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Ecological Economics Week 3 Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical Engineering Doctoral Program and.

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Presentation on theme: "Ecological Economics Week 3 Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical Engineering Doctoral Program and."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ecological Economics Week 3 Tiago Domingos Assistant Professor Environment and Energy Section Department of Mechanical Engineering Doctoral Program and Advanced Degree in Sustainable Energy Systems Doctoral Program in Mechanical Engineering

2 Assignments Preferences (exercise 4) –Convex definition: try to represent the indifference curves and understand the relationship between the extreme and average bundles. –Monotony definition: note that we assume that more is better, that is, that we are talking about goods, not bads. More precisely, if is a bundle of goods and is a bundle of goods with at least as much of both goods and more of one, then The second good is neutral…

3 Assignments Preferences (extra exercise) –Be aware that, Joana’s parents allow her to leave aside everything she dislikes eating!! Choice (exercise 2) –You should explain the math... –They are not complements. Y increases with px, there is a substitution. None of them is a bad….

4 Demand Effect on demand of a good Change in incomeQuantity demanded increases with income– normal goods. For some normal goods, the quantity demanded increases more than proportionally with income – luxury goods. For other normal goods, the quantity demanded increases less than proportionally with income – necessary goods. Quantity demanded decreases with an increase in income – inferior good (example: low quality food) Change in own priceThe quantity demanded for good 1 increases when its price decreases – ordinary good The quantity demanded for good 1 decreases with its price – Giffen good Change in the price of the other good The demand for good 1 increases when the price of good 2 increases – good 1 is a substitute for good 2 The demand for good 1 decreases when the price of good 2 increases – good 1 is a complement to good 2

5 Demand Market demand –Individual demand –Market demand Note: we sum the quantities, NOT the prices!

6 Demand Elasticity of demand –The price elasticity of demand, ɛ, is defined to be the percent change in quantity divided by the percent change in price. Elasticity is unit-free. –Elasticity as the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to price.

7 Demand Income elasticity of demand –Is used to describe how the quantity demanded responds to a change in income. –Normal good: income elasticity of demand is positive –Inferior good: income elasticity of demand is negative –Luxury good: income elasticity of demand greater than 1 –Necessary good: income elasticity of demand smaler than 1

8 Demand Revenue –Revenue (R): the price of a good times the quantity sold of that good. Marginal Revenue –When | ɛ |=1, the marginal revenue curve is constant at zero. Point of maximum revenue. See Chapter 15 – Market demand: APPENDIX

9 Technology Production set –Combinations of inputs and output that are feasible patterns of production Production function –Upper boundary of production set

10 Technology Returns to scale –Constant: –Increasing: –Decreasing:

11 Profit maximization Profits (π) –Revenues minus cost Maximization of profits In the long-run both factors are free to vary while in short-run some factors are fixed See Chapter 18 –Profit maximization: APPENDIX

12 Cost minimization Cost minimization problem –Minimize cost to produce some given level of output Integrating cost minimization and profit maximization See Chapter 19 –Cost minimization: APPENDIX


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