Microeconomics

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For more information, see: Economics.

Microeconomics is the branch of Economics that studies the behavior of units called "economic agents". Microeconomic models investigate assumptions about "economic agents" activities and about interactions between these agents. An "economic agent" is the basic unit operating in the model. Most often, we do have in mind that the "economic agent" is an individual, a person with one head, one heart, two eyes, and two ears. However, in some economic models, an economic agent is taken to be a nation, a family, or a parliament. At other times, the "individual" is broken down into a collection of economic agents, each operating in distinct circumstances and each regarded as an economic agent. When we construct a model with a particular economic scenario in mind, we might have some "degree of freedom" regarding whom we take to be the "economic agents". [1]

Those economic models are instruments or "tools" which help economists better understand the economic reality. As reality is too complex, and has infinite variables - that cannot be analysed simultaneoulsy - those models make simplifying assumptions about real life. We could compare economic models to geographical maps: the models create a "map" of the economic reality the same way a map creates a conventional representation of a country. As with maps, no information will come out of an economic model unless it had been previously incorporated in the model by the researcher; this information will only be presented in a more comprehensive manner. It is important to fully understand all the "assumptions" which lie behind any economic model in order to rationally understand their results.

The basic models of microeconomics

Production Possibilities Curves

Demand Functions and Demand Curves

Supply Functions and Supply Curves

Equilibrium Prices

Labor Markets

Elasticity of Demand

Consumer and Producer Surplus

Taxes and Welfare

Trade and Welfare

Externalities

Production Functions & Isoquants

Cost Minimization

Marginal Products and Minimizing Cost

Production and Cost in the Short-Run

Total, Average, and Marginal Cost

Profit Maximization for the Competitive Firm

Competitive Markets in the Short-Run

Competitive Markets in the Long-Run

Monopoly

Natural Monopoly

Price discrimination

Utility Functions and Indifference Curves

Utility Maximization

Demand Curves, and Income and Substitution Effects

Marginal Utility and Optimization

Discounted Present Value

Internal Rate of Return

Comparative Advantage

Labor Demand for the Competitive Firm

Competitive Labor Markets

See also

References

External Links