFERENT MARKET SEGMENTS 470
TWO DIFFERENT SEGMENTS, TWO DIFFERENT PRICES 470 SCREENING 473
THIRD-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION WITH CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS 475
IMPLEMENTING THE SCHEME OF PRICE DISCRIMINATION: BUILDING FENCES 477
12.5 TYING (TIE-IN SALES) 481 BUNDLING 482 MIXED BUNDLING 484 12.6
ADVERTISING 486 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 12.1 CAPTURING SURPLUS:
UNIFORM PRICING VERSUS FIRST-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION 461 12.2 WHERE
IS THE MARGINAL REVENUE CURVE WITH FIRST-DEGREE PRICE DISCRIMINATION?
462 12.3 INCREASING PROFITS WITH A BLOCK TARIFF 466 12.4 THIRD-DEGREE
PRICE DISCRIMINATION IN RAILROAD TRANSPORT 472 12.5 THIRD-DEGREE PRICE
DISCRIMINATION FOR AIRLINE TICKETS 474 12.6 PRICE DISCRIMINATION SUBJECT
TO CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS 476 12.7 MARKUP AND ADVERTISING-TO-SALES RATIO
488 CONTENTS XIX PART F) IMPERFECT COMPETITION AND STRATEGIC BEHAVIOR
/CHAPTER 13 MARKET STRUCTURE AND COMPETITION 495 WOT? 13.1 TYPES OF
MARKET STRUCTURES 497 13.2 OLIGOPOLY WITH HOMOGENEOUS PRODUCTS 498 THE
COURNOT MODEL OF OLIGOPOLY 498 THE BERTRAND MODEL OF OLIGOPOLY 506 WHY
ARE THE COURNOT AND BERTRAND EQUILIBRIA DIFFERENT? 508 THE STACKELBERG
MODEL OF OLIGOPOLY 509 13.3 DOMINANT FIRM MARKETS 511 13.4 OLIGOPOLY
WITH HORIZONTALLY DIFFERENTIATED PRODUCTS 514 WHAT IS PRODUCT
DIFFERENTIATION? 514 BERTRAND PRICE COMPETITION WITH HORIZONTALLY
DIFFERENTIATED PRODUCTS 518 13.5 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION 519 SHORT-RUN
AND LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM IN MONOPOLISTICALLY COMPETITIVE MARKETS 524
PRICE ELASTICITY OF DEMAND, MARGINS, AND NUMBER OF FIRMS IN THE MARKET
525 DO PRICES FALL WHEN MORE FIRMS ENTER? 526 APPENDIX THE COURNOT
EQUILIBRIUM AND THE INVERSE ELASTICITY PRICING RULE 535
LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 13.1 COMPUTING A COURNOT EQUILIBRIUM 501
13.2 COMPUTING THE COURNOT EQUILIBRIUM FOR TWO OR MORE FIRMS WITH LINEAR
DEMAND 505 13.3 COMPUTING THE EQUILIBRIUM IN THE DOCUMENT FIRM MODEL 513
13.4 COMPUTING A BERTRAND EQUILIBRIUM WITH HORIZONTALLY DIFFERENTIATED
PRODUCTS 521 CHAPTER 14 GAMETHEORYAND STRATEGIC BEHAVIOR 536 WHAFY CW A/
CJAME/7 14.1 THE CONCEPT OF NASH EQUILIBRIUM 538 A SIMPLE GAME 538 THE
NASH EQUILIBRIUM 539 THE PRISONERS DILEMMA 539 DOMINANT AND DOMINATED
STRATEGIES 540 GAMES WITH MORE THAN ONE NASH EQUILIBRIUM 544 MIXED
STRATEGIES 547 SUMMARY: HOW TO FIND ALL THE NASH EQUILIBRIA IN A
SIMUTTANEOUS-MOVE GAME WITH TWO PLAYERS 548 14.2 THE REPEATED
PRISONERS DILEMMA 549 14.3 SEQUENTIAL-MOVE GAMES AND STRATEGIC MOVES 554
ANALYZING SEQUENTIAL-MOVE GAMES 555 THE STRATEGIC VALUE OF LIMITING
ONE S OPTIONS 557 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 14.1 FINDING THE NASH
EQUILIBRIUM: COKE VERSUS PEPSI 543 14.2 FINDING ALL OF THE NASH
EQUILIBRIA IN A GAME 546 14.3 AN ENTRY GAME 556 PART 7 SPECIAL TOPICS
CHAPTER 15 RISK AND INFORMATION 568 15.1 DESCRIBING RISKY OUTCOMES 570
LOTTERIES AND PROBABILITIES 570 EXPECTED VALUE 571 VARIANCE 572 15.2
EVALUATING RISKY OUTCOMES 574 UTILITY FUNCTIONS AND RISK PREFERENCES 574
RISK-NEUTRAL AND RISK-LOVING PREFERENCES 577 15.3 BEARING AND
ELIMINATING RISK 579 RISK PREMIUM 579 WHEN WOULD A RISK-AVERSE PERSON
CHOOSE TO ELIMINATE RISK? THE DEMAND FOR INSURANCE 582 ASYMMETRIC
INFORMATION IN INSURANCE MARKETS: MORAL HAZARD AND ADVERSE SELECTION 583
15.4 ANALYZING RISKY DECISIONS 586 DECISION TREE BASICS 586 DECISION
TREES WITH A SEQUENCE OF DECISIONS 588 THE VALUE OF INFORMATION 591 15.5
AUCTIONS 593 TYPES OF AUCTIONS AND BIDDING ENVIRONMENTS 593 XX CONTENTS
AUCTIONS WHEN BIDDERS HAVE PRIVATE VALUES 594 AUCTIONS WHEN BIDDERS HAVE
COMMON VALUES: THE WINNER S CURSE 598 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 15.1
COMPUTING THE EXPECTED UTILITY FOR TWO LOTTERIES FOR A RISK-AVERSE
DECISION MAKER 576 15.2 COMPUTING THE EXPECTED UTILITY FOR TWO
LOTTERIES; RISK-NEUTRAL AND RISK-LOVING DECISION MAKERS 578 15.3
COMPUTING THE RISK PREMIUM FROM A UTILITY FUNCTION 581 15.4 THE
WILLINGNESS TO PAY FOR INSURANCE 583 15.5 VERIFYING THE NASH EQUILIBRIUM
IN A FIRST-PRICE SEALED-BID AUCTION WITH PRIVATE VALUES 596 CHAPTER 16
GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM THEORY 607 16.1 GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS: TWO
MARKETS 610 16.2 GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS: MANY MARKETS 613 THE
ORIGINS OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND IN A SIMPLE ECONOMY 613 THE GENERAL
EQUILIBRIUM IN OUR SIMPLE ECONOMY 619 WALRAS LAW 622 16.3 GENERAL
EQUILIBRIUM ANALYSIS: COMPARATIVE STATICS 623 16.4 THE EFFICIENCY OF
COMPETITIVE MARKETS 628 WHAT IS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY? 628 EXCHANGE
EFFICIENCY 629 INPUT EFFICIENCY 634 SUBSTITUTION EFFICIENCY 636 PULLING
THE ANALYSIS TOGETHER: THE FUNDAMENTAL THEOREMS OF WELFARE ECONOMICS 638
16.5 GAIN S FROM FREE TRADE 640 FREE TRADE IS MUTUALLY BENEFICIAL 640
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE 643 APPENDIX DERIVING THE DEMAND AND SUPPLY
CURVES FOR GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM IN FIGURE 16.9 AND LEARNING-BY-DOING
EXERCISE 16.2 649 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 16.1 FINDING THE PRICES AT
A GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM WITH TWO MARKETS 613 16.2 FINDING THE CONDITIONS
FOR A GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM WITH FOUR MARKETS 621 16.3 CHECKING THE
CONDITIONS FOR EXCHANGE EFFICIENCY 632 CHAPTER 17 EXTERNALITIES AND
PUBLIC GOODS 655 17.1 INTRODUCTION 657 17.2 EXTERNALITIES 657 NEGATIVE
EXTERNALITIES AND ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY 658 POSITIVE EXTERNALITIES AND
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY 670 , PROPERTY RIGHTS AND THE COASE THEOREM 672 17.3
PUBLIC GOODS 675 EFFICIENT PROVISION OF A PUBLIC GOOD 676 THE FREE RIDER
PROBLEM 678 LEARNING-BY-DOING EXERCISES 17.1 THE EFFICIENT AMOUNT OF
POLLUTION 661 17.2 EMISSIONS FEE 664 17.3 THE COASE THEOREM 674 17.4
OPTIMAL PROVISION OF A PUBLIC GOOD 678 MATHEMATICAL APPENDIX 686
SOLUTIONS TO SELECTED PROBLEMS 705 GLOSSARY G-I INDEX I-I
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Besanko, David 1955- Braeutigam, Ronald R. |
author_GND | (DE-588)132354934 (DE-588)111554721 |
author_facet | Besanko, David 1955- Braeutigam, Ronald R. |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Besanko, David 1955- |
author_variant | d b db r r b rr rrb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035285246 |
classification_rvk | QC 100 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)255863315 (DE-599)GBV540420093 |
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 | 3. ed., internat. student version |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV035285246 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:30:26Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780470234600 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017090388 |
oclc_num | 255863315 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 DE-634 DE-521 |
owner_facet | DE-703 DE-634 DE-521 |
physical | XX, 724, 8, 14 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Wiley |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Besanko, David 1955- Verfasser (DE-588)132354934 aut Microeconomics David Besanko ; Ronald R. Braeutigam 3. ed., internat. student version Hoboken, NJ Wiley 2008 XX, 724, 8, 14 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 s DE-604 Braeutigam, Ronald R. Verfasser (DE-588)111554721 aut SWBplus Fremddatenuebernahme application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017090388&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Besanko, David 1955- Braeutigam, Ronald R. Microeconomics Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4039225-9 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Microeconomics |
title_auth | Microeconomics |
title_exact_search | Microeconomics |
title_full | Microeconomics David Besanko ; Ronald R. Braeutigam |
title_fullStr | Microeconomics David Besanko ; Ronald R. Braeutigam |
title_full_unstemmed | Microeconomics David Besanko ; Ronald R. Braeutigam |
title_short | Microeconomics |
title_sort | microeconomics |
topic | Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Mikroökonomie Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017090388&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT besankodavid microeconomics AT braeutigamronaldr microeconomics |