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Super-normal fun with definitions for IAL.  Anything with an * means you should know where and how it relates to diagrams.  Anything with a & means.

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Presentation on theme: "Super-normal fun with definitions for IAL.  Anything with an * means you should know where and how it relates to diagrams.  Anything with a & means."— Presentation transcript:

1 Super-normal fun with definitions for IAL

2  Anything with an * means you should know where and how it relates to diagrams.  Anything with a & means you don’t really need the definition as such – just examples.

3 Costs

4  Average costs*

5  Fixed costs*

6  Variable costs*

7  Marginal Costs*

8  Implicit costs

9  Explicit costs

10  Sunk costs

11  The law of diminishing marginal returns* also known as diminishing marginal productivity.

12  Economics of Scale*

13  Internal economies of scale

14  External economies of scale

15  Diseconomies of scale*

16  Synergies &

17 Vertical integration

18  Backward vertical integration

19  Forward vertical integration

20  Horizontal integration

21  Organic growth

22  Demerger

23  Short term

24  Long term

25  Shut down/leave market point in the short term*

26  Shut down/leave market in the long term point*.

27 Revenue

28  Average revenue*

29  Marginal Revenue*

30  Total Revenue*

31  Normal profit*

32  Supernormal profit*

33  Perfect Competition*

34  Imperfect competition/monopolistic competition*

35  Oligopoly*

36  Concentration ratio*

37  Monopoly*

38  Legal Monopoly

39  Natural Monopoly

40  Monopsony

41  Profit maximisation*

42  Revenue Maximisation*

43  Sales Maximisation*

44  Profit satisficing

45  Product differentiation

46  Interdependence

47  Price maker

48  Price taker

49  Contestable markets

50  Credible threat

51  Barriers to entry

52  Barriers to exit&

53  Productive efficiency*

54  Allocative Efficiency*

55  Kinked demand curve*

56  Collusion

57  Formal (overt) collusion

58  Tacit collusion

59 Pricing Strategies

60  Limit Pricing

61  Premium pricing

62  Predatory Pricing

63  Loss leader

64  Penetration pricing

65  Psychological pricing

66  Price discrimination*

67  First degree price discrimination

68  Second degree price discrimination

69  Third degree price discrimination*

70  Office of Fair Trading and the Competition Commission – now the CMA – the Competition and Markets Austhority

71  Competitive tendering

72  International Competitiveness:

73  Unit Labour Cost

74  Transnational Corporation

75  Transfer pricing

76 Costs

77  Average costs*  Total costs divided by output.

78  Fixed costs*  Costs that do not vary with output.

79  Variable costs*  Costs which vary with output.

80  Marginal Cost*  The cost of producing one extra unit of output.

81  Implicit costs  an economic cost which a firm does not pay for with money to another firm but is the opportunity cost of factors of production which the firm itself owns.

82  Explicit costs  Explicit costs represent clear, obvious cash outflows from a business that reduce its bottom-line profitability.

83  Sunk costs  A cost that has already been incurred and no part of it can be recovered.

84  The law of diminishing marginal returns  This states when you have a fixed factor, and you add a variable factor to that in the production process – the return will eventually begin to diminish.

85  Economics of Scale  Cost benefits due to expansion.

86  Diseconomies of scale  Rising average costs as a firm gets too big.

87  Internal economies of scale  Costs benefits that an individual firm can enjoy as it expands.

88  External economies of scale  The costs benefits that all firms in an industry can enjoy when the industry expands.

89  Synergies&

90 Vertical integration

91  Backward vertical integration  Merging with a firm which operates at an earlier stage of the production process – that is further away from the consumer

92  Forward vertical integration  Merging with a firm which operates in a later stage of the production process – that is closer to the consumer.

93  Horizontal integration  Horizontal merger is a type of merger between two firms in the same industry at the same stage of production.

94  Organic growth  Organic growth is the process of business expansion by increased output, customer base expansion or by launching new products.

95  Demerger  A single business is broken into separate components.

96  Short term  When at least one factor of production is fixed.

97  Long term  When all factors of production are variable.

98  Shut down/leave market point in the short term*  A firm will implement a production shutdown if the revenue from the sale of goods produced cannot cover the variable costs of production.

99  Shut down/leave market in the long term point*.  A firm will implement a production shutdown in the long run if the revenue from the sale of goods produced cannot cover the total costs of production.

100 Revenue

101  Average revenue*  Total revenue divided by number of units sold.

102  Marginal Revenue*  Revenue earned from selling one extra unit of output.

103  Total Revenue*

104  Normal profit*  Normal profit is the minimum level of profit needed so that a firm will remain in the market.

105  Supernormal profit*  Abnormal (or supernormal or economic) profit – the profit over and above normal profit.

106  Perfect Competition*  No need for definition – just know the conditions for perfect competition.

107  Imperfect competition/monopolistic competition*  No need for definition – just know the conditions for perfect competition.

108  Oligopoly*  A market structure dominated by a few large firms.

109  Concentration ratio*  Know what it is and how to calculate it.

110  Monopoly*  A market structure dominated by one large firm.

111  Legal Monopoly  A situation whereby a firm controls 25% of more of the market share.

112  Natural Monopoly  Natural monopolies occur when a single firm can serve the entire market at a lower cost than a combination of two or more firms.

113  Monopsony  A monopsony exists where there is only one dominant buyer in a market.

114  Profit maximisation*  Operate at point MC=MR

115  Revenue Maximisation*  Operate at a point of MR = 0

116  Sales Maximisation*  Selling as many units as possible without making a loss. Operate at AC=AR

117  Profit satisficing  Making just enough profit to satisfy the owners of the business.

118  Product differentiation  A marketing process that showcases the differences between products.

119  Interdependence  One firm’s behaviour directly affects the behaviour and decisions of rival firms.

120  Price maker  Have some control of price.

121  Price taker  Have no control of price and must accept what the market offers.

122  Contestable markets  Markets where there is freedom of entry and exit.

123  Barriers to entry&  Obstacles preventing new firms from entering a market.

124  Barriers to exit&  Costs associated with leaving a business.

125  Productive efficiency*  When production is achieved at its lowest cost.  Produce at the lowest point on the AC curve.

126  Allocative Efficiency*  Occurs when resources are distributed in such a way that no consumers could be better off without making others worse off.  Produce where P=MC

127  Kinked demand curve*  Either an increase or a decrease in price will lead to a fall in total revenue

128  Collusion  Collusion: collective agreements between producers to restrict competition.

129  Formal collusion  Collective written or verbal agreements between producers to restrict competition. 

130  Tacit collusion.  when firms collude without any formal agreement being reached or even without explicit communication between the firms.

131 Pricing Strategies

132  Limit Pricing  Selling at below the profit maximisation price in order to dissuade new entrants from coming into the market.

133  Premium pricing  Setting a high price in order to attract a small number of high income customers.

134  Predatory Pricing  Selling at a loss in order to drive competitors out of the market and then raising price afterwards.

135  Loss leader  Selling certain items at a loss in the hope that demand for their complements will compensate.

136  Penetration pricing  Penetration pricing is a marketing technique in which a company offers a new product at a price significantly lower than its competitors.

137  Price discrimination*&  Price discrimination occurs when different prices are charged to different consumers for the same product by the same provider.

138  First degree price discrimination  The seller is able to get the maximum possible price from each customer. The seller takes all the consumer surplus.

139  Second degree price discrimination  This is price discrimination based on quantity.  Bulk buying, season tickets holders, frequent flyers etc.

140  Third degree price discrimination  This is when the seller separates consumers based on time, income, gender or age.

141  Office of Fair Trading and the Competition Commission (NOW THE CMA)  Government body designed to protect the interest of consumers and emilinate anti- competitive practices.

142  International Competitiveness:  is the ability of an economy to compete fairly and successfully in markets for internationally traded goods and services.

143  Unit Labour Cost  These are the labour costs of supplying goods and services per unit of output – in simple terms, how expensive it is to make something of value.

144  Competitive tendering  Introducing competition among private sector firms which put in bids for work which the public sector feel should be undertaken by private hands.

145  Transnational Corporation  A transnational corporation (TNC or MNC) is a firm with significant operations in several different countries.

146  Transfer pricing  Transfer pricing is the setting of the price for goods and services sold between parent and subsidiary companies.


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