《微观经济学》清华大学(全套课件667P).ppt
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1、Chapter OneThe Market - Appreciating Economic ModelingThe Purpose of this ChapteruTo begin to understand the art of building an economic modeluTo begin to understand three basic elements of modeling in economics:PurposeSimplification through assumptionsValue judgmentThe Purpose of an Economic Modelu
2、 The purpose of an economic model is to help provide precise insights (精精确的洞察力)确的洞察力)on a specific economic phenomenon.uThus:Different phenomena needs different model;Simplification by assumption is necessaryAn Illustration: Modeling the Apartment MarketuPurpose: How are apartment rents determined?
3、Are rents “desirable”?uSimplifying assumptions: apartments are close or distant, but otherwise identicaldistant apartments rents are exogenous (外生变量)外生变量) and knownmany potential renters and landlordsTwo Very Common Modeling AssumptionsRational Choice (理性选择)理性选择): Each person tries to choose the bes
4、t alternative available to him or her.Equilibrium (均衡)均衡): economic agents interact with each other, resulting in an equilibrium, in which each person reaches an optimal decision given others decisions.Modeling Apartment DemanduDemand: Suppose the most any one person is willing to pay to rent a clos
5、e apartment is $500/month. Thenp = $500 QD = 1.uSuppose the price has to drop to $490 before a 2nd person would rent. Thenp = $490 QD = 2.Modeling Apartment DemanduThe lower is the rental rate p, the larger is the quantity of close apartments demandedp QD .uThe quantity demanded vs. price graph is t
6、he market demand curve for close apartments.Market Demand Curve for ApartmentspQDModeling Apartment SupplyuSupply: It takes time to build more close apartments so in this short-run the quantity available is fixed (at say 100).Market Supply Curve for ApartmentspQS100Competitive Market Equilibrium(竞争性
7、市场均衡)uQuantity demanded = quantity available price will neither rise nor falluso the market is at a competitive equilibrium.Competitive Market EquilibriumpQD,QSpe100People willing to pay pe for close apartments get closeapartments.People not willing to pay pe for close apartments get distant apartme
8、nts.Comparative Statics(静态比较分析)uWhat is exogenous in the model? price of distant apartments quantity of close apartments incomes of potential renters.uWhat happens if these exogenous variables change?uNote: We are not analyzing the transition process or dynamic process.Comparative StaticsuSuppose th
9、e price of distant apartment rises.uDemand for close apartments increases (rightward shift), causinguA higher price for close apartments.Market EquilibriumpQD,QSpe100Higher demand causes highermarket price; same quantitytraded.More Comparative Statics (Do Them Yourself)uSuppose there were more close
10、 apartments.uOr, renters income rises;Elaboration of the Basic Model: Taxation Policy AnalysisuLocal government taxes apartment owners.uWhat happens topricequantity of close apartments rented?uIs any of the tax “passed” to renters?Taxation Policy AnalysisuMarket supply is unaffected.uMarket demand i
11、s unaffected.uSo the competitive market equilibrium is unaffected by the tax.uPrice and the quantity of close apartments rented are not changed.uLandlords pay all of the tax.Imperfectly Competitive MarketCase 1: A Monopolistic LandlorduLandlord sets a rental price p he rents D(p) apartments.uRevenue
12、 = pD(p).uHe chooses p to maximizes p D(p), subject to D(p) = S (total number of apartments in his hands)uTypically, his optimal p is such thatD(p) S, that is, there are vacant apartments.Monopolistic Market EquilibriumpQD,QSMiddlepriceMiddle price, medium quantitydemanded, larger revenue.Monopolist
13、 does not rent all theclose apartments.100Vacant close apartments.Imperfectly Competitive Market Case 2: Perfectly Discriminatory Monopolistic LandlorduImagine the monopolist knew willingness-to-pay of everybody,uCharge $500 to the most willing-to-pay,ucharge $490 to the 2nd most willing-to-pay, etc
14、.Discriminatory Monopolistic Market EquilibriumpQD,QS100p1 =$5001Discriminatory Monopolistic Market EquilibriumpQD,QS100p1 =$500p2 =$49012Discriminatory Monopolistic Market EquilibriumpQD,QS100p1 =$500p2 =$49012p3 =$4753Discriminatory Monopolistic Market EquilibriumpQD,QS100p1 =$500p2 =$49012p3 =$47
15、53Discriminatory Monopolistic Market EquilibriumpQD,QS100p1 =$500p2 =$49012p3 =$4753peDiscriminatory monopolistcharges the competitive marketprice to the last renter, andrents the competitive quantityof close apartments.Rent Control(房租管制)uLocal government imposes a maximum legal price, pmax 20.Shape
16、s of Budget Constraints - Quantity DiscountsuSuppose p2 is constant at $1 but that p1=$2 for 0 x1 20 and p1=$1 for x120. Then the constraints slope is - 2, for 0 x1 20-p1/p2 = - 1, for x1 20and the constraint isShapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Discountm = $1005010020Slope = - 2 / 1 = - 2
17、 (p1=2, p2=1)Slope = - 1/ 1 = - 1 (p1=1, p2=1)80 x2x1Shapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Discountm = $1005010020Slope = - 2 / 1 = - 2 (p1=2, p2=1)Slope = - 1/ 1 = - 1 (p1=1, p2=1)80 x2x1Shapes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Discountm = $100501002080 x2x1Budget SetBudget ConstraintSha
18、pes of Budget Constraints with a Quantity Penaltyx2x1Budget SetBudget ConstraintShapes of Budget Constraints - One Price NegativeuCommodity 1 is stinky garbage. You are paid $2 per unit to accept it; i.e. p1 = - $2. p2 = $1. Income, other than from accepting commodity 1, is m = $10.uThen the constra
19、int is - 2x1 + x2 = 10 or x2 = 2x1 + 10.Shapes of Budget Constraints - One Price Negative10Budget constraints slope is-p1/p2 = -(-2)/1 = +2x2x1x2 = 2x1 + 10Shapes of Budget Constraints - One Price Negative10 x2x1 Budget set is all bundles for which x1 0,x2 0 andx2 2x1 + 10.More General Choice SetsuC
20、hoices are usually constrained by more than a budget; e.g. time constraints and other resources constraints.uA bundle is available only if it meets every constraint.More General Choice SetsFoodOther Stuff10At least 10 units of foodmust be eaten to surviveMore General Choice SetsFoodOther Stuff10Budg
21、et SetMore General Choice SetsFoodOther Stuff10Choice is further restricted by a time constraint.More General Choice SetsMore General Choice SetsFoodOther Stuff10More General Choice SetsFoodOther Stuff10More General Choice SetsFoodOther Stuff10The choice set is theintersection of all ofthe constrain
22、t sets.SummaryChapter ThreePreferences 消费者偏好消费者偏好Where Are We in the Course?u We are studying the 1st of the three blocks of microeconomics: Consumer behavior, production theory, and market equilibriumuWithin the 1st block, we are working on the 2nd of the three components: choice set, preference, a
23、nd consumer demandWhat Do We Mean by Preference? (偏好)u It refers to the ordered relationship among alternative choices given by an economic agent.u In most economic literature, consumer preference is treated as the ultimate exogenous element.Preference RelationsuComparing two different consumption b
24、undles, x and y: strict preference: x is more preferred than is y.weak preference: x is as at least as preferred as is y.Indifference: x is exactly as preferred as is y.Notationsu denotes strict preference; u denotes indifference; u denotes weak preference;p pf fPreference Relationsux y and y x impl
25、y x y.ux y and (not y x) imply x y.f ff ff ff fp pAssumptions about Preference RelationsuCompleteness: For any two bundles x and y it is always possible to make the statement that either x y or y x.f ff fAssumptions about Preference RelationsuReflexivity: Any bundle x is always at least as preferred
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