Essentials of economics:
Gespeichert in:
Beteiligte Personen: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Harlow [u.a.]
Pearson
2013
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Ausgabe: | 6. ed. |
Schriftenreihe: | Always learning
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Schlagwörter: | |
Links: | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026068800&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
Umfang: | Getr. Zählung Ill., zahlr. graph. Darst., Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780273783794 9780273783879 9780273783800 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Titel: Essentials of economics
Autor: Sloman, John
Jahr: 2013
Detailed contents
Guidedtour xvi 2.2 Supply 31
Student and lecturer resources xxii Supply and price 31
Preface xxvi
INTRODUCTION
The supply curve 31
Other determinatus of supply 32
Publisher s acknowledgements xxx Movements along and shifts in the
supply curve 32
2.3 The determination of price 33
Equilibrium price and Output 33
———¦• —- Movementtoa newequilibrium 35
Economic lSSUes 2 2.4 The free-market economy 42
1.1 The economic problem 3 Advantagesofa free-market economy 42
The problem ofscarcity 3 Problems with a free-market economy 42
Demand and supply 4 2.5 Behavioural economics 43
1.2 Dividing up the subject 4 What is behavioural economics? 43
Macroeconomics 4 Explaining irrational consumer choices 43
Microeconomics 5
1.3 Modelling economic relationships 10
The production possibility curve 10
The circular flow of goods and incomes 12
Techniquesof analysis 13
1.4 Economic Systems 14
The command economy 14
The free-market economy 15
The mixed market economy 19
Chapter 2 Boxes
2.1 Getting satisfaction: Characteristics, Utility and
the demand curve 29
2.2 UK house prices: From raising the roofto
falling through thefloor 36
2.3 Stock market prices: Demand and supply in action 38
2.4 Commodity prices: Riding the commodities
Big Dipper? 40
2.5 Nudging people: How to change behaviour 44
Chapter1 Boxes
1.1 Macroeconomic issues: A historicalperspective 6 3 MarketS in action 47
1.2 The opportunitycostsofstudying economics: 31 price elastidtyof demand 48
Whatareyousacrificing? 8 Measuring the price elasticityof demand 48
1.3 The rise andfall ofplanning in the former Interpreting the figure for elasticity 49
SovietUnion: When everything didn t go Determinants of price elastidtyof demand 49
according to plan 16 3-2 price elastidtyof demand and consumer
1.4 Affording the mixed economy: The sovereign expenditure 50
debtcrisisof the early 2010s 20 3.3 price elastidtyof supply (ft s) 54
The determinants of price elastidty of supply 55
3.4 Other elastidties 55
Income elastidtyof demand 55
_.___ _._ __ . — : —— - Cross-price elastidtyof demand (CeD b) 56
2 Markets, demand and supply 26 35 Marketsandadjustmentovertime a 57
2.1 Demand 27 Short-run and long-run adjustment 57
The relationship between demand and price 27 Price expectations and speculation 57
The demand curve 27 3.6 Uncertainty and risk 61
Other determinants of demand 28 3.7 Markets where prices are controlled 63
Movements along and shifts in the Setting a minimum (high) price 63
demand curve 28 Setting a maximum (low) price 65
MICROECONOMICS
x DETAILED CONTENTS
Chapter 3 Boxes The long-run equilibrium of the firm 97
3.1 The measurement of elasticity 52 Is perfect competition good for consumers? 99
3.2 Advertising and its effects on demand curve: 5.3 Monopoly 100
How to increase sales and price 53 What is a monopoly? 100
3.3 Short selling: Gamblingona fall in share prices 60 Barriere to entry 100
3.4 Problems with insurance markets: Equilibrium price and Output 101
Adverse selection and moral hazard 62 Monopoly versus perfect competition:
3.5 Agriculture and minimum prices: A problem of which best serves the public interest? 101
surpluses 64 Potential competition or Potential monopoly?
3.6 Theeffectofimposingtaxeson goods: The theoryofcontestable markets 102
Who ends up paying? 66 5.4 Monopolistic competition 105
Assumptions 105
4 The Supply dedsion 70 Equilibrium of the firm 106
4.1 Production and costs: Short run 71 Non-price competition 106
Short-run and long-run changes in production 71 Monopolistic competition and the public
Production in the short run: the law of
interest 107
diminishing returns 71 5-5 Oligopoly 108
Measuring costs of production 72 The two keyfeaturesof oligopoly 108
Costs and output 74 Competition and collusion 108
4.2 Production and costs: long run 76 Collusive oligopoly 109
The scale of production 76 Non-collusive oligopoly: the breakdown of
Long-run average cost 79
collusion 113
The relationship between long-run and Non-collusive oligopoly: assumptions about
short-run average cost curves 79
rivals behavtour 113
Long-run cost curves in practice 80 Oligopoly and the consumer 115
Postscript: derision-making in different time 5-6 Garne theory 116
periods 81 Single-move games 116
4.3 Revenue 82 Repeated games 118
TotaL average and marginal revenue 83
5.7 Price discrimination 120
Average and marginal revenue curves when Conditions necessary for price discrimination
price is not affectedby the firm s Output 83 tooperate 121
Average and marginal revenue curves when Advantages to the firm 121
price varies with output 84 Price discrimination and the consumer 121
Shifts in revenue curves 85
Chapter 5 Boxes
4.4 Profit maximisation 85 c-i F-mmmerre- Anrtiirnnfnnwer tnthp nennb?
Some qualifications 86
4.5 Problems with traditionaltheory 88
5.1 E-commerce: A return of power to the people? 98
5.2 Breaking Sky s monopoly on live premier
leaguefootball: The impactofopening up
Explaining irrational producer choices 88 tne mm^ i
Chapter 4 Boxes 5-3 OEPC-the rise and and fall and riseagainof
4.1 Diminishing returns in the bread shop: a cartel: The history °fthe mMs most
Is the baker using his loaf? 72
103
famouscartel 110
4.2 Malthus and the dismalsäenceof economics: 5A The prisoners dilemma 118
Population growth + diminishing returns = 5-5 Profit-maximising prices and output for a price
starvation 73 discriminating firm: Identijying different prices
4.3 The relationship between averages and marginals 76 in different markets 122
4.4 Minimum efficient scale: The exent of economics
of scale in practice so 6 Wagesand the distribution of income 125
4.5 The logicoflogistics-.Drivingup profits 88 61 wage determination in a perfect market 126
Perfect labour markets 126
Market structures 93 The supply of labour 126
5.1 The degreeof competition 94 The demand for labour: the marginal
5.2 Perfect competition 95 productivity theory 128
Assumptions 95 Wages and profits under perfect competition 129
The short-run equilibrium of the firm 96 6.2 Wage determination in imperfect markets 130
The short-run supply curve 96 Firms with power 130
DETAILED CONTENTS xi
The role of trade unions 131 Market failures 166
Bilateral monopoly 131 Policy alternatives 167
The efficiency wage hypothesis 133 How much can we rely on govemments? 170
6.3 Causes of inequality 134
Inequality in the UK 134
Causes of inequality 137
6.4 The redistribution of income 139
Taxation 139
Benefits 141
The tax/benefit System and the problem of
disincentives: the poverty trap 142
Chapter 7 Boxes
7.1 Should health-care Provision be left to the market?
A case of multiple market failures 156
7.2 Regulating privatised industries: Is it the best way
of dealing with their monopoly power? 160
7.3 Green taxes: Their growing popularity in
the industrialised world 168
7.4 Trading our way out ofclimate change:
Chapter 6 Boxes The EU carbon trading System 171
6.1 Labour market trends: Patterns in employment 127 7.5 The problem of urban traffic congestion:
6.2 Wages under bilateral monopoly: All toplay for? 132 Does Singapore have the answer? 172
6.3 Equal payfor equal work? Wage inequalities
between men and women 136
6.4 Minimum wage legislation: A way ofhelping
thepoor? 138 ...... ......... ....................... .................
6.5 UK tax credits: An escape from the poverty trap? 143 8 Aggregate demand and the national
economy 178
Market failures and government policy 147 8A introduction to macroeconomics 179
Key macroeconomic issues 179
MACROECONOMICS
7.1 Social efficiency 148
7.2 Market failures: externalities and public goods 149
Externalities 149
Public goods 151
7.3 Market failures: monopoly power 152
Deadweight loss under monopoly 152
Conclusions 154
7.4 Other market failures 154
Ignorance and uncertainty 154
Protecting people s interests 154
The principal-agent problem 155
Immobility of factors and time lags in response 155
Macroeconomic goals 157
How far can economists go in advising
govemments? 157
7.5 Government intervention: taxes and subsidies 157
The use of taxes and subsidies 157
Advantages of taxes and subsidies 158
Disadvantages of taxes and subsidies 158
7.6 Government intervention: laws and regulation 159
Laws prohibiting or regulating undesirable
structures or behaviour 159
Regulatory bodies 160
7.7 Otherformsof government intervention 162
Changes in property rights 162
Provision of information 163
The direct Provision of goods and Services 163
7.8 More or less intervention? 164
Drawbacks of government intervention 164
Advantagesof the free market 165 Chapter 8 Boxes
Should there be more or less intervention 8.1 The household sedor balance sheet:
in the market? 165 The balance sheet 190
7.9 The environment: a case study in market failure 166 8.2 Sentiment and spending: Spending to
The environmental problem 166 be happy or happy to be spending? 192
8.2 The circular flow of income model 182
The inner flow, withdrawals and injections 183
The relationship between withdrawals and
injections 185
The circular flow of income and the
four macroeconomic objectives 185
Disequilibrium and a chain reaction 185
8.3 The componentsof aggregate demand 186
Household consumption 186
Investment 188
Government expenditure 189
Imports and exports 189
8.4 The equilibrium levelof national income 194
Showing equilibrium with a Keynesian diagram 194
The withdrawals and injections approach 195
The income and expenditure approach 195
8.5 The multiplier 196
The withdrawals and injections approach 196
The income and expenditure approach 197
The multiplier: a numericalIllustration 198
Appendix: Measuring national income
and output 198
The product method 198
The income method 199
The expenditure method 199
From GDP to national income 201
Households disposable income 201
Taking account of inflation 202
xii DETAILED CONTENTS
8.3 The distinction between real and nominal values: 10.4 The demand for money 254
Working out whatis real 202 What determines the sizeof the demand
8.4 Tryingto makesenseof economic data: for money? 255
The apparently puzzling case ofJapanese GDP 203 10.5 Equilibrium 256
Equilibrium in the money market 256
9 Aggregate supply and economic grOWth 206 The link between the money and goods markets 257
9.1 The/10/AJmodel 207 Chapter 10 Boxes
The aggregate demand curve 207 10.1 Financial intermediation: What isitthatbanksdo? 233
The aggregate supply curve 208 10.2 The growth of banks balance sheets: The rise
Equilibrium 208 ofwholesale funding 235
9.2 Introdudng economic growth 209 10.3 Residential mortgages andsecuritisation:
The distinction between actual and Was this the cause ofthe credit crunch? 240
Potential growth 210 10.4 Responses to the credit crunch: Cleansing
9.3 Short-term economic growth and the banking System 244
the business cycle 212 10.5 Credit and money supply: Who sdriving the M4? 252
The businesscycle in practice 213 ^ Inflation and unemployment 261
9.4 Explanations ofthe business cycle 214
Fluctuations in aggregate demand 214
Fluctuations in aggregate supply 217
Finance and trade 218
9.5 Long-term economic growth 218
Growth over the decades 218
Comparing the growth Performance of
different countries 219
9.6 Explanations of long-term growth 220
The causes of economic growth 220
Capital accumulation 220
Technological progress 222
Endogenous growth theory 223
11.1 Inflation 262
Introduction to the causes of inflation 263
11.2 Money supply, aggregate demand and inflation 265
The equation of exchange 265
Money supply and aggregate demand 266
Inflation and changes in aggregate demand 267
11.3 Unemployment 272
The meaningof unemployment 272
Offidal measures of unemployment 273
Unemployment and the labour market 274
Types of disequilibrium unemployment 275
Equilibrium unemployment (or natural
unemployment) 278
Chapter 9 Boxes 11.4 The relationship between inflation and
9.1 Output gaps: An alternative measure ofexcess unemployment: the short run 280
or defiaent demand 210 The recessionary gap 280
9.2 The accelerator: an example: Demonstrating The inflationary gap 280
theinstabilityofinvestment 216 Policy implications 281
9.3 Getting intensive with physical capital: The Phillips curve 281
How quickly does it grow? 224 11.5 The relationship between inflation and
9.4 Labour productivity: How effective is unemployment: introdudng expectations: What
UK labour? 226 happens when people come to expect inflation? 284
The expectations-augmented Phillips curve 284
10 Banking, money and interest rates 230 The acceierationisttheory 285
10.1 The meaning and functionsof money 231 The long-run Phillips curve and the equilibrium
The functionsof money 231 rate of unemployment 286
What shouldcountas money? 231 Rational expectations 286
10.2 The finandal System 232 Keynesian views 287
The keyroleof banks in the monetary n-6 Inflation rate targeting and unemployment 287
svstem 232 Long-term changes in unemployment 288
Liquidity, profitability and capital adequacy 237 Inflation targeting 289
The central bank 242 Chapter 11 Boxes
The role ofthe money markets 244 11.1 Hyperinflation: When prices gocrazy.isit the
10.3 The supply of money 248 money supply? 268
The creationof credit 248 11.2 The costs of unemployment Isit just the
The creation of credit: the real world 249 unemployed who suffer? 273
What causes money supply to rise? 251 11.3 The durationof unemployment: Takinga dip in
The relationship between money supply the unemployment pool 276
and the rate of interest 253 11.4 Mind the gap: Do output gaps explain inflation? 282
DETAILED CONTENTS xiii
12 Macroeconomic policy 293 Other reasons for gains from trade 336
12.1 Fiscal policy 294 The terms of trade 337
Defidtsandsurpluses 294 13 3 Arguments for restricting trade 338
The useof fiscal policy 295 Arguments in favourof restricting trade 338
The effectivenessof fiscal policy 297 Problems with protection 340
Problems ofmagnitude 297 13 4 The world trading System and the WTO 342
The problem oftiming 298 13 5 Trading blocs 344
Fiscal rules 303 Typesof preferential trading arrangement 344
12.2 Monetary policy 304 The directeffectsofacustomsunion:
The policy setting 304 trade creation and trade diversion 345
Control ofthe money supply over the medium Longer-term effects of a customs union 345
and long term 304
Preferential trading in practice 346
Short-term monetary measures 305 13 6 The European Union 347
From customs union to common market 347
Techniques to control the money supply 306
Techniques to control interest rates 309
Using monetary policy
12.3 Demand-side policy 313
Attitudestowards demand management 313 13J Trade and developing countries 351
The benefits and costs ofthe Single market 349
-1 _ Completing the internal market 350
The effect ofthe newmember states 350
The case for rules and policy frameworks 313
Trade strategies 351
The case for discretion 313 Approach 1: Exporting primaries - exploiting
Difficulties with choice of target under a
comparative advantage 351
. . . ,. ,„, Approach 2: Import-substituting
rules-based policy 314 rr r a
_..... ^ ... .,,. ,„, industrialisation (ISI) 352
Constrained discretion in the UK 314 v
r. . ..... ... r .... Approach 3: Exporting manufactures - the way
Fiscal consolidation and the Coalition rr r * j
,., forward? 354
government 317
12.4 Supply-side policy 318 Chapter 13 Boxes
Market-orientated supply-side polides 318 13.1 Doctor, the world has caught a coldl Global
Interventionist supply-side polides 320 answers to global problems? 330
13.2 Trading places: Patterns and trends in world trade 334
13.3 Do we exploitforeign workers by buying cheap
foreign Imports? 339
13.4 The Doha Development Agenda: A new direction
for the WTO? 343
13.5 Features ofthe Single market 348
13.6 The Chinese economic miracle :
Riding the dragon 356
Chapter12 Boxes
12.1 UKand US fiscal policy during and öfter
thefinancial crisis: From fiscal expansion to
fiscal consolidation 298
12.2 The evolving fiscal frameworks in the UK and
eurozone: Constraining government discretion
over fiscal policy 300
12.3 The daily Operation of monetary policy:
What goes on at Threadneedle Street? 307
12.4 Monetary policy in the eurozone: The roleof 14 Balance ofpayments and exchange rates 361
the ECB 308 14.1 Thebalanceof payments account 362
12.5 Quantitative easing: Rethinking monetary The current account 362
policy in hard times 311 The capital account 363
The finandal account 364
14.2 Exchange rates 365
Determination ofthe rate of exchange in
•-—~ . _.,..__ __,. ^ ^^ market 367
13 Globalisation and international trade 328 143 Exchange rates and thebalanceof payments 368
13.1 Global interdependence 329 Exchange rates and the balance of payments:
Interdependence through trade 329 no government or central bankintervention 368
Finandal interdependence 332 Exchange rates and the balance of payments:
Global policy response 332 with government or central bank
13.2 The advantagesoftrade 332 Intervention 369
Trading patterns 332 14.4 Fixed versus floating exchange rates 370
Spedalisationas the basis for trade 333 Advantagesof fixed exchange rates 370
The gains from trade based on comparative Disadvantages of fixed exchange rates 371
advantage 336 Advantagesofafree-floating exchange rate 371
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
xiv DETAILED CONTENTS
Disadvantagesofafree-floating exchange rate 372 Chapter 14 Boxes
Exchange rates in practice 373 14.1 Dealing in foreign currencies: A daify juggling act 369
14.5 The origins ofthe euro 376 14.2 The importanceof international finandal
TheERM 376 movements: How a current account defiat can
The Maastricht Treaty and the road to the Single coindde with an appredating exchange rate 372
currency 377 14.3 The euro/dollar see-saw: Ups and downs in
14.6 Economic and monetary union (EMU) in the currency market 374
Europe 3 78 14.4 Optimal currency areas: When it pays to pay in
Birth ofthe euro 378 the same currency 380
How desirable is EMU? 378
14.7 Debt and developing countries 381 Web appendix W:l
The oilshocks ofthe 1970s 382 Keyideasand glossary K:l
Dealing with the debt 383 Index 1:1
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Sloman, John 1947- Garratt, Dean 1970- |
author_GND | (DE-588)121722988 (DE-588)171497287 |
author_facet | Sloman, John 1947- Garratt, Dean 1970- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Sloman, John 1947- |
author_variant | j s js d g dg |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV041092229 |
classification_rvk | QC 072 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)854728348 (DE-599)BVBBV041092229 |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 6. ed. |
format | Book |
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genre | 1\p (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content 2\p (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV041092229 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-20T16:30:35Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780273783794 9780273783879 9780273783800 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-026068800 |
oclc_num | 854728348 |
open_access_boolean | |
physical | Getr. Zählung Ill., zahlr. graph. Darst., Kt. |
publishDate | 2013 |
publishDateSearch | 2013 |
publishDateSort | 2013 |
publisher | Pearson |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Always learning |
spellingShingle | Sloman, John 1947- Garratt, Dean 1970- Essentials of economics Volkswirtschaftslehre (DE-588)4078943-3 gnd Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4078943-3 (DE-588)4039225-9 (DE-588)4151278-9 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | Essentials of economics |
title_auth | Essentials of economics |
title_exact_search | Essentials of economics |
title_full | Essentials of economics John Sloman ; Dean Garratt |
title_fullStr | Essentials of economics John Sloman ; Dean Garratt |
title_full_unstemmed | Essentials of economics John Sloman ; Dean Garratt |
title_short | Essentials of economics |
title_sort | essentials of economics |
topic | Volkswirtschaftslehre (DE-588)4078943-3 gnd Mikroökonomie (DE-588)4039225-9 gnd |
topic_facet | Volkswirtschaftslehre Mikroökonomie Einführung Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026068800&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT slomanjohn essentialsofeconomics AT garrattdean essentialsofeconomics |