Markets
in Action
Scarcity, PPF, demand & supply analysis, elasticities, market failure, externalities, public goods, information gaps, and government intervention — the complete Unit 1 toolkit.
The Nature of Economics
Ceteris paribus ("all other things being equal"): The assumption that all other variables are held constant when examining the relationship between two variables. E.g., when drawing a demand curve, we assume income, tastes, and prices of related goods are unchanged.
Normative statements: Value judgements — subjective opinions about what should happen. E.g., "The government ought to redistribute income more aggressively." Cannot be proved true or false.
Scarcity and Opportunity Cost
- Renewable resources: Replenished naturally — wind, solar, fish stocks (if managed). Not permanently depleted.
- Non-renewable resources: Finite stock — oil, coal, natural gas. Extraction permanently reduces available supply.
- Free goods: Not scarce — no opportunity cost (e.g., air, sunlight). No economic decision needed.
- Economic goods: Scarce — involve opportunity cost and require allocation decisions.
Production Possibility Frontiers (PPF)
| Point on PPF | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| On the PPF | Productively efficient — full resource utilisation | All workers employed, all capital used |
| Inside the PPF | Inefficient — underemployment of resources | Recession, unemployment |
| Outside the PPF | Currently unattainable — beyond current capacity | Would require more resources or technology |
| Shift outward | Economic growth — more resources or better technology | New capital investment, improved education |
| Movement along | More of one good means less of another (opportunity cost) | More consumer goods → fewer capital goods |
Capital vs consumer goods: Producing more capital goods (machines, infrastructure) now means fewer consumer goods now, but shifts the PPF outward in the future — increasing long-run productive potential.
Specialisation, Division of Labour & Financial Markets
- Higher productivity — workers master one task
- Economies of scale at firm/national level
- Comparative advantage in international trade
- Learning by doing — skill accumulation
- Monotony — boredom reduces motivation
- Structural unemployment if skill becomes obsolete
- Interdependence risk — breakdown affects whole chain
- Less flexibility — narrow skills base
Functions of money: Medium of exchange (avoids double coincidence of wants problem of barter); store of value (purchasing power held over time); measure of value (common unit for comparison); method of deferred payment (credit/debt transactions possible).
Role of financial markets: Facilitate saving and investment; channel funds from savers to borrowers; provide forward/futures markets (manage price risk); equity markets (businesses raise capital by selling shares).
Economic Systems
| System | Resource allocation | Key advantage | Key problem |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free market | Price mechanism | Allocative efficiency; incentives; innovation | Market failures; inequality; public goods underprovided |
| Command economy | Central government planning | Can prioritise equity/strategic goods; no unemployment in theory | Information problem (Hayek); incentive problem; inefficiency |
| Mixed economy | Both — market with state intervention | Addresses market failures while preserving incentives | Government failure risk; difficult to find right balance |
Rational Decision Making & Behavioural Economics
However, behavioural economics (Kahneman & Tversky) shows consumers often deviate from rationality:
| Bias/Behaviour | Explanation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Herding | Following what others do regardless of own preferences | Buying a stock because others are buying |
| Habitual behaviour | Repeating past choices without reassessing | Brand loyalty to a product |
| Inertia | Sticking with default option due to effort of switching | Not switching energy supplier despite cheaper options |
| Poor computational skills | Difficulty evaluating complex price comparisons | Missing a better mortgage deal |
| Need to feel valued | Paying premium for perceived status or identity | Buying designer goods |
| Framing & anchoring | Decision affected by how information is presented | "90% fat-free" vs "10% fat" — same product |
The Demand Curve
Movement along vs shift of demand curve:
- Movement along: Caused only by a change in the good's own price. Extension (price falls) or contraction (price rises).
- Shift of the curve: Caused by any non-price factor → new demand curve at every price level.
Factors that Shift Demand (INCATS)
| Factor | Direction | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Income (normal good) | ↑ income → rightward shift D | Rising wages → more restaurant meals |
| Income (inferior good) | ↑ income → leftward shift D | Rising wages → less instant noodles |
| Price of substitute | ↑ substitute price → rightward shift D | Pepsi price rises → more Coca-Cola demanded |
| Price of complement | ↑ complement price → leftward shift D | Petrol price rises → fewer cars demanded |
| Advertising | More advertising → rightward shift D | Nike campaign increases trainers demand |
| Tastes/fashions | Change in preferences shifts D | Health awareness → less demand for sugar |
| Population size/age | Larger/younger population may shift D | Baby boom → more demand for schools |
Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
| Value | Type | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| |PED| = 0 | Perfectly inelastic | Quantity doesn't change with price (e.g., insulin for diabetics) |
| 0 < |PED| < 1 | Price inelastic | Quantity changes by less than price change (necessities, addictive goods) |
| |PED| = 1 | Unitary elastic | Total revenue unchanged when price changes |
| |PED| > 1 | Price elastic | Quantity changes by more than price (luxuries, substitutes available) |
| |PED| = ∞ | Perfectly elastic | Consumers buy any quantity at current price; none at higher price |
Factors Determining PED
- Availability of substitutes: More substitutes → more elastic (consumers switch easily)
- Branding: Strong brand loyalty → more inelastic (consumers won't switch)
- Percentage of income: Small % of income → inelastic (e.g., salt); large % → elastic (e.g., car)
- Addictiveness: Addictive goods → inelastic (cigarettes, alcohol)
- Durability: Durable goods → more elastic (consumers can delay purchase)
- Time period: Short-run more inelastic; long-run more elastic (habits change, alternatives develop)
PED and Total Revenue (TR)
| PED | Price rise effect on TR | Price fall effect on TR |
|---|---|---|
| Elastic (|PED|>1) | TR falls (big Q fall outweighs P rise) | TR rises (big Q rise outweighs P fall) |
| Inelastic (|PED|<1) | TR rises (small Q fall, big P gain) | TR falls (small Q gain, big P loss) |
| Unitary (|PED|=1) | TR unchanged | TR unchanged |
Income Elasticity of Demand (YED)
- YED > 0: Normal good — demand rises with income (most goods)
- YED > 1: Luxury/income elastic — demand rises faster than income (e.g., holidays, premium cars)
- 0 < YED < 1: Necessity/income inelastic — demand rises slower than income (e.g., bread, bus journeys)
- YED < 0: Inferior good — demand falls as income rises (e.g., own-brand supermarket goods, bus travel when car affordable)
Cross Elasticity of Demand (XED)
- XED > 0: Substitutes — goods compete (Pepsi and Coke). Stronger substitutes → higher positive XED
- XED < 0: Complements — goods used together (petrol and cars). Stronger complements → more negative XED
- XED = 0: Unrelated goods — changes in B's price don't affect A's demand
The Supply Curve
Movement vs shift: Movement along — only own price changes. Shift — any other factor changes supply at all prices.
Factors Shifting Supply (TINSG)
| Factor | Direction | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Technology | Better tech → rightward shift S (lower unit costs) | Automation in car manufacturing |
| Input costs | Higher wages/materials → leftward shift S | Oil price spike raises transport costs |
| Indirect taxes | Tax → leftward shift S (treated as a cost) | Excise duty on alcohol |
| Subsidies | Subsidy → rightward shift S (reduces cost) | Government subsidy to renewable energy firms |
| Natural disasters/weather | Supply shock → leftward shift S | Drought → less wheat supply |
| Number of producers | More firms → rightward shift S | New entrants into electric vehicle market |
Price Elasticity of Supply (PES)
| PES Value | Type | Example |
|---|---|---|
| PES = 0 | Perfectly inelastic | Scarce art, fixed land supply |
| 0 < PES < 1 | Inelastic | Agricultural goods (growing takes time) |
| PES = 1 | Unitary elastic | — |
| PES > 1 | Elastic | Manufactured goods with idle capacity |
| PES = ∞ | Perfectly elastic | Theoretical — any price rise causes infinite supply response |
Factors Determining PES
- Time period: Short run → inelastic (can't change fixed factors); long run → more elastic
- Availability of stocks/perishability: Storable goods → elastic (can release stock); perishable goods → inelastic
- Mobility of factors of production: Mobile factors → more elastic (can quickly scale up)
- Spare capacity: If capacity exists → elastic (easy to increase output). At full capacity → inelastic
- Legal constraints: Planning permission, quotas → reduce PES
Market Equilibrium
Excess demand (shortage): P below equilibrium → Qd > Qs → upward pressure on price → price rises until equilibrium restored.
Excess supply (surplus): P above equilibrium → Qs > Qd → downward pressure on price → price falls until equilibrium restored.
Market forces automatically eliminate disequilibrium — this self-correcting mechanism is a key strength of the free market.
Consumer and Producer Surplus
Significance: Total welfare = consumer surplus + producer surplus. Market efficiency maximised where this sum is greatest — at free market equilibrium. Price controls (max/min prices) or taxes that reduce equilibrium quantity create deadweight welfare losses.
Functions of the Price Mechanism
| Function | How it works | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Signalling | Price changes transmit information about scarcity/abundance | Rising wheat price signals shortage → farmers grow more |
| Incentive | Higher prices encourage more production; lower prices discourage | High oil profits → exploration of new reserves |
| Rationing | Limited goods allocated to those willing to pay most | House prices ration limited housing among buyers |
Indirect Taxes and Subsidies
Specific tax: Fixed amount per unit (e.g., 80p per litre of petrol). Shifts supply curve leftward by the tax amount — parallel shift.
Ad valorem tax: Percentage of price (e.g., 20% VAT). Shifts supply curve leftward by increasing proportion at higher prices — wedge/pivoted shift.
Tax incidence: Who actually bears the burden of the tax. If demand is inelastic → most of the tax falls on consumers (price rises by nearly the full tax amount). If demand is elastic → most falls on producers (can't raise price much without losing customers).
Subsidy: Government payment to producers → shifts supply curve rightward → lower equilibrium price → higher equilibrium quantity. Benefits shared between producers (higher profits) and consumers (lower prices) — split depends on elasticities.
Sources of Market Failure
Main Sources
- Externalities: Costs/benefits falling on third parties not party to the transaction
- Public goods: Free-rider problem prevents private provision
- Imperfect information: Asymmetric information leads to under/over-consumption
- Moral hazard: Insured parties take greater risks than they would without insurance
- Speculation and market bubbles: Asset prices diverge from fundamental values
Externalities
Key terms:
- Private cost/benefit: Cost/benefit to the direct parties (buyer and seller)
- External cost/benefit: Cost/benefit to third parties (not involved in transaction)
- Social cost = Private cost + External cost
- Social benefit = Private benefit + External benefit
| Type | Effect | Market outcome | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative externality of production | MSC > MPC | Over-produced relative to socially optimal Q* | Factory pollution, carbon emissions from manufacturing |
| Negative externality of consumption | MSC > MPC (via consumption) | Over-consumed relative to Q* | Alcohol, cigarettes, congestion from car use |
| Positive externality of consumption | MSB > MPB | Under-consumed relative to Q* | Education, vaccines — consumer gains less than society |
| Positive externality of production | MSB > MPB | Under-produced relative to Q* | Employer training — benefits other firms who hire trained workers |
Welfare loss: The area between the market quantity and the socially optimal quantity, representing the net loss to society. For negative externalities: market produces too much → welfare loss equals triangle between Qmarket and Q*. For positive externalities: market produces too little → similar welfare loss triangle.
Public Goods
Free-rider problem: Since non-payers cannot be excluded from a public good, rational individuals will not pay voluntarily — they "free-ride." If everyone free-rides, the good is not provided at all by the private sector → market failure. State provision required.
Quasi-public goods: Display one but not both characteristics (e.g., roads — non-excludable but congested = rival at capacity). May be provided privately (toll roads) or publicly.
Imperfect Information
| Context | Information problem | Market failure |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare | Patients cannot assess quality of treatment; doctors know more | Under-consumption; supplier-induced demand |
| Education | Individuals may underestimate long-run returns to education | Under-investment in human capital |
| Pensions | Workers don't understand compound interest/long-run need | Under-saving for retirement |
| Insurance (adverse selection) | High-risk buyers know more about risk than insurer | Adverse selection — only high-risk people buy insurance; market fails |
Moral Hazard
- Insurance: Insured driver may drive less carefully; insured homeowner may invest less in security
- Banking: Banks with government bailout guarantee ("too big to fail") take excessive risks — privatise gains, socialise losses. 2008 financial crisis: banks took on excessive mortgage-backed securities risk knowing systemic importance meant bailout was likely
Speculation and Market Bubbles
- Housing: 2007–08 US subprime housing bubble — rising prices encouraged speculative buying → bank lending surged → bubble burst → financial crisis → recession
- Stocks and shares: Dot-com bubble (1999–2000) — internet company valuations had no earnings basis; collapsed when investors reassessed
Impact: Misallocation of investment during bubble; severe economic damage when bubble bursts; consumers suffer negative wealth effect (assets less valuable); firms cut investment; banks face bad debts; government faces rising deficit (stimulus needed).
Methods of Intervention
| Method | How it works | Best used for | Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indirect taxes | Raise price of goods with negative externalities | Demerit goods: alcohol, tobacco, fuel | Regressive — poorer households pay higher % income; tax avoidance |
| Subsidies | Lower price/increase supply of goods with positive externalities | Public transport, renewable energy, education | Expensive; may go to wrong recipients; permanent dependency |
| Maximum prices | Price ceiling below equilibrium → prevents price rising above | Housing rent control, food price caps | Creates excess demand/shortages; black markets emerge; supply falls |
| Minimum prices | Price floor above equilibrium → prevents price falling below | Minimum wage, EU farm prices, minimum alcohol unit price | Creates excess supply/surplus; requires government to buy surplus (farm support) |
| Tradeable pollution permits | Cap total pollution; firms buy/sell permits; price creates incentive to reduce emissions | Carbon/CO₂ emissions (EU ETS) | Cap level is political; permits given free initially; difficult globally |
| Extension of property rights | If polluters own the right to pollute and victims can sue, Coase theorem says private bargaining reaches efficient outcome | Noise, pollution, trespass | High transaction costs; works only with small numbers of parties |
| State provision | Government directly provides good/service (NHS, public education) | Public goods; merit goods | Inefficient without profit motive; crowding out; high cost |
| Regulation | Legal rules mandating/prohibiting behaviour (minimum standards, bans) | Building regulations, food safety, financial conduct | Compliance costs; regulatory capture; difficult to enforce |
| Information provision | Correct information failures by publishing data or running campaigns | Nutritional labelling, anti-smoking campaigns | Ignored if not salient; doesn't change price signals |
Government Failure
Causes of Government Failure
| Cause | Explanation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Information gaps | Government lacks data to set optimal tax/subsidy/price level | Setting a pollution tax at the wrong level → over/under-corrects |
| Lack of incentives | Public sector lacks profit motive → inefficiency and cost overruns | State-run firms with no competition |
| Unintended consequences | Intervention changes behaviour in unexpected ways | Rent controls → landlords withdraw from rental market → housing shortage worsens |
| Excessive administrative costs | Cost of collecting tax/enforcing regulation exceeds benefit | Small congestion charge raises less than it costs to administer |
| Regulatory capture | Regulated industry influences the regulator → self-serving rules | Financial sector lobbying regulators for looser rules pre-2008 |
| Moral hazard | Intervention creates perverse incentives | Bailouts → banks take more risk in future |
- Corrects externalities that market ignores
- Provides public goods (defence, law)
- Addresses information failures (NHS)
- Reduces inequality through redistribution
- Government failure may worsen allocation
- Price signals distorted — misallocation
- Taxes/subsidies have deadweight losses
- Regulatory capture undermines goals
Model Answer
A movement along the demand curve (extension or contraction) occurs when the price of the good itself changes — quantity demanded rises or falls along the existing curve. For example, if the price of a bus ticket rises from £2 to £3, quantity demanded falls — this is a contraction of demand.
A shift of the demand curve occurs when any non-price determinant changes — the entire demand curve moves to a new position. For example, a rise in consumer incomes (for a normal good) shifts the demand curve rightward, meaning more is demanded at every price level. Other causes include: changes in price of substitutes or complements, advertising, tastes, or population changes.
Model Answer
A negative externality of production occurs when a firm's production imposes external costs on third parties not involved in the transaction — for example, a factory emitting pollution into a river, harming local communities and fish stocks.
The market equilibrium is determined by the intersection of the demand curve (= MPB = MSB) and the firm's supply curve (= MPC). However, because the firm ignores external costs, the Marginal Social Cost (MSC) = MPC + external costs is higher than the MPC at every level of output. The MSC curve lies to the left of the MPC/supply curve.
The socially optimal output Q* is where MSC = MSB (demand). The market produces at Qm where MPC = MPB, which is greater than Q*. The excess output from Q* to Qm represents a welfare loss — the area of the triangle between MSC and MSB from Q* to Qm. The market over-produces relative to the social optimum.
Model Answer
Price elasticity of demand (PED) measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to a change in price. PED = % change in Qd ÷ % change in Price. PED is always negative (inverse relationship). When |PED| > 1, demand is price elastic; when |PED| < 1, it is price inelastic.
PED is determined by: availability of substitutes (more → more elastic), branding (strong brand → inelastic), percentage of income, addictiveness, and durability.
Significance for firms: A firm with inelastic demand (strong brand, no close substitutes) can raise prices and increase total revenue — the proportionate fall in quantity is smaller than the proportionate rise in price. Apple can raise iPhone prices because of strong brand loyalty and lack of close substitutes (elastic iphones would see revenue fall). Conversely, supermarket own-brand goods face elastic demand — these firms compete on price and must reduce prices to gain market share, increasing revenue through volume.
Firms also use YED to plan across the economic cycle: luxury producers (high YED) plan for volatile sales; staple food producers (low YED) have stable revenues. XED informs merger strategy — high positive XED between two firms suggests they are close competitors.
Model Essay Plan
Define: Negative externality — external costs to third parties (crime, NHS burden, addiction strain on families). Market failure — over-consumption beyond socially optimal level. Legalisation with tax = one possible government intervention.
Case for (legalise + tax): Tax internalises the externality — raises price → reduces consumption toward Q*. Government revenue to fund treatment/NHS. Reduces criminal activity (supply chain violence, organised crime eliminated). Quality control — reduces health risks from adulterated products. Portugal drug decriminalisation (2001): drug-related deaths and HIV infections fell significantly; treatment uptake rose.
Case against: Demand for drugs is highly inelastic → legalisation may signal social acceptance → demand rises → externalities increase. Tax revenue could incentivise government to keep drugs legal even if harmful (tobacco). Hard to set the right tax level without perfect information on external costs. Some drugs so harmful that full prohibition may still be optimal.
Alternative 1 — Prohibition: Raises price (supply restricted) → reduces consumption. But black market thrives, criminal externalities large. May be less effective than legalisation + tax.
Alternative 2 — Regulation and treatment provision: Harm reduction approaches — needle exchanges, supervised injection facilities (Switzerland). Addresses externality of disease transmission without signalling acceptance. Limited impact on overall consumption.
Evaluate: Effectiveness depends on PED — if demand is very inelastic, tax raises revenue but doesn't reduce consumption much. Comparison matters — prohibition has failed in many countries. Institutional context (enforcement capacity, healthcare infrastructure) determines relative effectiveness.
Conclude: Legalisation with a high specific tax is likely more effective than prohibition given the failure of prohibition models globally. But the tax must be set high enough to internalise the full external cost, and accompanied by treatment investment — a combined approach addresses both consumption and harm reduction externalities.