Description
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- Half Title
- Pearson’s Commitment to Accessibility
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Microeconomics: The Allocation of Scarce Resources
- Trade-Offs
- Who Makes the Decisions
- Prices Determine Allocations
- Application: Twinkie Tax
- 1.2 Models
- Application: Income Threshold Model and China
- Simplifications by Assumption
- Testing Theories
- Maximizing Subject to Constraints
- Positive Versus Normative
- 1.3 Uses of Microeconomic Models in Your Life and Career
- How Individuals, Firms, and Government Agencies Use Microeconomics
- What You Will Learn
- Career Skills
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Chapter 2. Supply and Demand
- Challenge: Quantities and Prices of Genetically Modified Foods
- 2.1 Demand
- The Demand Curve
- The Demand Function
- Solved Problem 2.1
- Summing Demand Curves
- Application: Aggregating Corn Demand Curves
- 2.2 Supply
- The Supply Curve
- The Supply Function
- Summing Supply Curves
- How Government Import Policies Affect Supply Curves
- Solved Problem 2.2
- 2.3 Market Equilibrium
- Using a Graph to Determine the Equilibrium
- Using Math to Determine the Equilibrium
- Forces That Drive the Market to Equilibrium
- Application: Speed of Adjustment to New Information
- 2.4 Shocking the Equilibrium
- Effects of a Shock to the Supply Curve
- Solved Problem 2.3
- Application: The Opioid Epidemic Reduces Labor-Market Participation
- Effects of a Shock to the Demand Curve
- 2.5 Effects of Government Interventions
- Policies That Shift Supply Curves
- Application: Occupational Licensing
- Solved Problem 2.4
- Policies That Cause the Quantity Demanded to Differ from the Quantity Supplied
- Application: Venezuelan Price Ceilings and Shortages
- Solved Problem 2.5
- Why the Quantity Supplied Need Not Equal the Quantity Demanded
- 2.6 When to Use the Supply-and-Demand Model
- Challenge Solution: Quantities and Prices of Genetically Modified Foods
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 3. Applying the Supply-and- Demand Model
- Challenge: Who Pays the Gasoline Tax?
- 3.1 How Shapes of Supply and Demand Curves Matter
- 3.2 Sensitivity of the Quantity Demanded to Price
- Price Elasticity of Demand
- Solved Problem 3.1
- Application: The Demand Elasticities for Google Play and Apple Apps
- Elasticity Along the Demand Curve
- Demand Elasticity and Revenue
- Solved Problem 3.2
- Application: Amazon Prime
- Demand Elasticities over Time
- Other Demand Elasticities
- Application: Anti-Smoking Policies May Reduce Drunk Driving
- 3.3 Sensitivity of the Quantity Supplied to Price
- Elasticity of Supply
- Elasticity Along the Supply Curve
- Supply Elasticities over Time
- Application: Oil Drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
- Solved Problem 3.3
- 3.4 Effects of a Sales Tax
- Effects of a Specific Tax on the Equilibrium
- The Equilibrium Is the Same No Matter Whom the Government Taxes
- Solved Problem 3.4
- Firms and Customers Share the Burden of the Tax
- Application: Taxes to Prevent Obesity
- Solved Problem 3.5
- Ad Valorem and Specific Taxes Have Similar Effects
- Solved Problem 3.6
- Subsidies
- Application: Subsidizing Ethanol
- Challenge Solution: Who Pays the Gasoline Tax?
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 4. Consumer Choice
- Challenge: Why Americans Buy More Ebooks Than Do Germans
- 4.1 Preferences
- Application: Testosterone and Luxury Goods
- Properties of Consumer Preferences
- Preference Maps
- Solved Problem 4.1
- Application: Indifference Curves Between Food and Clothing
- 4.2 Utility
- Utility Function
- Ordinal Preferences
- Utility and Indifference Curves
- Marginal Utility
- Utility and Marginal Rates of Substitution
- 4.3 Budget Constraint
- Slope of the Budget Constraint
- Application: Droughts
- Solved Problem 4.2
- Effect of a Change in Price on the Opportunity Set
- Effect of a Change in Income on the Opportunity Set
- Solved Problem 4.3
- 4.4 Constrained Consumer Choice
- The Consumer’s Optimal Bundle
- Application: The Trade-Off Between Alcohol and Marijuana
- Solved Problem 4.4
- Solved Problem 4.5
- Optimal Bundles on Convex Sections of Indifference Curves
- Buying Where More Is Better
- Application: Can Money Buy Happiness?
- Food Stamps
- Application: Benefiting from Food Stamps
- 4.5 Behavioral Economics
- Tests of Transitivity
- Endowment Effect
- Application: How You Ask a Question Matters
- Salience and Bounded Rationality
- Application: Unaware of Taxes
- Challenge Solution: Why Americans Buy More Ebooks Than Do Germans
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 5. Applying Consumer Theory
- Challenge: Per-Hour Versus Lump-Sum Childcare Subsidies
- 5.1 Deriving Demand Curves
- Indifference Curves and a Rotating Budget Line
- Price-Consumption Curve
- Application: Cigarettes Versus E-Cigarettes
- The Demand Curve Corresponds to the Price-Consumption Curve
- Solved Problem 5.1
- 5.2 How Changes in Income Shift Demand Curves
- Effects of a Rise in Income
- Solved Problem 5.2
- Consumer Theory and Income Elasticities
- Application: Fast-Food Engel Curve
- 5.3 Effects of a Price Change
- Income and Substitution Effects with a Normal Good
- Solved Problem 5.3
- Solved Problem 5.4
- Income and Substitution Effects with an Inferior Good
- Solved Problem 5.5
- Compensating Variation and Equivalent Variation
- Application: Compensating Variation and Equivalent Variation for Smartphones and Facebook
- 5.4 Cost-of-Living Adjustments
- Inflation Indexes
- Effects of Inflation Adjustments
- Application: Paying Employees to Relocate
- 5.5 Deriving Labor Supply Curves
- Labor-Leisure Choice
- Income and Substitution Effects
- Solved Problem 5.6
- Application: Fracking Causes Students to Drop Out
- Solved Problem 5.7
- The Shape of the Labor Supply Curve
- Application: Working After Winning the Lottery
- Income Tax Rates and Labor Supply
- Challenge Solution: Per-Hour Versus Lump-Sum Childcare Subsidies
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 6. Firms and Production
- Challenge: More Productive Workers During Downturns
- 6.1 The Ownership and Management of Firms
- Private, Public, and Nonprofit Firms
- Application: Chinese State-Owned Enterprises
- The Ownership of For-Profit Firms
- The Management of Firms
- What Owners Want
- 6.2 Production
- Production Functions
- Time and the Variability of Inputs
- 6.3 Short-Run Production
- Total Product
- Marginal Product of Labor
- Solved Problem 6.1
- Average Product of Labor
- Graphing the Product Curves
- Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns
- Application: Malthus and the Green Revolution
- 6.4 Long-Run Production
- Isoquants
- Application: Self-Driving Trucks
- Substituting Inputs
- Solved Problem 6.2
- 6.5 Returns to Scale
- Constant, Increasing, and Decreasing Returns to Scale
- Solved Problem 6.3
- Application: Returns to Scale in Various Industries
- Varying Returns to Scale
- 6.6 Productivity and Technical Change
- Relative Productivity
- Innovations
- Application: Restaurant Robots
- Application: A Good Boss Raises Productivity
- Challenge Solution: More Productive Workers During Downturns
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 7. Costs
- Challenge: Technology Choice at Home Versus Abroad
- 7.1 The Nature of Costs
- Opportunity Costs
- Application: The Opportunity Cost of an MBA
- Solved Problem 7.1
- Opportunity Cost of Capital
- Sunk Costs
- 7.2 Short-Run Costs
- Short-Run Cost Measures
- Application: The Sharing Economy and the Short Run
- Short-Run Cost Curves
- Production Functions and the Shape of Cost Curves
- Application: A Beer Manufacturer’s Short-Run Cost Curves
- Effects of Taxes on Costs
- Solved Problem 7.2
- Short-Run Cost Summary
- 7.3 Long-Run Costs
- All Costs Are Avoidable in the Long Run
- Minimizing Cost
- Isocost Line
- Combining Cost and Production Information
- Solved Problem 7.3
- Factor Price Changes
- Solved Problem 7.4
- The Long-Run Expansion Path and the Long-Run Cost Function
- Solved Problem 7.5
- The Shape of Long-Run Cost Curves
- Application: 3D Printing
- Estimating Cost Curves Versus Introspection
- 7.4 Lower Costs in the Long Run
- Long-Run Average Cost as the Envelope of Short-Run Average Cost Curves
- Application: A Beer Manufacturer’s Long-Run Cost Curves
- Application: Should You Buy an Inkjet or a Laser Printer?
- Short-Run and Long-Run Expansion Paths
- The Learning Curve
- Application: Solar Power Learning Curves
- 7.5 Cost of Producing Multiple Goods
- Challenge Solution: Technology Choice at Home Versus Abroad
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 8. Competitive Firms and Markets
- Challenge: The Rising Cost of Keeping On Truckin’
- 8.1 Perfect Competition
- Price Taking
- Why the Firm’s Demand Curve Is Horizontal
- Deviations from Perfect Competition
- Derivation of a Competitive Firm’s Demand Curve
- Solved Problem 8.1
- Why We Study Perfect Competition
- 8.2 Profit Maximization
- Profit
- Two Decisions for Maximizing Profit
- 8.3 Competition in the Short Run
- Short-Run Output Decision
- Solved Problem 8.2
- Short-Run Shutdown Decision
- Application: Fracking and Shutdowns
- Solved Problem 8.3
- Short-Run Firm Supply Curve
- Short-Run Market Supply Curve
- Short-Run Competitive Equilibrium
- Solved Problem 8.4
- 8.4 Competition in the Long Run
- Long-Run Competitive Profit Maximization
- Long-Run Firm Supply Curve
- Application: The Size of Ethanol Processing Plants
- Long-Run Market Supply Curve
- Application: Industries with High Entry and Exit Rates
- Application: Upward-Sloping Long-Run Supply Curve for Cotton
- Application: Reformulated Gasoline Supply Curves
- Solved Problem 8.5
- Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium
- Challenge Solution: The Rising Cost of Keeping On Truckin’
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 9. Applying the Competitive Model
- Challenge: Liquor Licenses
- 9.1 Zero Profit for Competitive Firms in the Long Run
- Zero Long-Run Profit with Free Entry
- Zero Long-Run Profit When Entry Is Limited
- Application: The Value of a Celebrity’s Name
- The Need to Maximize Profit
- 9.2 Consumer Welfare
- Measuring Consumer Welfare Using a Demand Curve
- Application: Willingness to Pay on eBay
- Effect of a Price Change on Consumer Surplus
- Application: Goods with a Large Consumer Surplus Loss from Price Increases
- Solved Problem 9.1
- 9.3 Producer Welfare
- Measuring Producer Surplus Using a Supply Curve
- Using Producer Surplus
- Solved Problem 9.2
- 9.4 Competition Maximizes Welfare
- Measuring Welfare
- Why Producing Less Than the Competitive Output Lowers Welfare
- Solved Problem 9.3
- Application: Deadweight Loss of Christmas Presents
- 9.5 Policies That Shift Supply and Demand Curves
- Entry Barrier
- Application: Welfare Effects of Allowing Fracking
- 9.6 Policies That Create a Wedge Between Supply and Demand Curves
- Welfare Effects of a Sales Tax
- Application: The Deadweight Loss from Gas Taxes
- Solved Problem 9.4
- Welfare Effects of a Subsidy
- Solved Problem 9.5
- Welfare Effects of a Price Floor
- Solved Problem 9.6
- Application: Who Gets Farm Subsidies?
- Welfare Effects of a Price Ceiling
- Solved Problem 9.7
- Application: The Social Cost of a Natural Gas Price Ceiling
- 9.7 Comparing Both Types of Policies: Imports
- Free Trade Versus a Ban on Imports
- Application: Russian Food Ban
- Free Trade Versus a Tariff
- A Tariff Versus a Quota
- Rent Seeking
- Challenge Solution: Liquor Licenses
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 10. General Equilibrium and Economic Welfare
- Challenge: Natural Disasters and Anti-Price Gouging Laws
- 10.1 General Equilibrium
- Feedback Between Competitive Markets
- Solved Problem 10.1
- Minimum Wages with Incomplete Coverage
- Solved Problem 10.2
- Application: Urban Flight
- 10.2 Trading Between Two People
- Endowments
- Mutually Beneficial Trades
- Solved Problem 10.3
- Bargaining Ability
- 10.3 Competitive Exchange
- Competitive Equilibrium
- The Efficiency of Competition
- Obtaining Any Efficient Allocation Using Competition
- 10.4 Production and Trading
- Comparative Advantage
- Solved Problem 10.4
- Efficient Product Mix
- Competition
- 10.5 Efficiency and Equity
- Role of the Government
- Application: Extremely Unequal Wealth
- Efficiency
- Equity
- Application: How You Vote Matters
- Efficiency Versus Equity
- Challenge Solution Natural Disasters and Anti-Price Gouging Laws
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 11. Monopoly
- Challenge: Brand-Name and Generic Drugs
- 11.1 Monopoly Profit Maximization
- Marginal Revenue
- Solved Problem 11.1
- Choosing Price or Quantity
- Graphical Approach
- Application: Taylor Swift Concert Pricing
- Solved Problem 11.2
- Mathematical Approach
- Application: Apple’s iPad
- Solved Problem 11.3
- Effects of a Shift of the Demand Curve
- 11.2 Market Power
- Market Power and the Shape of the Demand Curve
- Application: Cable Cars and Profit Maximization
- Lerner Index
- Solved Problem 11.4
- Sources of Market Power
- 11.3 Market Failure Due to Monopoly Pricing
- Solved Problem 11.5
- 11.4 Causes of Monopoly
- Cost-Based Monopoly
- Solved Problem 11.6
- Government Creation of a Monopoly
- Application: Botox Patent Monopoly
- 11.5 Government Actions That Reduce Market Power
- Regulating Monopolies
- Solved Problem 11.7
- Application: Natural Gas Regulation
- Increasing Competition
- Application: Movie Studios Attacked by 3D Printers!
- Solved Problem 11.8
- 11.6 Internet Monopolies: Network Effects, Behavioral Economics, and Economies of Scale
- Network Externalities
- Application: Critical Mass and eBay
- Introductory Prices: A Two-Period Monopoly Model
- Two-Sided Markets
- Economies of Scale on the Internet
- Disruptive Technologies
- Challenge Solution Brand-Name and Generic Drugs
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 12. Pricing and Advertising
- Challenge: Sale Prices
- 12.1 Conditions for Price Discrimination
- Why Price Discrimination Pays
- Application: Disneyland Pricing
- Which Firms Can Price Discriminate
- Preventing Resale
- Application: Preventing Resale of Designer Bags
- Not All Price Differences Are Price Discrimination
- Types of Price Discrimination
- 12.2 Perfect Price Discrimination
- How a Firm Perfectly Price Discriminates
- Perfect Price Discrimination Is Efficient but Harms Some Consumers
- Application: Botox and Price Discrimination
- Solved Problem 12.1
- Application: Google Uses Bidding for Ads to Price Discriminate
- Transaction Costs and Perfect Price Discrimination
- 12.3 Group Price Discrimination
- Application: Tesla Price Discriminates
- Solved Problem 12.2
- Prices and Elasticities
- Solved Problem 12.3
- Preventing Resale
- Application: Age Discrimination
- Solved Problem 12.4
- Identifying Groups
- Application: Buying Discounts
- Welfare Effects of Group Price Discrimination
- 12.4 Nonlinear Price Discrimination
- 12.5 Two-Part Pricing
- Two-Part Pricing with Identical Customers
- Two-Part Pricing with Nonidentical Consumers
- Application: iTunes for a Song
- 12.6 Tie-In Sales
- Requirement Tie-In Sale
- Application: Ties That Bind
- Bundling
- Solved Problem 12.5
- 12.7 Advertising
- The Decision Whether to Advertise
- How Much to Advertise
- Application: Super Bowl Commercials
- Challenge Solution: Sale Prices
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 13. Oligopoly and Monopolistic Competition
- Challenge: Government Aircraft Subsidies
- 13.1 Market Structures
- 13.2 Cartels
- Why Cartels Form
- Why Cartels Fail
- Laws Against Cartels
- Application: Signaling Drug Price Increases
- Maintaining Cartels
- Application: The Apple-Google-Intel-Adobe- Intuit-Lucasfilm-Pixar Wage Cartel
- Mergers
- Application: Airline Mergers
- 13.3 Cournot Oligopoly
- The Duopoly Nash-Cournot Equilibrium
- Equilibrium, Elasticity, and the Number of Firms
- Application: Mobile Number Portability
- Nonidentical Firms
- Solved Problem 13.1
- Application: How Do Costs, Price Markups, and Profits Vary Across Airlines?
- Solved Problem 13.2
- Application: Rising Market Power
- 13.4 Stackelberg Oligopoly
- Graphical Model
- Solved Problem 13.3
- Why Moving Sequentially Is Essential
- Comparison of Competitive, Stackelberg, Cournot, and Collusive Equilibria
- 13.5 Bertrand Oligopoly
- Identical Products
- Differentiated Products
- Application: Differentiating Bottled Water Through Marketing
- 13.6 Monopolistic Competition
- Application: Monopolistically Competitive Food Truck Market
- Equilibrium
- Solved Problem 13.4
- Fixed Costs and the Number of Firms
- Solved Problem 13.5
- Application: Entry Cost and the Number of Dentists
- Challenge Solution: Government Aircraft Subsidies
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 14. Game Theory
- Challenge: Intel’s and AMD’s Advertising Strategies
- 14.1 Static Games
- Normal-Form Games
- Failure to Maximize Joint Profits
- Application: Strategic Advertising
- Multiple Equilibria
- Solved Problem 14.1
- Mixed Strategies
- Application: Boomerang Generation
- Solved Problem 14.2
- 14.2 Repeated Dynamic Games
- Strategies and Actions in Dynamic Games
- Cooperation in a Repeated Prisoners’ Dilemma Game
- Solved Problem 14.3
- 14.3 Sequential Dynamic Games
- Game Tree
- Subgame Perfect Nash Equilibrium
- Credibility
- Dynamic Entry Game
- Solved Problem 14.4
- Application: Keeping Out Casinos
- Solved Problem 14.5
- Disadvantages of Moving First
- Application: Venezuelan Nationalization
- Too-Early Product Innovation
- Application: Advantages and Disadvantages of Moving First
- 14.4 Auctions
- Elements of Auctions
- Bidding Strategies in Private-Value Auctions
- Winner’s Curse
- 14.5 Behavioral Game Theory
- Application: GM’s Ultimatum
- An Experiment
- Reciprocity
- Challenge Solution: Intel’s and AMD’s Advertising Strategies
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 15. Factor Markets
- Challenge: Athletes’ Salaries and Ticket Prices
- 15.1 Competitive Factor Market
- Short-Run Factor Demand of a Firm
- Solved Problem 15.1
- Solved Problem 15.2
- Application: The Black Death Increased Wages
- Long-Run Factor Demand
- Factor Market Demand
- Competitive Factor Market Equilibrium
- 15.2 Effects of Monopolies on Factor Markets
- Market Structure and Factor Demands
- A Model of Market Power in Input and Output Markets
- Solved Problem 15.3
- 15.3 Monopsony
- Monopsony Profit Maximization
- Application: Monopsony in U.S. Labor Markets
- Welfare Effects of Monopsony
- Solved Problem 15.4
- Challenge Solution: Athletes’ Salaries and Ticket Prices
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 16. Interest Rates, Investments, and Capital Markets
- Challenge: Does Going to College Pay?
- 16.1 Comparing Money Today to Money in the Future
- Interest Rates
- Using Interest Rates to Connect the Present and Future
- Application: Power of Compounding
- Stream of Payments
- Solved Problem 16.1
- Application: Saving for Retirement
- Inflation and Discounting
- Application: Winning the Lottery
- 16.2 Choices over Time
- Investing
- Solved Problem 16.2
- Solved Problem 16.3
- Rate of Return on Bonds
- Behavioral Economics: Time-Varying Discounting
- Application: Falling Discount Rates and Self-Control
- 16.3 Exhaustible Resources
- When to Sell an Exhaustible Resource
- Price of a Scarce Exhaustible Resource
- Application: Redwood Trees
- Why Price May Be Constant or Fall
- 16.4 Capital Markets, Interest Rates, and Investments
- Solved Problem 16.4
- Challenge Solution: Does Going to College Pay?
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 17. Uncertainty
- Challenge BP and Limited Liability
- 17.1 Assessing Risk
- Probability
- Application: Risk of a Cyberattack
- Expected Value
- Solved Problem 17.1
- Variance and Standard Deviation
- 17.2 Attitudes Toward Risk
- Expected Utility
- Risk Aversion
- Solved Problem 17.2
- Application: Stocks’ Risk Premium
- Risk Neutrality
- Risk Preference
- Application: Gambling
- 17.3 Reducing Risk
- Just Say No
- Obtain and Use Information
- Diversify
- Application: Failing to Diversify
- Buy Insurance
- Solved Problem 17.3
- Application: Flight Insurance
- Application: Flooded by Insurance Claims
- 17.4 Investing Under Uncertainty
- Risk-Neutral Investing
- Risk-Averse Investing
- Solved Problem 17.4
- 17.5 Behavioral Economics of Uncertainty
- Biased Assessment of Probabilities
- Application: Biased Estimates
- Violations of Expected Utility Theory
- Prospect Theory
- Application: Loss Aversion Contracts
- Challenge Solution: BP and Limited Liability
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 18. Externalities, Open-Access, and Public Goods
- Challenge: Trade and Pollution
- 18.1 Externalities
- Application: Negative Externalities from Spam
- 18.2 The Inefficiency of Competition with Externalities
- Application: Global Warming
- 18.3 Regulating Externalities
- Emissions Standard
- Emissions Fee
- Solved Problem 18.1
- Application: Taxing Driving
- Benefits Versus Costs from Controlling Pollution
- Application: Protecting Babies and Grandparents
- 18.4 Market Structure and Externalities
- Monopoly and Externalities
- Monopoly Versus Competitive Welfare with Externalities
- Taxing Externalities in Noncompetitive Markets
- Solved Problem 18.2
- 18.5 Allocating Property Rights to Reduce Externalities
- Coase Theorem
- Application: Buying a Town
- Markets for Pollution
- Application: Acid Rain Cap-and-Trade Program
- Markets for Positive Externalities
- 18.6 Rivalry and Exclusion
- Open-Access Common Property
- Application: Road Congestion
- Club Goods
- Application: Software Piracy
- Public Goods
- Solved Problem 18.3
- Application: Free Riding on Measles and COVID-19 Vaccinations
- Application: Ending Disney’s Positive Externality
- Challenge Solution: Trade and Pollution
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 19. Asymmetric Information
- Challenge: Dying to Work
- 19.1 Adverse Selection
- Insurance Markets
- Products of Unknown Quality
- Solved Problem 19.1
- Solved Problem 19.2
- 19.2 Reducing Adverse Selection
- Equalizing Information
- Application: Discounts for Data
- Application: Adverse Selection and Remanufactured Goods
- Restricting Opportunistic Behavior
- 19.3 Price Discrimination Due to False Beliefs About Quality
- Application: Reducing Consumers’ Information
- 19.4 Market Power from Price Ignorance
- Tourist-Trap Model
- Solved Problem 19.3
- Advertising and Prices
- 19.5 Problems Arising from Ignorance When Hiring
- Cheap Talk
- Application: Cheap Talk in eBay’s Best Offer Market
- Education as a Signal
- Solved Problem 19.4
- Screening in Hiring
- Challenge Solution: Dying to Work
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 20. Contracts and Moral Hazards
- Challenge: Clawing Back Bonuses
- 20.1 The Principal-Agent Problem
- Efficiency
- Symmetric Information
- Asymmetric Information
- Solved Problem 20.1
- Application: Honest Cabbie?
- 20.2 Using Contracts to Reduce Moral Hazard
- Fixed-Fee Contracts
- Contingent Contracts
- Application: Health Insurance and Moral Hazard
- Solved Problem 20.2
- Solved Problem 20.3
- Application: Sing for Your Supper
- Solved Problem 20.4
- Choosing the Best Contract
- 20.3 Monitoring to Reduce Moral Hazard
- Bonding
- Solved Problem 20.5
- Application: Capping Oil and Gas Bankruptcies
- Deferred Payments
- Efficiency Wages
- Application: Walmart’s Efficiency Wages
- Monitoring Outcomes
- 20.4 Checks on Principals
- Application: Layoffs Versus Pay Cuts
- 20.5 Contract Choice
- Challenge Solution: Clawing Back Bonuses
- Key Terms
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter Appendixes
- Appendix 2A: Regressions
- Appendix 3A: Effects of a Specific Tax on Equilibrium
- Appendix 4A: Utility and Indifference Curves
- Appendix 4B: Maximizing Utility
- Appendix 5A: The Slutsky Equation
- Appendix 5B: Labor-Leisure Model
- Appendix 6A: Properties of Marginal and Average Product Curves
- Appendix 6B: The Slope of an Isoquant
- Appendix 6C: Cobb-Douglas Production Function
- Appendix 7A: Minimum of the Average Cost Curve
- Appendix 7B: Japanese Beer Manufacturer’s Short-Run Cost Curves
- Appendix 7C: Minimizing Cost
- Appendix 8A: The Elasticity of the Residual Demand Curve
- Appendix 8B: Profit Maximization
- Appendix 9A: Demand Elasticities and Surplus
- Appendix 11A: Relationship Between a Linear Demand Curve and Its Marginal Revenue Curve
- Appendix 11B: Incidence of a Specific Tax on a Monopoly
- Appendix 12A: Perfect Price Discrimination
- Appendix 12B: Group Price Discrimination
- Appendix 12C: Block Pricing
- Appendix 12D: Two-Part Pricing
- Appendix 12E: Profit-Maximizing Advertising and Production
- Appendix 13A: Nash-Cournot Equilibrium
- Appendix 13B: Nash-Stackelberg Equilibrium
- Appendix 13C: Nash-Bertrand Equilibrium
- Appendix 15A: Factor Demands
- Appendix 15B: Monopsony
- Appendix 16A: The Present Value of Payments over Time
- Appendix 18A: Welfare Effects of Pollution in a Competitive Market
- Appendix 20A: Nonshirking Condition
- Answers to Selected Questions and Problems
- Sources for Challenges and Applications
- References
- Definitions
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- X
- Y
- Z
- Credits
- Symbols Used in This Book




