Başlık:
Microeconomics
Yazar:
Pindyck, Robert S.
ISBN:
9780130084613
9780131912076
Ek Yazar:
Edition:
6th ed.
Yayım Bilgisi:
Upper Saddle River, N.J. : Pearson Prentice Hall, ©2005.
Fiziksel Tanım:
xxix, 720 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 27 cm.
Series:
Prentice-Hall series in economics
Prentice-Hall series in economics.
Contents:
pt. 1. Introduction: markets and prices -- Preliminaries -- The basics of supply and demand -- pt. 2. Producers, consumers, and competitive markets -- Consumer behavior -- Individual and market demand -- Uncertainty and consumer behavior -- Production -- The cost of production -- Profit maximization and competitive supply -- The analysis of competitive markets -- pt. 3. Market structure and competitive strategy -- Market power: monopoly and monopsony -- Pricing with market power -- Monopolistic competition and oligopoly -- Game theory and competitive strategy -- Markets for factor inputs -- Investment, time, and capital markets -- pt. 4. Information, market failure, and the role of government -- General equilibrium and economic efficiency -- Markets with asymmetric information -- Externalities and public goods.
Abstract:
Provides an understanding of microeconomics, particularly on how it can be used outside of the classroom.
Added Author:
Mevcut:*
Library | Materyal Türü | Barkod | Yer Numarası | Durum |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Searching... İktisadi İdari Bilimler Fakültesi | Kitap | 0112050 | HB172 P56 2005 | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
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Pindyck and Rubinfeld now sells twice as many copies as its next closest competitor, making it by far the best-selling text in the market. Why? Our book is clearly written, accurate, and well loved by professos and their students.
If you want a text that gives students a solid understanding for how microeconomics can be used outside of the classroom, this is the right book for you.
Table of Contents
| Preface | p. xxiii |
| Part 1 Introduction: Markets and Prices | p. 1 |
| 1 Preliminaries | p. 3 |
| 1.1 The Themes of Microeconomics | p. 4 |
| 1.2 What Is a Market? | p. 7 |
| 1.3 Real versus Nominal Prices | p. 11 |
| 1.4 Why Study Microeconomics? | p. 15 |
| Summary | p. 17 |
| Questions for Review | p. 17 |
| Exercises | p. 18 |
| 2 The Basics of Supply and Demand | p. 19 |
| 2.1 Supply and Demand | p. 20 |
| 2.2 The Market Mechanism | p. 23 |
| 2.3 Changes in Market Equilibrium | p. 24 |
| 2.4 Elasticities of Supply and Demand | p. 30 |
| 2.5 Short-Run versus Long-Run Elasticities | p. 35 |
| 2.6 Understanding and Predicting the Effects of Changing Market Conditions | p. 44 |
| 2.7 Effects of Government Intervention--Price Controls | p. 53 |
| Summary | p. 55 |
| Questions for Review | p. 56 |
| Exercises | p. 57 |
| Part 2 Producers, Consumers, and Competitive Markets | p. 59 |
| 3 Consumer Behavior | p. 61 |
| 3.1 Consumer Preferences | p. 62 |
| 3.2 Budget Constraints | p. 75 |
| 3.3 Consumer Choice | p. 79 |
| 3.4 Revealed Preference | p. 86 |
| 3.5 Marginal Utility and Consumer Choice | p. 89 |
| 3.6 Cost-of-Living Indexes | p. 92 |
| Summary | p. 98 |
| Questions for Review | p. 99 |
| Exercises | p. 99 |
| 4 Individual and Market Demand | p. 101 |
| 4.1 Individual Demand | p. 102 |
| 4.2 Income and Substitution Effects | p. 110 |
| 4.3 Market Demand | p. 116 |
| 4.4 Consumer Surplus | p. 123 |
| 4.5 Network Externalities | p. 127 |
| 4.6 Empirical Estimation of Demand | p. 131 |
| Summary | p. 135 |
| Questions for Review | p. 136 |
| Exercises | p. 136 |
| Appendix to Chapter 4: Demand Theory--A Mathematical Treatment | p. 139 |
| 5 Choice Under Uncertainty | p. 149 |
| 5.1 Describing Risk | p. 150 |
| 5.2 Preferences Toward Risk | p. 155 |
| 5.3 Reducing Risk | p. 161 |
| 5.4 The Demand for Risky Assets | p. 166 |
| Summary | p. 174 |
| Questions for Review | p. 175 |
| Exercises | p. 175 |
| 6 Production | p. 177 |
| 6.1 The Technology of Production | p. 178 |
| 6.2 Isoquants | p. 179 |
| 6.3 Production with One Variable Input (Labor) | p. 181 |
| 6.4 Production with Two Variable Inputs | p. 191 |
| 6.5 Returns to Scale | p. 197 |
| Summary | p. 201 |
| Questions for Review | p. 201 |
| Exercises | p. 202 |
| 7 The Cost of Production | p. 203 |
| 7.1 Measuring Cost: Which Costs Matter? | p. 203 |
| 7.2 Cost in the Short Run | p. 208 |
| 7.3 Cost in the Long Run | p. 215 |
| 7.4 Long-Run versus Short-Run Cost Curves | p. 224 |
| 7.5 Production with Two Outputs--Economies of Scope | p. 229 |
| 7.6 Dynamic Changes in Costs--The Learning Curve | p. 232 |
| 7.7 Estimating and Predicting Cost | p. 237 |
| Summary | p. 242 |
| Questions for Review | p. 243 |
| Exercises | p. 243 |
| Appendix to Chapter 7: Production and Cost Theory--A Mathematical Treatment | p. 246 |
| 8 Profit Maximization and Competitive Supply | p. 251 |
| 8.1 Perfectly Competitive Markets | p. 252 |
| 8.2 Profit Maximization | p. 254 |
| 8.3 Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization | p. 255 |
| 8.4 Choosing Output in the Short Run | p. 258 |
| 8.5 The Competitive Firm's Short-Run Supply Curve | p. 263 |
| 8.6 The Short-Run Market Supply Curve | p. 266 |
| 8.7 Choosing Output in the Long Run | p. 271 |
| 8.8 The Industry's Long-Run Supply Curve | p. 277 |
| Summary | p. 283 |
| Questions for Review | p. 284 |
| Exercises | p. 284 |
| 9 The Analysis of Competitive Markets | p. 287 |
| 9.1 Evaluating the Gains and Losses from Government Policies--Consumer and Producer Surplus | p. 288 |
| 9.2 The Efficiency of a Competitive Market | p. 294 |
| 9.3 Minimum Prices | p. 298 |
| 9.4 Price Supports and Production Quotas | p. 302 |
| 9.5 Import Quotas and Tariffs | p. 309 |
| 9.6 The Impact of a Tax or Subsidy | p. 313 |
| Summary | p. 320 |
| Questions for Review | p. 320 |
| Exercises | p. 321 |
| Part 3 Market Structure and Competitive Strategy | p. 325 |
| 10 Market Power: Monopoly and Monopsony | p. 327 |
| 10.1 Monopoly | p. 328 |
| 10.2 Monopoly Power | p. 339 |
| 10.3 Sources of Monopoly Power | p. 345 |
| 10.4 The Social Costs of Monopoly Power | p. 347 |
| 10.5 Monopsony | p. 352 |
| 10.6 Monopsony Power | p. 355 |
| 10.7 Limiting Market Power: The Antitrust Laws | p. 359 |
| Summary | p. 364 |
| Questions for Review | p. 365 |
| Exercises | p. 365 |
| 11 Pricing with Market Power | p. 369 |
| 11.1 Capturing Consumer Surplus | p. 370 |
| 11.2 Price Discrimination | p. 371 |
| 11.3 Intertemporal Price Discrimination and Peak-Load Pricing | p. 382 |
| 11.4 The Two-Part Tariff | p. 385 |
| 11.5 Bundling | p. 392 |
| 11.6 Advertising | p. 403 |
| Summary | p. 407 |
| Questions for Review | p. 408 |
| Exercises | p. 408 |
| Appendix to Chapter 11: Transfer Pricing in the Integrated Firm | p. 413 |
| 12 Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly | p. 423 |
| 12.1 Monopolistic Competition | p. 424 |
| 12.2 Oligopoly | p. 429 |
| 12.3 Price Competition | p. 437 |
| 12.4 Competition versus Collusion: The Prisoners' Dilemma | p. 442 |
| 12.5 Implications of the Prisoners' Dilemma for Oligopolistic Pricing | p. 445 |
| 12.6 Cartels | p. 451 |
| Summary | p. 456 |
| Questions for Review | p. 457 |
| Exercises | p. 457 |
| 13 Game Theory and Competitive Strategy | p. 461 |
| 13.1 Gaming and Strategic Decisions | p. 461 |
| 13.2 Dominant Strategies | p. 464 |
| 13.3 The Nash Equilibrium Revisited | p. 466 |
| 13.4 Repeated Games | p. 472 |
| 13.5 Sequential Games | p. 476 |
| 13.6 Threats, Commitments, and Credibility | p. 479 |
| 13.7 Entry Deterrence | p. 483 |
| 13.8 Bargaining Strategy | p. 489 |
| 13.9 Auctions | p. 491 |
| Summary | p. 496 |
| Questions for Review | p. 497 |
| Exercises | p. 498 |
| 14 Markets for Factor Inputs | p. 501 |
| 14.1 Competitive Factor Markets | p. 501 |
| 14.2 Equilibrium in a Competitive Factor Market | p. 514 |
| 14.3 Factor Markets with Monopsony Power | p. 518 |
| 14.4 Factor Markets with Monopoly Power | p. 523 |
| Summary | p. 529 |
| Questions for Review | p. 530 |
| Exercises | p. 530 |
| 15 Investment, Time, and Capital Markets | p. 533 |
| 15.1 Stocks versus Flows | p. 534 |
| 15.2 Present Discounted Value | p. 534 |
| 15.3 The Value of a Bond | p. 538 |
| 15.4 The Net Present Value Criterion for Capital Investment Decisions | p. 542 |
| 15.5 Adjustments for Risk | p. 545 |
| 15.6 Investment Decisions by Consumers | p. 549 |
| 15.7 Intertemporal Production Decisions--Depletable Resources | p. 551 |
| 15.8 How Are Interest Rates Determined? | p. 555 |
| Summary | p. 558 |
| Questions for Review | p. 558 |
| Exercises | p. 559 |
| Part 4 Information, Market Failure, and the Role of Government | p. 561 |
| 16 General Equilibrium and Economic Efficiency | p. 563 |
| 16.1 General Equilibrium Analysis | p. 563 |
| 16.2 Efficiency in Exchange | p. 567 |
| 16.3 Equity and Efficiency | p. 575 |
| 16.4 Efficiency in Production | p. 578 |
| 16.5 The Gains from Free Trade | p. 585 |
| 16.6 An Overview--The Efficiency of Competitive Markets | p. 590 |
| 16.7 Why Markets Fail | p. 591 |
| Summary | p. 593 |
| Questions for Review | p. 594 |
| Exercises | p. 594 |
| 17 Markets with Asymmetric Information | p. 595 |
| 17.1 Quality Uncertainty and the Market for Lemons | p. 596 |
| 17.2 Market Signaling | p. 601 |
| 17.3 Moral Hazard | p. 606 |
| 17.4 The Principal-Agent Problem | p. 609 |
| 17.5 Managerial Incentives in an Integrated Firm | p. 613 |
| 17.6 Asymmetric Information in Labor Markets: Efficiency Wage Theory | p. 616 |
| Summary | p. 619 |
| Questions for Review | p. 619 |
| Exercises | p. 619 |
| 18 Externalities and Public Goods | p. 621 |
| 18.1 Externalities | p. 621 |
| 18.2 Ways of Correcting Market Failure | p. 625 |
| 18.3 Externalities and Property Rights | p. 638 |
| 18.4 Common Property Resources | p. 642 |
| 18.5 Public Goods | p. 644 |
| 18.6 Private Preferences for Public Goods | p. 649 |
| Summary | p. 651 |
| Questions for Review | p. 651 |
| Exercises | p. 652 |
| Appendix The Basics of Regression | p. 655 |
| Glossary | p. 663 |
| Answers to Selected Exercises | p. 675 |
| Index | p. 687 |
| List of Examples | |
| Example 1.1 Markets for Prescription Drugs | p. 10 |
| Example 1.2 The Price of Eggs and the Price of a College Education | p. 12 |
| Example 1.3 The Minimum Wage | p. 13 |
| Example 2.1 The Price of Eggs and the Price of a College Education Revisited | p. 26 |
| Example 2.2 Wage Inequality in the United States | p. 27 |
| Example 2.3 The Long-Run Behavior of Natural Resource Prices | p. 28 |
| Example 2.4 The Market for Wheat | p. 33 |
| Example 2.5 The Demand for Gasoline and Automobiles | p. 39 |
| Example 2.6 The Weather in Brazil and the Price of Coffee in New York | p. 41 |
| Example 2.7 Declining Demand and the Behavior of Copper Prices | p. 47 |
| Example 2.8 Upheaval in the World Oil Market | p. 49 |
| Example 2.9 Price Controls and Natural Gas Shortages | p. 54 |
| Example 3.1 Designing New Automobiles | p. 71 |
| Example 3.2 Designing New Automobiles (II) | p. 81 |
| Example 3.3 Decision Making and Public Policy | p. 82 |
| Example 3.4 A College Trust Fund | p. 85 |
| Example 3.5 Revealed Preference for Recreation | p. 88 |
| Example 3.6 Gasoline Rationing | p. 91 |
| Example 3.7 The Bias in the CPI | p. 97 |
| Example 4.1 Consumer Expenditures in the United States | p. 108 |
| Example 4.2 The Effects of a Gasoline Tax | p. 114 |
| Example 4.3 The Aggregate Demand for Wheat | p. 120 |
| Example 4.4 The Demand for Housing | p. 122 |
| Example 4.5 The Value of Clean Air | p. 125 |
| Example 4.6 Network Externalities and the Demands for Computers and E-Mail | p. 130 |
| Example 4.7 The Demand for Ready-to-Eat Cereal | p. 134 |
| Example 5.1 Deterring Crime | p. 154 |
| Example 5.2 Business Executives and the Choice of Risk | p. 160 |
| Example 5.3 The Value of Title Insurance When Buying a House | p. 163 |
| Example 5.4 The Value of Information in the Dairy Industry | p. 165 |
| Example 5.5 Investing in the Stock Market | p. 173 |
| Example 6.1 Malthus and the Food Crisis | p. 187 |
| Example 6.2 Labor Productivity and the Standard of Living | p. 189 |
| Example 6.3 A Production Function for Wheat | p. 196 |
| Example 6.4 Returns to Scale in the Carpet Industry | p. 199 |
| Example 7.1 Choosing the Location for a New Law School Building | p. 205 |
| Example 7.2 Sunk, Fixed, and Variable Costs: Computers, Software, and Pizzas | p. 207 |
| Example 7.3 The Short-Run Cost of Aluminum Smelting | p. 213 |
| Example 7.4 The Effect of Effluent Fees on Input Choices | p. 220 |
| Example 7.5 Economies of Scope in the Trucking Industry | p. 232 |
| Example 7.6 The Learning Curve in Practice | p. 236 |
| Example 7.7 Cost Functions for Electric Power | p. 240 |
| Example 7.8 A Cost Function for the Savings and Loan Industry | p. 241 |
| Example 8.1 The Short-Run Output Decision of an Aluminum Smelting Plant | p. 260 |
| Example 8.2 Some Cost Considerations for Managers | p. 261 |
| Example 8.3 The Short-Run Production of Petroleum Products | p. 265 |
| Example 8.4 The Short-Run World Supply of Copper | p. 268 |
| Example 8.5 The Long-Run Supply of Housing | p. 282 |
| Example 9.1 Price Controls and Natural Gas Shortages | p. 292 |
| Example 9.2 The Market for Human Kidneys | p. 295 |
| Example 9.3 Airline Regulation | p. 300 |
| Example 9.4 Supporting the Price of Wheat | p. 306 |
| Example 9.5 The Sugar Quota | p. 312 |
| Example 9.6 A Tax on Gasoline | p. 318 |
| Example 10.1 Astra-Merck Prices Prilosec | p. 334 |
| Example 10.2 Markup Pricing: Supermarkets to Designer Jeans | p. 342 |
| Example 10.3 The Pricing of Prerecorded Videocassettes | p. 343 |
| Example 10.4 Monopsony Power in U.S. Manufacturing | p. 358 |
| Example 10.5 A Phone Call About Prices | p. 362 |
| Example 10.6 The United States versus Microsoft | p. 363 |
| Example 11.1 The Economics of Coupons and Rebates | p. 379 |
| Example 11.2 Airline Fares | p. 380 |
| Example 11.3 How to Price a Best-Selling Novel | p. 384 |
| Example 11.4 Polaroid Cameras | p. 389 |
| Example 11.5 Pricing Cellular Phone Service | p. 390 |
| Example 11.6 The Complete Dinner versus a la Carte: A Restaurant's Pricing Problem | p. 401 |
| Example 11.7 Advertising in Practice | p. 406 |
| Example 12.1 Monopolistic Competition in the Markets for Colas and Coffee | p. 428 |
| Example 12.2 A Pricing Problem for Procter and Gamble | p. 440 |
| Example 12.3 Procter and Gamble in a Prisoners' Dilemma | p. 444 |
| Example 12.4 Price Leadership and Price Rigidity in Commercial Banking | p. 448 |
| Example 12.5 The Cartelization of Intercollegiate Athletics | p. 455 |
| Example 12.6 The Milk Cartel | p. 456 |
| Example 13.1 Acquiring a Company | p. 463 |
| Example 13.2 Oligopolistic Cooperation in the Water Meter Industry | p. 474 |
| Example 13.3 Competition and Collusion in the Airline Industry | p. 475 |
| Example 13.4 Wal-Mart Stores' Preemptive Investment Strategy | p. 482 |
| Example 13.5 DuPont Deters Entry in the Titanium Dioxide Industry | p. 487 |
| Example 13.6 Diaper Wars | p. 488 |
| Example 13.7 Internet Auctions | p. 495 |
| Example 14.1 The Demand for Jet Fuel | p. 508 |
| Example 14.2 Labor Supply for One- and Two-Earner Households | p. 513 |
| Example 14.3 Pay in the Military | p. 517 |
| Example 14.4 Monopsony Power in the Market for Baseball Players | p. 520 |
| Example 14.5 Teenage Labor Markets and the Minimum Wage | p. 521 |
| Example 14.6 The Decline of Private-Sector Unionism | p. 527 |
| Example 14.7 Wage Inequality--Have Computers Changed the Labor Market? | p. 528 |
| Example 15.1 The Value of Lost Earnings | p. 537 |
| Example 15.2 The Yields on Corporate Bonds | p. 541 |
| Example 15.3 Capital Investment in the Disposable Diaper Industry | p. 548 |
| Example 15.4 Choosing an Air Conditioner and a New Car | p. 550 |
| Example 15.5 How Depletable Are Depletable Resources? | p. 554 |
| Example 16.1 The Interdependence of International Markets | p. 566 |
| Example 16.2 The Effects of Automobile Import Quotas | p. 588 |
| Example 16.3 The Costs and Benefits of Special Protection | p. 589 |
| Example 17.1 Lemons in Major League Baseball | p. 600 |
| Example 17.2 Working into the Night | p. 605 |
| Example 17.3 Reducing Moral Hazard--Warranties of Animal Health | p. 608 |
| Example 17.4 Crisis in the Savings and Loan Industry | p. 608 |
| Example 17.5 Managers of Nonprofit Hospitals as Agents | p. 611 |
| Example 17.6 Efficiency Wages at Ford Motor Company | p. 618 |
| Example 18.1 The Costs and Benefits of Reduced Sulfur Dioxide Emissions | p. 631 |
| Example 18.2 Emissions Trading and Clean Air | p. 632 |
| Example 18.3 Regulating Municipal Solid Wastes | p. 637 |
| Example 18.4 The Coase Theorem at Work | p. 641 |
| Example 18.5 Crawfish Fishing in Louisiana | p. 643 |
| Example 18.6 The Demand for Clear Air | p. 647 |
| Example A.1 The Demand for Coal | p. 661 |
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