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Intermediate Microeconomics: A Modern Approach 8th Edition by Hal R. Varian, ISBN-13: 978-0393934243

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Intermediate Microeconomics: A Modern Approach 8th Edition by Hal R. Varian, ISBN-13: 978-0393934243

[PDF eBook eTextbook] – Available Instantly

  • Publisher: ‎ W. W. Norton & Company; Eighth edition (December 3, 2009)
  • Language: ‎ English
  • 739 pages
  • ISBN-10: ‎ 0393934241
  • ISBN-13: ‎ 978-0393934243

The #1 best-selling intermediate microeconomics text in the world is still the most modern and contemporary.

Varian is “the Adam Smith of the new discipline of Googlenomics.”―Stephen Levy, Wired

For over 20 years Hal Varian’s Intermediate Microeconomics has given students the most current and complete coverage of intermediate microeconomics at an appropriate mathematical level. The Eighth Edition includes contemporary case studies and examples and relevant coverage of the current economic crisis―all in focused, lecture-length chapters.

Table of Content:
Prefacexix

1 The Market

Constructing a Model

1

Optimization and Equilibrium

3

The Demand Curve

3

The Supply Curve

5

Market Equilibrium

7

Comparative Statics

9

Other Ways to Allocate Apartments

11

The Discriminating Monopolist

The Ordinary Monopolist

Rent Control

Which Way Is Best?

14

Pareto Efficiency

15

Comparing Ways to Allocate Apartments

16

Equilibrium in the Long Run

17

Summary

18

Review Questions

19

2 Budget Constraint

The Budget Constraint

20

Two Goods Are Often Enough

21

Properties of the Budget Set

22

How the Budget Line Changes

24

The Numeraire

26

Taxes, Subsidies, and Rationing

26

Example: The Food Stamp Program

Budget Line Changes

31

Summary

31

Review Questions

32

3 Preferences

Consumer Preferences

34

Assumptions about Preferences

35

Indifference Curves

36

Examples of Preferences

37

Perfect Substitutes

Perfect Complements

Bads

Neutrals

Satiation

Discrete Goods

Well-Behaved Preferences

44

The Marginal Rate of Substitution

48

Other Interpretations of the MRS

50

Behavior of the MRS

51

Summary

52

Review Questions

52

4 Utility

Cardinal Utility

57

Constructing a Utility Function

58

Some Examples of Utility Functions

59

Example: Indifference Curves from Utility Perfect Substitutes

Perfect Complements

Quasilinear Preferences

Cobb-Douglas Preferences

Marginal Utility

65

Marginal Utility and MRS

66

Utility for Commuting

67

Summary

69

Review Questions

70

Appendix

70

Example: Cobb-Douglas Preferences

5 Choice

Optimal Choice

73

Consumer Demand

78

Some Examples

78

Perfect Substitutes

Perfect Complements

Neutrals and Bads

Discrete Goods

Concave Preferences

Cobb-Douglas Preferences

Estimating Utility Functions

83

Implications of the MRS Condition

85

Choosing Taxes

87

Summary

89

Review Questions

89

Appendix

90

Example: Cobb-Douglas Demand Functions

6 Demand

Normal and Inferior Goods

96

Income Offer Curves and Engel Curves

97

Some Examples

99

Perfect Substitutes

Perfect Complements

Cobb-Douglas Preferences

Homothetic Preferences

Quasilinear Preferences

Ordinary Goods and Giffen Goods

104

The Price Offer Curve and the Demand Curve

106

Some Examples

107

Perfect Substitutes

Perfect Complements

A Discrete Good

Substitutes and Complements

111

The Inverse Demand Function

112

Summary

114

Review Questions

115

Appendix

115

7 Revealed Preference

The Idea of Revealed Preference

119

From Revealed Preference to Preference

120

Recovering Preferences

122

The Weak Axiom of Revealed Preference

124

Checking WARP

125

The Strong Axiom of Revealed Preference

128

How to Check SARP

129

Index Numbers

130

Price Indices

132

Example: Indexing Social Security Payments

Summary

135

Review Questions

135

8 Slutsky Equation

The Substitution Effect

137

Example: Calculating the Substitution Effect

The Income Effect

141

Example: Calculating the Income Effect

Sign of the Substitution Effect

142

The Total Change in Demand

143

Rates of Change

144

The Law of Demand

147

Examples of Income and Substitution Effects

147

Example: Rebating a Tax

Example: Voluntary Real Time Pricing

Another Substitution Effect

153

Compensated Demand Curves

155

Summary

156

Review Questions

157

Appendix

157

Example: Rebating a Small Tax

9 Buying and Selling

Net and Gross Demands

160

The Budget Constraint

161

Changing the Endowment

163

Price Changes

184

Offer Curves and Demand Curves

167

The Slutsky Equation Revisited

168

Use of the Slut-sky

Equation

172

Example: Calculating the Endowment Income Effect

Labor Supply

173

The Budget Constraint

Comparative Statics of Labor Supply

174

Example: Overtime and the Supply of Labor

Summary

178

Review Questions

179

Appendix

179

10 Intertemporal Choice

The Budget Constraint

182

Preferences for Consumption

185

Comparative Statics

186

The Slutsky Equation and Intertemporal Choice

187

Inflation

189

Present Value: A Closer Look

191

Analyzing Present Value for Several Periods

193

Use of Present Value

194

Example: Valuing a Stream of Payments

Example: The True Cost of a Credit Card

Example: Extending Copyright

Bonds

198

Example: Installment Loans

Taxes

200

Example: Scholarships and Savings

Choice of the Interest Rate

201

Summary

202

Review Questions

202

11 Asset Markets

Rates of Return

203

Arbitrage and Present Value

205

Adjustments for Differences among Assets

205

Assets with Consumption Returns

206

Taxation of Asset Returns

207

Market Bubbles

208

Applications

209

Depletable Resources

When to Cut a Forest

Example: Gasoline Prices during the Gulf War

Financial Institutions

213

Summary

214

Review Questions

215

Appendix

215

12 Uncertainty

Contingent Consumption

217

Example: Catastrophe Bonds

Utility Functions and Probabilities

222

Example: Some Examples of Utility Functions

Expected Utility

223

Why Expected Utility Is Reasonable

224

Risk Aversion

226

Example: The Demand for Insurance

Diversification

230

Risk Spreading

230

Role of the Stock Market

231

Summary

232

Review Questions

232

Appendix

233

Example: The Effect of Taxation on Investment in Risky Assets

13 Risky Assets

Mean-Variance Utility

236

Measuring Risk

241

Counterparty Risk

243

Equilibrium in a Market for Risky Assets

243

How Returns Adjust

245

Example: Value at Risk

Example: Ranking Mutual Funds

Summary

249

Review Questions

250

14 Consumer’s Surplus

Demand for a Discrete Good

252

Constructing Utility from Demand

253

Other Interpretations of Consumer’s Surplus

254

From Consumer’s Surplus to Consumers’ Surplus

255

Approximating a Continuous Demand

255

Quasilinear Utility

255

Interpreting the Change in Consumer’s Surplus

256

Example: The Change in Consumer’s Surplus

Compensating and Equivalent Variation

258

Example: Compensating and Equivalent Variations

Example: Compensating and Equivalent Variation for Quasilinear Preferences

Producer’s Surplus

262

Benefit-Cost Analysis

264

Rationing

Calculating Gains and Losses

266

Summary

267

Review Questions

267

Appendix

268

Example: A Few Demand Functions

Example: CV, EV, and Consumer’s Surplus

15 Market Demand

From Individual to Market Demand

270

The Inverse Demand Function

272

Example: Adding Up “Linear” Demand Curves

Discrete Goods

273

The Extensive and the Intensive Margin

273

Elasticity

274

Example: The Elasticity of a Linear Demand Curve

Elasticity and Demand

276

Elasticity and Revenue

277

Example: Strikes and Profits

Constant Elasticity Demands

280

Elasticity and Marginal Revenue

281

Example: Setting a Price

Marginal Revenue Curves

283

Income Elasticity

284

Summary

285

Review Questions

286

Appendix

287

Example: The Leifer Curve

Example: Another Expression for Elasticity

16 Equilibrium

Supply

293

Market Equilibrium

293

Two Special Cases

294

Inverse Demand and Supply Curves

295

Example: Equilibrium with Linear Curves

Comparative Statics

297

Example: Shifting Both Curves

Taxes

298

Example: Taxation with Linear Demand and Supply

Passing Along a Tax

302

The Deadweight Loss of a Tax

304

Example: The Market for Loans

Example: Food Subsidies

Example: Subsidies in Iraq

Pareto Efficiency

310

Example: Waiting in Line

Summary

313

Review Questions

313

17 Auctions

Classification of Auctions

316

Bidding Rules

Auction Design

317

Other Auction Forms

320

Example: Late Bidding on eBay

Position Auctions

322

Two Bidders

More Than Two Bidders

Quality Scores

Problems with Auctions

326

Example: Taking Bids Off the Wall

The Winner’s Curse

327

Stable Marriage Problem

327

Mechanism Design

329

Summary

331

Review Questions

331

18 Technology

Inputs and Outputs

332

Describing Technological Constraints

333

Examples of Technology

334

Fixed Proportions

Perfect Substitutes

Cobb-Douglas

Properties of Technology

336

The Marginal Product

338

The Technical Rate of Substitution

338

Diminishing Marginal Product

339

Diminishing Technical Rate of Substitution

339

The Long Run and the Short Run

340

Returns to Scale

340

Example: Datacenters

Example: Copy Exactly!

Summary

343

Review Questions

344

19 Profit Maximization

Profits

345

The Organization of Firms

347

Profits and Stock Market Value

347

The Boundaries of the Firm

349

Fixed and Variable Factors

350

Short-Run Profit Maximization

350

Comparative Statics

352

Profit Maximization in the Long Run

353

Inverse Factor Demand Curves

354

Profit Maximization and Returns to Scale

355

Revealed Profitability

356

Example: How Do Farmers React to Price Supports?

Cost Minimization

360

Summary

360

Review Questions

361

Appendix

362

20 Cost Minimization

Cost Minimization

364

Example: Minimizing Costs for Specific Technologies

Revealed Cost Minimization

368

Returns to Scale and the Cost Function

369

Long-Run and Short-Run Costs

371

Fixed and Quasi-Fixed Costs

373

Sunk Costs

373

Summary

374

Review Questions

374

Appendix

375

21 Cost Curves

Average Costs

378

Marginal Costs

380

Marginal Costs and Variable Costs

382

Example: Specific Cost Curves

Example: Marginal Cost Curves for Two Plants

Cost Curves for Online Auctions

386

Long-Run Costs

387

Discrete Levels of Plant Size

389

Long-Run Marginal Costs

390

Summary

391

Review Questions

392

Appendix

393

22 Firm Supply

Market Environments

395

Pure Competition

396

The Supply Decision of a Competitive Firm

398

An Exception

400

Another Exception

401

Example: Pricing Operating Systems

The Inverse Supply Function

403

Profits and Producer’s Surplus

403

Example: The Supply Curve for a Specific Cost Function

The Long-Run Supply Curve of a Firm

407

Long-Run Constant Average Costs

409

Summary

410

Review Questions

411

Appendix

411

23 Industry Supply

Short-Run Industry Supply

413

Industry Equilibrium in the Short Run

414

Industry Equilibrium in the Long Run

415

The Long-Run Supply Curve

417

Example: Taxation in the Long Run and in the Short Run

The Meaning of Zero Profits

421

Fixed Factors and Economic Rent

422

Example: Taxi Licenses in New York City

Economic Rent

424

Rental Rates and Prices

426

Example: Liquor Licenses

The Politics of Rent

427

Example: Farming the Government

Energy Policy

429

Two-Tiered Oil Pricing

Price Controls

The Entitlement Program

Carbon Tax Versus Cap and Trade

433

Optimal Production of Emissions

A Carbon Tax

Cap and Trade

Summary

437

Review Questions

437

24 Monopoly

Maximizing Profits

440

Linear Demand Curve and Monopoly

441

Markup Pricing

443

Example: The Impact of Taxes on a Monopolist

Inefficiency of Monopoly

445

Deadweight Loss of Monopoly

447

Example: The Optimal Life of a Patent

Example: Patent Thickets

Example: Managing the Supply of Potatoes

Natural Monopoly

451

What Causes Monopolies?

454

Example: Diamonds Are Forever

Example: Pooling in Auction Markets

Example: Price Fixing in Computer Memory Markets

Summary

458

Review Questions

458

Appendix

459

25 Monopoly Behavior

Price Discrimination

462

First-Degree Price Discrimination

462

Example: First-degree Price Discrimination in Practice

Second-Degree Price Discrimination

465

Example: Price Discrimination in Airfares

Example: Prescription Drug Prices

Third-Degree Price Discrimination

469

Example: Linear Demand Curves

Example: Calculating Optimal Price Discrimination

Example: Price Discrimination in Academic Journals

Bundling

474

Example: Software Suites

Two-Part Tariffs

475

Monopolistic Competition

476

A Location Model of Product Differentiation

480

Product Differentiation

482

More Vendors

483

Summary

484

Review Questions

484

26 Factor Markets

Monopoly in the Output Market

485

Monopsony

488

Example: The Minimum Wage

Upstream and Downstream Monopolies

492

Summary

494

Review Questions

495

Appendix

495

27 Oligopoly

Choosing a Strategy

498

Example: Pricing Matching

Quantity Leadership

499

The Follower’s Problem

The Leader’s Problem

Price Leadership

504

Comparing Price Leadership and Quantity Leadership

507

Simultaneous Quantity Setting

507

An Example of Cournot Equilibrium

509

Adjustment to Equilibrium

510

Many Firms in Cournot Equilibrium

511

Simultaneous Price Setting

512

Collusion

513

Punishment Strategies

515

Example: Price Matching and Competition

Example: Voluntary Export Restraints

Comparison of the Solutions

519

Summary

519

Review Questions

520

28 Game Theory

The Payoff Matrix of a Game

522

Nash Equilibrium

524

Mixed Strategies

525

Example: Rock Paper Scissors

The Prisoner’s Dilemma

527

Repeated Games

529

Enforcing a Cartel

530

Example: Tit for Tat in Airline Pricing

Sequential Games

532

A Game of Entry Deterrence

534

Summary

536

Review Questions

537

29 Game Applications

Best Response Curves

538

Mixed Strategies

540

Games of Coordination

542

Battle of the Sexes

Prisoner’s Dilemma

Assurance Games

Chicken

How to Coordinate

Games of Competition

546

Games of Coexistence

551

Games of Commitment

553

The Frog and the Scorpion

The Kindly Kidnapper

When Strength Is Weakness

Savings and Social Security

Hold Up

Bargaining

561

The Ultimatum Game

Summary

584

Review Questions

565

30 Behavioral Economics

Framing Effects in Consumer Choice

567

The Disease Dilemma

Anchoring Effects

Bracketing

Too Much Choice

Constructed Preferences

Uncertainty

571

Law of Small Numbers

Asset Integration and Loss Aversion

Time

574

Discounting

Self-control

Example: Overconfidence

Strategic Interaction and Social Norms

576

Ultimatum Game

Fairness

Assessment of Behavioral Economics

578

Summary

579

Review Questions

581

31 Exchange

The Edgeworth Box

583

Trade

585

Pareto Efficient Allocations

586

Market Trade

588

The Algebra of Equilibrium

590

Walras’ Law

592

Relative Prices

593

Example: An Algebraic Example of Equilibrium

The Existence of Equilibrium

595

Equilibrium and Efficiency

596

The Algebra of Efficiency

597

Example: Monopoly in the Edgeworth Box

Efficiency and Equilibrium

600

Implications of the First Welfare Theorem

602

Implications of the Second Welfare Theorem

604

Summary

606

Review Questions

607

Appendix

607

32 Production

The Robinson Crusoe Economy

609

Crusoe, Inc.

611

The Firm

612

Robinson’s Problem

613

Putting Them Together

613

Different Technologies

615

Production and the First Welfare Theorem

617

Production and the Second Welfare Theorem

618

Production Possibilities

618

Comparative Advantage

620

Pareto Efficiency

622

Castaways, Inc.

624

Robinson and Friday as Consumers

626

Decentralized Resource Allocation

627

Summary

628

Review Questions

628

Appendix

629

33 Welfare

Aggregation of Preferences

632

Social Welfare Functions

634

Welfare Maximization

636

Individualistic Social Welfare Functions

638

Fair Allocations

639

Envy and Equity

640

Summary

642

Review Questions

642

Appendix

643

34 Externalities

Smokers and Nonsmokers

645

Quasilinear Preferences and the Come Theorem

648

Production Externalities

650

Example: Pollution Vouchers

Interpretation of the Conditions

655

Market Signals

658

Example: Bees and Almonds

The Tragedy of the Commons

659

Example: Overfishing

Example: New England Lobsters

Automobile Pollution

663

Summary

665

Review Questions

665

35 Information Technology

Systems Competition

668

The Problem of Complements

668

Relationships among Complementors

Example: Apple’s iPod and iTune.s

Example: Who Makes an iPod?

Example: AdWords and AdSense

Lock-In

674

A Model of Competition with Switching Costs

Example: Online Bill Payment

Example: Number Portability on Cell Phones

Network Externalities

678

Markets with Network Externalities

678

Market Dynamics

680

Example: Network Externalities in Computer Software

Implications of Network Externalities

684

Example: The Yellow Pages

Example: Radio Ads

Two-sided Markets

686

A Model of Two-sided Markets

Rights Management

687

Example: Video Rental

Sharing Intellectual Property

689

Example: Online Two-sided Markets

Summary

692

Review Questions

693

36 Public Goods

When to Provide a Public Good?

695

Private Provision of the Public Good

699

Free Riding

699

Different Levels of the Public Good

701

Quasilinear Preferences and Public Goods

703

Example: Pollution Revisited

The Free Rider Problem

705

Comparison to Private Goods

707

Voting

708

Example: Agenda Manipulation

The Vickrey-Clarke-Groves Mechanism

711

Groves Mechanism

The VCG Mechanism

Examples of VCG

713

Vickrey Auction

Clarke-Groves Mechanism

Problems with the VCG

714

Summary

715

Review Questions

716

Appendix

716

37 Asymmetric Information

The Market for Lemons

719

Quality Choice

720

Choosing the Quality

Adverse Selection

722

Moral Hazard

724

Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection

725

Signaling

726

Example: The Sheepskin Effect

Incentives

730

Example: Voting Rights in the Corporation

Example: Chinese Economic Reforms

Asymmetric Information

735

Example: Monitoring Costs

Example: The Grameen Bank

Summary

738

Review Questions

739

Mathematical Appendix

Functions

A1

Graphs

A2

Properties of Functions

A2

Inverse Functions

A3

Equations and Identities

A3

Linear Functions

A4

Changes and Rates of Change

A4

Slopes and Intercepts

A5

Absolute Values and Logarithms

A6

Derivatives

A6

Second Derivatives

A7

The Product Rule and the Chain Rule

A8

Partial Derivatives

A8

Optimization

A9

Constrained Optimization

A10

Answers

A11

Index

A31

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