Microeconomics: Private and Public ChoiceDryden Press, 1992 - 656 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 75
Página 316
... areas during the period from 1965 to 1975. During the last decade , job opportunities for computer programmers , systems analysts , and computer technicians have been highly attractive as the computer revolution spread throughout our ...
... areas during the period from 1965 to 1975. During the last decade , job opportunities for computer programmers , systems analysts , and computer technicians have been highly attractive as the computer revolution spread throughout our ...
Página 509
... area S ( Exhibit 10 ) in the form of additional net revenues . The tariff raises revenues equal to the area T for the government . The areas U and V represent costs imposed on consumers that do not benefit either producers or the ...
... area S ( Exhibit 10 ) in the form of additional net revenues . The tariff raises revenues equal to the area T for the government . The areas U and V represent costs imposed on consumers that do not benefit either producers or the ...
Página 510
... area S + U + T + V in the form of higher prices and the loss of consumer surplus . Similarly , domestic producers gain the area S , while the areas U and V represent deadweight losses from allocative inefficiency . However , there is a ...
... area S + U + T + V in the form of higher prices and the loss of consumer surplus . Similarly , domestic producers gain the area S , while the areas U and V represent deadweight losses from allocative inefficiency . However , there is a ...
Contenido
PART | 1 |
Some Tools of the Economist | 29 |
Supply Demand and the Market Process | 51 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 24 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
allocation amount assets automobiles average total cost benefits breadfruit buyers capital chapter consumers consumption countries current account decision-makers decisions decline deficit demand curve dollar earnings economic profit economists effects efficiency elasticity employees employment entrepreneurs example exchange rate Exhibit expand expenditures exports factors factors of production families firm's firms foreign foreign exchange market future gain growth higher price illustrates impact important incentive income increase indicates indifference curve individuals industry inflation interest rate investment isocost isoquant Japan labor long-run lower marginal cost marginal revenue marginal tax rates market price million monetary monopolistic competition monopoly nations oligopolistic opportunity cost output owners percent political pollution potential property rights purchase pure competition quantity demanded reduce regulation relative result rise sector sell sellers short run social Soviet Union substantially substitutes supply curve trade transfers U.S. dollars voters wage rates workers