Description
Efnisyfirlit
- about the authors
- Contents
- Contents
- Contents
- preface
- Our approach
- Content and structure
- In summary
- Key issues
- Concepts boxes
- Business case studies
- Everyday economics
- Applying economics to business
- Reflecting on economics
- Think points
- Economics at work
- Summary
- Key terms
- Questions for discussion
- One thing you should read
- guide to the book
- online resources
- 1: economics and business
- 1.1 Introduction: what is economics?
- What is produced?
- How is production organized?
- For whom is production organized?
- 1.2 Why economics matters to business, indeed to everyone
- 1.3 Understanding the roles of firms, consumers and government in markets
- What is the role of firms in markets?
- The role of consumers in markets
- The role of government in markets
- Aircraft
- Cars
- Mobile phone services
- Soft drinks
- 1.4 Scarcity, choice and opportunity cost
- 1.5 Opportunity cost and incentives
- 1.6 Microeconomics, macroeconomics and business
- Interest rates
- Exchange rates
- Confronting the 2008–9 recession
- 1.7 Positive and normative economics
- 2: the market
- 2.1 Introduction: the market, an old but still very useful institution
- 2.2 Consumers and demand in the market
- 2.3 Firms and supply in the market
- 2.4 The market: bringing demand and supply together
- The equilibrium price and market equilibrium
- Reflections on equilibrium price and market equilibria
- T-shirts
- Tuna fish
- Gold
- 2.5 Applying market analysis 1: the example of economic integration in the European Union
- 2.6 Elasticity in the market
- 2.7 Price elasticity of demand
- 2.8 Determinants of price elasticity of demand
- The availability of substitutes
- The proportion of income spent on a good or service, or why have Freddos more than doubled in pr
- Time
- 2.9 Why firms need to know about price elasticity of demand
- 2.10 Applying market analysis 2: OPEC and the market for oil
- 2.11 Other forms of elasticity
- Income elasticity of demand
- Applying income elasticity of demand
- Price elasticity of supply
- Determinants of price elasticity of supply
- Time
- The elasticity of supply of factor inputs
- 2.12 Markets and asymmetric information
- 2.13 Markets and the rational consumer
- 2.14 Markets: concluding remarks
- 3: the firm
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 What do firms do?
- 3.3 Why is the firm a necessary institution?
- Savings on transaction costs
- The capacity of firms to extend the division of labour
- The potential of firms to innovate
- 3.4 Different kinds of firm
- Sole proprietorship
- Partnership
- Companies
- The relative advantages and disadvantages of different forms of ownership
- The taxation of the firm’s profits
- Liability
- Raising capital
- The management of the firm
- The John Lewis Partnership
- Sunderland football club
- 3.5 Reflections on the strategies of firms: profit maximization, economics and business strategy
- Are firms profit maximizers?
- Economics and business strategy: the case of Google
- Horizontal, vertical and diversified growth
- Growth by merger and acquisition
- 3.6 Firms’ strategies for survival: resolving the principal–agent problem, coping with asymme
- The principal–agent problem
- Firms and asymmetric information
- 3.7 The death of a firm
- 3.8 Firms and entrepreneurship: an Austrian view
- 4: firms’ costs and revenues
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 The short run and the long run
- 4.3 The short-run production function and the law of diminishing marginal returns
- 4.4 Short-run costs
- 4.5 Production in the long run
- 4.6 Long-run costs
- 4.7 Firms’ revenues
- Revenues and price takers
- Revenues and price makers
- 4.8 Profit maximization
- 5: market concentration and market power
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Market power
- Market power in the real world
- Monopoly and market power
- Market power in the context of branding, reputation and consumer preferences
- 5.3 Market structures, market power, price competition and non-price competition
- Haircuts
- Pubs, bars and restaurants
- New cars
- Train travel
- 5.4 Perfect competition
- The perfectly competitive firm as a price taker
- The revenue and cost curves of the perfectly competitive firm
- The short-run position of the perfectly competitive firm
- The long-run position of the perfectly competitive firm
- The perfectly competitive firm and allocative efficiency
- Perfect competition: a summary
- 5.5 Monopoly
- Sources of monopoly
- The economic implications of monopoly
- The monopolist’s output decision
- Monopoly and allocative efficiency
- Monopoly and price discrimination
- Reflections on monopoly
- Government regulation of monopoly
- 5.6 Imperfect competition (also known as monopolistic competition)
- 5.7 Oligopoly
- Oligopoly and price stability
- Why is there a tendency towards price stability in oligopoly?
- 5.8 Oligopoly and game theory
- Real-world dominant strategies in oligopoly
- 5.9 Market structures: an institutionalist view
- Consumers
- Costs and prices
- 6: business and government
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Market failure
- 6.3 Public goods
- 6.4 Externalities
- Negative externalities
- Positive externalities
- Externalities and the work of Ronald Coase
- 6.5 Public goods, externalities and business
- 6.6 The liberal view: market failure and state failure
- State failure
- State failure versus market failure
- Reflecting on the liberal view of market failure
- Liberalism: a summary
- 6.7 Privatization
- The rationale for privatization
- The case against privatization
- 6.8 Competition policy
- The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA)
- 6.9 Industrial policy
- Strengthening UK productivity
- Building long-term partnerships between businesses and government
- Addressing the ‘grand challenges’ that face the economy and society
- Reflecting on industrial policy
- 7: factor markets
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 The labour market
- 7.3 The demand for labour
- The firm’s demand for labour in the short run
- The firm’s demand for labour in the long run
- Labour productivity and wages: some evidence
- 7.4 The supply of labour
- The supply of labour in an economy
- The individual’s supply of labour
- The supply of labour to a particular occupation
- The elasticity of labour supply
- 7.5 Issues in the labour market: bringing demand and supply together
- Skilled and unskilled labour
- Human capital
- Minimum wages: do they raise the wages of the low paid; do they destroy jobs?
- The labour market as a shock absorber
- 7.6 Factor incomes and economic rent
- Applying the concept of economic rent to different factor markets
- 8: the macroeconomy, macroeconomic policy and business
- 8.1 Introduction: the macroeconomic context of business
- 8.2 Economic growth
- The output method
- The expenditure method
- The income method
- Injections into the circular flow of income
- Withdrawals from the circular flow of income
- Injections and withdrawals in the circular flow – the significance of government involvement
- The circular flow, microeconomics and macroeconomics
- Further reflections on GDP
- 8.3 Unemployment
- 8.4 Inflation
- Measuring inflation
- The inflation objective
- Problems associated with inflation
- Shoe leather costs
- Menu costs
- Hyperinflation
- Market distortion
- Deteriorating international competitiveness
- The redistribution of income
- Inflation performances
- 8.5 The balance of payments
- 8.6 A brief overview of macroeconomic policy since 1945
- 9: unemployment: causes and cures
- 9.1 Introduction: the debate over the causes and cures for unemployment
- 9.2 The classical approach
- 9.3 The orthodox Keynesian approach
- Consumer expenditure
- Investment expenditure
- Government expenditure
- Net export expenditure
- The equilibrium level of national income in the Keynesian model
- 9.4 The monetarist approach
- 9.5 The new classical approach
- 9.6 The new Keynesian approach
- Efficiency wage model
- Insider–outsider model
- Hysteresis effects and unemployment
- 9.7 A case study: unemployment in Europe
- Appendix
- An alternative presentation using an Aggregate Demand (AD)–Aggregate Supply (AS) model
- 10: inflation: causes and cures
- 10.1 Introduction: the inflation debate
- 10.2 The monetarist view
- The quantity theory of money
- The traditional quantity theory of money
- The modern quantity theory of money
- The original Phillips curve
- The statistical relationship between inflation and unemployment
- The economic rationale for the original Phillips curve
- The original Phillips curve as a menu for policy choice
- The breakdown of the original Phillips curve
- The expectations-augmented Phillips curve
- Deriving a whole family of short-run Phillips curves and a vertical long-run Phillips curve
- Summing up
- Policy implications of the expectations-augmented Phillips curve
- The danger of triggering accelerating inflation
- The output–employment costs of reducing inflation
- Inflation as an international monetary phenomenon
- 10.3 The non-monetarist view
- Wage increases as the initiating force of inflation
- Policy implications of the non-monetarist view
- 10.4 A case study: maintaining price stability in the euro area
- 10.5 Concluding remarks
- Appendix
- Keynesians, monetarists and new classicists and the expectations-augmented Phillips curve
- 11: economic growth and business cycles
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 Economic growth: an overview
- 11.3 The Solow growth model
- 11.4 The new endogenous growth models
- 11.5 Wider influences on economic growth
- Institutions
- International economic integration
- Geography
- 11.6 Main features of business cycles
- 11.7 The debate over the cause and control of business cycles
- The Keynesian approach
- The monetarist approach
- The monetarist way to run the economy
- The new classical approach
- The real business cycle approach
- The political business cycle approach
- 11.8 Concluding remarks
- Appendix
- The Solow growth model
- The aggregate production function
- The steady state
- 12: stabilizing the economy
- 12.1 Introduction
- 12.2 Discretionary policy and policy rules
- Discretionary policy
- Policy rules
- 12.3 The rules versus discretion debate: problems of stabilization policy
- The Keynesian view
- The monetarist view
- Crowding out
- Tax changes
- Problems associated with stabilization policy
- The new classical view
- Policy ineffectiveness proposition
- Time inconsistency
- The Lucas critique
- The real business cycle view
- 12.4 Changing views on stabilizing the economy
- 12.5 Concluding remarks
- 13: international trade
- 13.1 Introduction
- The advantages of trade
- The economic basis for trade
- Some negative consequences of trade
- 13.2 The theory of comparative advantage
- 13.3 Reflecting on comparative advantage: further developments in trade theory
- Problems with the free trade process?
- What determines comparative advantage?
- Why don’t countries specialize to the extent that comparative advantage predicts?
- Product life-cycle theory
- The new theory of international trade
- 13.4 Patterns of trade since 1945
- 13.5 International trade policy
- Understanding protectionism
- The institutions of international trade policy: from GATT to the WTO
- The Uruguay Round (1986–94): extending trade liberalization and dealing with the new protection
- World Trade Organization replaces the GATT
- The EU and US/Cairns Group dispute
- The dispute settlement process
- The WTO’s first test: the Doha Round crisis
- 14: the balance of payments and exchange rates
- 14.1 Introduction
- 14.2 The balance of payments accounts
- Current account
- Capital account
- Financial account
- How the balance of payments works
- Surplus and deficit on the balance of payments
- Influences upon the current and financial accounts
- The demand for imports
- The demand for exports
- Factors affecting investment flows
- Disequilibria in the balance of payments
- The balance of payments performance of selected economies
- 14.3 The balance of payments and business
- 14.4 Exchange rates and exchange rate determination
- Nominal and real exchange rates
- Purchasing power parity
- Exchange rates are multiply determined
- 14.5 Exchange rate systems
- Flexible exchange rates
- Fixed exchange rates
- Correcting balance of payments disequilibria under fixed exchange rates
- The advantages of fixed exchange rates
- The integration argument
- The anchor argument
- Managed rates
- 14.6 Exchange rate systems in practice
- The Bretton Woods system
- The non-system
- The European exchange rate mechanism (ERM)
- 14.7 The euro
- The benefits of the euro
- The costs of the euro
- 14.8 The balance of payments, exchange rates and business
- Fixed exchange rates
- Flexible exchange rates
- Fixed versus flexible exchange rates in a business context
- 15: globalization
- 15.1 Introduction
- 15.2 What is globalization?
- Aspects of globalization
- Conceptualizing globalization from a business perspective
- 15.3 How far has globalization progressed?
- Recent patterns in world trade
- Recent patterns in world investment
- Some reflections on the distribution of world GDP
- Recent patterns in human migration
- Globalization – has it happened?
- 15.4 What are the attractions of globalization?
- Free and open trade is beneficial to all
- Trade and investment are complements in a globalized world
- 15.5 What threats might globalization pose?
- An unbalanced and less stable world economy?
- Issues of exclusion and exploitation
- Information economics, counteracting institutions and globalization
- 15.6 On reflection, how new is globalization anyway?
- glossary
- index
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