Trade and Government
Externalities
Market Structures
Potpourri
More Potpourri
100

Revenue and Protective

Types of Tariffs

100

A benefit obtained without compensation by third parties from the production or consumption of sellers or buyers.

Positive Externality

100

A type of economic structure with one producer

Monopoly

100

Factors that prevent firms from entering the industry

Barriers to Entry

100

Land, Labor, Capital, and Entrepreneurial Ability

4 categories of economic resources

200

A tariff designed to shield domestic producers of a good or service from the competition of foreign producers

Protective tariff

200

A cost or benefit accruing to a third party external to the market transaction.

Externality

200

A type of economic structure with few large producers

Oligopoly

200

Measures the responsiveness of purchases of one good to a change in the price of another good

Cross Elasticity of Demand

200

Demand that is Insensitive to price changes

Inelastic demand

300

All barriers other than protective tariffs that Page G-16 nations erect to impede international trade, including import quotas, licensing requirements, unreasonable product-quality standards, unnecessary bureaucratic detail in customs procedures, and so on.

Nontariff barriers (NTBs)

300

This creates positive externalities, and too little is produced

Demand-side market failure

300

A seller (or buyer) who is unable to affect the price at which a product or resource sells by changing the amount it sells (or buys).

Price taker

300

Underallocations of resources occur when the private demand curve understates consumers’ full willingness to pay for a good or service.

Market Failure

300

The inability to keep nonpayers (free riders) from obtaining benefits from a certain good; a characteristic of a public good.

Nonexcludability

400

Inefficiencies in resource allocation are caused by problems in the operation of the public sector (government). Specific examples include the principal-agent problem, the special-interest effect, the collective-action problem, rent seeking, and political corruption.

Government failure

400

This theorem states that Private sector bargaining can solve the externality problem.

Coase theorem

400

An oligopoly in which firms produce a standardized product.

Homogeneous Oligopoly

400

The part of economics involving value judgments about what the economy should be like; focused on which economic goals and policies should be implemented; policy economics.

normative economics

400

The selling of a product to different buyers at different prices when the price differences are not justified by differences in cost

Price discrimination

500

Under this economy, the government is needed to: Protect private property from theft, provide a legal environment for contract enforcement

Laissez-Faire Capitalism

500

A tax is an amount to offset the negative externalities

Pigovian tax

500

The theory of why most oligopolies fail

Prisoner’s Dilemma

500

When the price is equal to the marginal cost.

Socially Optimal Price

500

The possibility that households trying to protect themselves against a recession by saving more may inadvertently worsen the recession and hurt themselves by reducing overall consumption and economic activity

Paradox of thrift

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