Top Banner
Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi State University, & Virtual Economics
75

Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Dec 21, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Microeconomics

James B. Wilcox

Resources provided by:

The University of Southern MississippiCenter for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education,

Mississippi State University, & Virtual Economics

Page 2: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Economics…is the study of how individuals and society choose, with or without the use of money, to employ scarce productive resources to produce various commodities over time and distribute them for consumption, now and in the future, among various people and groups in a society.

Page 3: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

The Economic Way of Thinking:Three Activities to Demonstrate Marginal Analysis 2

5

9

12

14

15

15

14

2

3

4

3

2

1

0

-1

Page 4: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.
Page 5: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.
Page 6: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.
Page 7: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.
Page 8: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

MTE Microeconomics

© 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning

Page 9: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

99

Production and Costs

• Producers: Maximize profit• Opportunity cost

– All resources have an opportunity cost

• Explicit costs– Payments for resources

• Implicit costs – Opportunity cost of resources owned by

the firm / firm owners

– No cash payment

Page 10: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Alternative Measures of Profit

• Accounting profit– Total revenue minus explicit costs

• Economic profit– Total revenue minus all costs (implicit and

explicit)• Opportunity cost of all resources

• Normal profit– “Accounting profit in excess of normal profit”

• Accounting profit = Economic + Normal profit10

Page 11: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Production in the Short Run

• Variable resources– Can be varied quickly

• Fixed resources – Cannot be altered easily

• Short run– At least one resource is fixed

• Long run – No resource is fixed

11

Page 12: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns

• Total product: total output produced • Production function

– Relationship between amount of resources employed and total product

• Marginal product: the change in total product resulting from a one-unit increase in a resource employed by the firm

12

Page 13: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns

• Increasing marginal returns: the MP of a variable resource increases as each additional unit of the resource is put into action

• Diminishing marginal returns – Marginal product decreases

• Law of diminishing marginal returns: as more of a variable resource is added to a given amount of a fixed resource, MP eventually begins to decline 13

Page 14: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 3The total and marginal product of labor

14

5

10

15

Tot

al p

rodu

ct

(to

ns/d

ay)

5 10 Workers per day0

5 10 Workers per day

1

3

5

Mar

gina

l pro

duct

(to

ns/d

ay)

0

2

4

Total

product

Marginal product

Negative

marginal

returns

Diminishing but

positive

marginal returns

Increasing

marginal

returns

(a) Total product

(b) Marginal product

Page 15: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Costs in the Short Run

• Fixed cost (TFC): any production costs that a firm incurs even when it is not producing output; Ex: overhead—rent, insurance, property taxes

• Variable cost (TVC) any production costs that change as output changes; TVC = 0 when the firm is not producing any output; Ex.: labor costs

15

Page 16: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Costs in the Short Run

• Total cost TC = TFC + TVC• Marginal cost MC = ∆TC/∆q

• Change in TC to produce one more unit of output

– Changes in MC reflect changes in marginal productivity

– Increasing marginal returns• MC falls

– Diminishing marginal returns• MC increases 16

Page 17: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 4Short-run TC and MC data for Smoother Mover

17

(1)Tons moved

per day(q)

(2)Fixed cost(FC)

(3)Workers per day

(4)Variable

cost(VC)

(5)Total cost

(TC=FC+VC)

(6)Marginal cost

MC=∆TC/∆q

0259

121415

$200 200 200 200 200 200 200

0123456

$0100200300400500600

Page 18: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

18

(1)Tons moved

per day(q)

(2)Fixed cost(FC)

(3)Workers per day

(4)Variable

cost(VC)

(5)Total cost

(TC=FC+VC)

(6)Marginal cost

MC=∆TC/∆q

0259

121415

$200 200 200 200 200 200 200

0123456

$0100200300400500600

$200 300 400 500 600 700 800

-$50.00 33.33 25.00 33.33 50.55 100.00

•SR TC and MC data for Smoother Mover

Page 19: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 5TC and MC curves for Smoother Mover

19

200

$500

Tot

al d

olla

rs

25

Cos

t per

ton

$50Marginal cost

9 15 Tons per day0 63 12

Fixed cost

Total cost

Tons per day0 9 1563 12

Variable costFixed

cost

FC = $200 at all levels of output

VC starts from origin; increases slowly at first;

with diminishing returns, VC increases rapidly

TC is the vertical sum of FC and VC

MC first declines: increasing marginal returns;

then increases: diminishing marginal returns

Page 20: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Average Cost in the Short Run

• Average variable cost AVC = VC/q• Average total cost ATC = TC/q• When MC < average cost

– The marginal pulls down the average

• When MC > average cost– The marginal pulls up the average

• U-shape of average cost curves– Law of diminishing marginal returns

20

Page 21: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 7Average and marginal cost curves; Smoother Movers

21

0 5 10 15 Tons per day

$150

125

100

75

50

25

Cos

t pe

r to

n

ATC

AVC

MC

ATC and AVC: decline,

reach low points, then rise.

When MC is below AVC (ATC),

AVC (ATC) is falling

When MC = AVC (ATC), AVC (ATC) is at its minimum.

When MC is above AVC (ATC),

AVC (ATC) is increasing.

Page 22: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Perfect Competition

© 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning

Page 23: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

2323

What is Market Structure?

• Market structure– Number of suppliers

– Product’s degree of uniformity

– Ease of entry into the market

– Forms of competition among forms

• Industry– All firms supplying output to a market

Page 24: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Types of Market Structure

• Perfect Competition: many sellers; horizontal demand curve

• Monopoly: one seller• Monopolistic Competition: many

sellers; downward-sloping demand curve• Oligopoly: few sellers

24

Page 25: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Perfectly Competitive Market Structure

• Many buyers and sellers• Commodity; standardized product• Fully informed buyers and sellers• No barriers to entry• Individual buyer or seller

– No control over priceprice-taker

25

Page 26: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Demand Under Perfect Competition

• Market price– Determined by market demand and

supply. All firms must use this price on their products.

• Demand curve facing one supplier– Horizontal line at the market price

– Perfectly elastic

26

Page 27: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Short Run Profit Maximization

• Maximize economic profit– Choose the quantity at which total

revenue (TR) exceeds total cost (TC) by the greatest amount

– TR = PxQ

• Profit = TR – TC

27

Page 28: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Golden Rule of Profit Maximization

• Marginal revenue: the change in TR from selling an additional unit– ∆TR/∆q

• MR = P = AR (perfect competition)• Golden rule: produce where MR = MC

– Expand output: MR>MC

– Stop before MC>MR

28

Page 29: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 2

• Short-run cost and revenue; perfectly competitive firm

29

(1)Bushels of wheat

per day;(q)

(2)MarginalRevenue

(Price); (p)

(3)Total

Revenue(TR=q×p)

(4)TotalCost(TC)

(5)Marginal

CostMC=∆TC/∆q

(6)Average

Total costATC=TC/q

(7)Economic

Profit or LossTR-TC

0123456789

10111213141516

-$5555555555555555

$05

101520253035404550556065707580

$15.0019.7523.5026.5029.0031.0032.5033.7535.2537.2540.0043.2548.0054.5064.0077.5096.00

-$4.753.753.002.502.001.501.251.502.002.753.254.756.509.50

13.5018.50

-$19.7511.758.837.256.205.424.824.414.144.003.934.004.194.575.176.00

-$15.00-14.75-13.50-11.50-9.00-6.00-2.501.254.757.75

10.0011.7512.0010.506.00-2.50-16.00

Page 30: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Monopoly

© 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning

Page 31: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Barriers to Entry

• Monopoly– Sole supplier of a product with no close

substitutes

• Barriers to entry1.Legal restrictions such as a patent

2.Economies of scale – natural monopoly with a downward sloping LRAC

3.Control of essential resources – EX: DeBeers Consolidated Mines (diamonds)

31

Page 32: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Firm’s Costs and Profit Maximization

• Monopolist– Choose the price

– OR the quantity

– ‘Price maker’

• Profit maximization– TR minus TC

– Supply quantity where TR exceeds TC by the greatest amount

– MR equals MC32

Page 33: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 5

• Short-run costs and revenue for a monopolist

33

(1)Diamonds

per day(Q)

(2)Price(AR)(p)

(3)Total

RevenueTR=p×Q

(4)Marginal Revenue

MR=∆TR/∆Q

(5)TotalCost(TC)

(6)Marginal

Cost(MC)

(7)Average

Total costATC=TC/q

(8)Total profit

or loss(=TR-TC)

0123456789

1011121314151617

$7,7507,5007,2507,0006,7506,5006,2506,0005,7505,5005,2505,0004,7504,5004,2504,0003,7503,500

0$7,50014,50021,00027,00032,50037,50042,00046,00049,50052,50055,00057,00058,50059,50060,00060,00059,500

-$7,5007,0006,5006,0005,5005,0004,5004,0003,5003,0002,5002,0001,5001,000500

0-500

$15,00019,75023,50026,50029,00031,00032,50033,75035,25037,25040,00043,25048,00054,50064,00077,50096,000121,000

-$4,7503,7503,0002,5002,0001,5001,2501,5002,0002,7503,2504,7506,5009,500

13,50018,50025,000

-$19,75011,7508,8337,7506,2005,4204,8204,4104,1404,0003,9304,0004,1904,5705,1706,0007,120

-$15,000-12,250-9,000-5,500-2,0001,5005,0008,25010,75012,25012,50011,7509,0004,000-4,500-17,500-36,000-61,500

Page 34: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Monopolistic Competition

and Oligopoly

Page 35: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Monopolistic Competition

• Characteristics– Many producers

– Low barriers to entry

– Slightly different products• A firm that raises prices: lose some

customers to rivals

– Some control over price ‘Price makers’• Downward sloping D curve

– Act independently35

Page 36: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Monopolistic Competition

• Product differentiation– Physical differences

• Appearance; quality

– Location• Spatial differentiation

– Services

– Product image• Promotion; advertising

36

Page 37: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Oligopoly

• Few sellers• Barriers to entry

– Economies of scale

– Legal restrictions

– Brand names

– Control over an essential resource

– High cost of entry• Start-up costs; advertising

• Crowding out the competition37

Page 38: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Collusion and Cartels

• Collusion– Agreement among firms to

• Divide the market• Fix the price

• Cartel– Group of firms that agree to collude

• Act as monopoly• Increase economic profit

• Illegal in U.S.38

Page 39: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Comparisons Across Market Structures

CharacteristicsPerfect Competition

Monopolistic Competition

Oligopoly Monopoly

Sellers Many Many Few One

Products Identical Close substitutes, but not identical

Identical (ex: oil) ORDifferent (ex: cereal)

No close substitutes

Prices Price-taker Price-maker Price-maker Price-maker

Entry and Exit No barriers No barriers Barriers Barriers

Demand horizontal Downward-sloping

Downward-sloping

Downward-sloping

Profits MR=MC MR=MC MR=MC MR=MC

Long-Run Economic Profits

Zero Zero Greater than zero

Greater than zero

39

Page 40: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Public Goods

and Public Choice

© 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning

Page 41: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Characteristics of Pure Public Goods

• Nonrival: more than one person can consume the good or service at the same timeMC of an additional user is zero

• Nonexcludable: difficult or impossible to exclude others from deriving the benefits of the public good

41

Page 42: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Private, Public Goods, and in Between

1. Private goods– Rival in consumption

– Exclusive

– Provided by private sector

2. Public goods– Nonrival in consumption

– Nonexclusive

– Provided by government

42

Page 43: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Private, Public Goods, and in Between

3. Natural monopoly– Nonrival but exclusive

– With congestion: private goods

– Provided by private sector or government

4. Open-access good– Rival but nonexclusive

– Regulated by government

43

Page 44: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 1

• Categories of goods

44

Page 45: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Paying for Public Goods

• Tax = marginal valuation– Free-rider problem

• People try to benefit from the public goods without paying for them

– Ability to pay

45

Page 46: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Externalities

and the Environment

© 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning

Page 47: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Externality

• Externality—costs or benefits from the production process that are not reflected in the market price and affect the welfare of others not necessarily using the product or service.

• Externalities can be positive (reflecting a benefit) or negative (reflecting a cost.)

47

Page 48: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Negative versus Positive• Person smoking in a crowded room• Firm producing honey located next to an

apple orchard• Person talking loudly on their cell phone

at the table next to yours• Colorful English country garden in your

next door neighbor’s yard• Pollution from a coal-burning utility plant

48

Page 49: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Negative Externality

• Marginal Private Cost (MPC): private costs of production such as wages, costs of materials, rent, insurance, taxes, etc.

• Marginal External Cost (MEC): valuation of marginal damage caused by negative externality

• Marginal Social Cost (MSC):

= MPC + MEC

49

Page 50: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 1

50

0.10

$0.14

Dol

lars

per

kilo

wat

t-ho

ur

Marginal

social cost Marginal private cost; 50 million kilowatt-hours of electricity are produced per month.

The marginal external cost of production is imposed on society.

350 Millions of kilowatt-hours

of electricity per month50

Marginal

private cost

D

a

c

Marginal social cost; only 35 millions kilowatts-hour are produced, which is the optimal output.

Marginal social cost curve includes marginal private cost and marginal external cost.

Total social gain

b

Page 51: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Public Responses to Negative Externalities

• Tax the polluter: levy a tax on each level of output produced by the polluter in an amount equal to the MEC inflicted at the socially efficient level of output.

• Subsidize the polluter: pay the polluter not to pollute

• Environmental regulation: Government tells the polluter to reduce pollution or face sanctions (1990 Clean Air Act)

51

Page 52: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Public Responses to Negative Externalities

• Economic efficiency approach: marketable permits—government sells producers permits to pollute (pollution rights)

52

Page 53: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Positive Externality

• Marginal Private Benefit (MPB): private benefits of production or consumption

• Marginal External Benefit (MEB): valuation of marginal benefit created by positive externality

• Marginal social benefit = MPB + MEB

53

Page 54: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Positive Externalities

• Beneficial externalities• Education

– Personal benefits

– Benefits to society• Positive externality

• Public policy– To increase quantity beyond private

optimum

54

Page 55: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 7

• Education and positive externalities

55

E0 E’ Quantity of

education per period

Dol

lars

per

uni

t

DMarginal

private benefit

D’

Marginal

social benefit

SMarginal

cost

e’

e

No government intervention: equilibrium quantity of education (E); marginal private benefit of education equals the marginal cost as reflected by the supply curve.

Education also confers a positive externality on the rest of society, so the social benefit exceeds the private benefits.

At E, the marginal social benefit exceeds the marginal cost, so more education increases social welfare.

In this situation, government tries to increase education to E’, where the marginal social benefit equals the marginal cost.

Page 56: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Income Distribution

and Poverty

© 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning

Page 57: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Income Distribution by Quintiles

• Distribution of income– U.S. households

– Ranked by income

– Five groups of equal size (quintiles)

• Percentage of income received in 1970– Poorest 20% of population

• 4.1% of income

– Richest 20% of population• 43.3% of income

57

Page 58: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 1

• Share of aggregate household income by quintile: 1970, 1980, 1990, and 2005

58

Page 59: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Income Distribution by Quintiles

• Richest 20% of population– Increased share of income

– Two-earner households

• Poorest 20% of population– Decreased share of income

– Single-parent household

59

Page 60: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

The Lorenz Curve

• Lorenz curve: graphical representation of the size of the income distribution

• The diagonal line represents equal distribution or perfect income equality. Each 20 percent of the population receives 20 percent of total income.

60

Page 61: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 2: Lorenz Curve

61

Households (cumulative percent)

Inco

me

(cum

ulat

ive

perc

ent)

1970

2005

a

bEqual d

istrib

ution

Lorenz curve: convenient way of showing the % of total income received by any given % of households when households are arrayed from smallest to largest.

Point a: in 1970, the bottom 80% of households received 56.7% of all income.

Point b: in 2005, the share of all income going to the bottom 80% of households was lower than in 1970.

If income were evenly distributed across households, the Lorenz curve would be a straight line.

Page 62: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Why Incomes Differ

• Number of household members working• Education, ability, job experience• Productivity• High-income household

• Well-educated couple; both spouses employed

• Low-income household• One person living alone• Single-parent, female• Poorly educated

62

Page 63: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

A College Education Pays More

• Median wage, past 20 years– Only high-school diploma: decreased 6%

• Industry deregulation; declining unionization• Information technology

– College degree: increased 12%• Information technology• Higher rewards for education

63

Page 64: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Redistribution Programs

• Official U.S. poverty level– Family of four: $19,971 in 2005

– $13.70 per person per day

– Pretax money income– Includes cash transfers– Excludes value of non-cash transfers

» Food stamps; Medicaid; Subsidized housing» Employer-provided health insurance

– Recessions: Increase in poverty

• International poverty line: • $1 per person per day 64

Page 65: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Exhibit 3 (1959-2005)

• Number and percentage of US population in poverty

65

Page 66: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Social Insurance

1. Social security

2. Medicare

3. Unemployment insurance

4. Workers’ compensation• Deducted from workers’ pay

– Aimed at people with work history

• Income redistribution • From rich to poor • From young to old 66

Page 67: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Income Assistance

• Welfare programs• Means-tested program: only individuals

with incomes below a certain level qualify

1.Cash transfers programs– Temporary assistance for needy families:

TANF replaced AFDC

– Supplemental security income

– General assistance aid

– Earned-income tax credit67

Page 68: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Income Assistance

2. In-kind transfer programs– Medicaid: basic medical care for the poor

– Food stamps

– Housing assistance

– Support for day care, school lunches

– Energy assistance

– Education and training

68

Page 69: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Percent of population living in poverty by state

69

Page 70: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Welfare Reform

• Welfare-to-work programs• 1997: Temporary assistance for needy

families– States: more control

• Maximum time to receive benefits: 5 years• Work participation rates: must work after 2

years of receiving benefits• Benefit levels are reduced less than dollar

for dollar when one obtains a job

70

Page 71: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Welfare-to-work is working?

• Welfare recipients– Declined 71% below the peak

• Increased employment among mothers – Higher income

• Increased welfare spending per recipient• Earned-income tax credit• Higher price of going on welfare

71

Page 72: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Statistics from U.S. GAO

Page 73: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Andrea’s SoftwareBusiness

73

Page 74: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

74

$60

$60

$60

$60

$60

$60

$60

$60

$145

$180

$210

$245

$285

$330

$385

$525

$35

$30

$35

$40

$45

$55

$65

$112

$168

$224

$56

$56

$56

$56

$56

$56

$56

$280

$336

$392

$448

$560

$56

$56

$56

$56

$56

$56

$56

-$49 (loss)-$33 (loss)

$14 (profit)

$35 (profit)

$62 (profit)

$63 (profit)

$54 (profit)

$35 (profit)

Page 75: Microeconomics James B. Wilcox Resources provided by: The University of Southern Mississippi Center for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education, Mississippi.

Microeconomics

James B. Wilcox

Resources provided by:

The University of Southern MississippiCenter for Economic and Entrepreneurship Education,

Mississippi State University, & Virtual Economics