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Karlan & Morduch: Economics

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The Power of Economics

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 1-2

MobLab Game: Comparative Advantages

Key Teaching Points:

  • The distinction between absolute and comparative advantage.
  • Experience first hand the gains from specialization and trade.
  • Differences in opportunity costs lead to mutually beneficial trade.

Markets

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 3-5

MobLab Game: Competitive Markets

Key Teaching Points:

  • The “invisible hand” of the market: how individual profit maximization leads to competitive market equilibrium
  • Price discovery: the equilibrium market-clearing price results from the valuations of different buyers and costs of different sellers
  • Gains from trade (i.e., consumer and producer surplus).
  • Shifts in either supply or demand change equilibrium outcomes.

Government Intervention

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 6

MobLab Game: Competitive Markets with Interventions

Key Teaching Points:

  • Government interventions (per-unit taxes, subsidies, price ceilings and floors) alter equilibrium outcomes.
  • Equilibrium outcomes do not depend on whether buyers or sellers pay the tax.
  • The difference between tax incidence and who pays the tax.
  • Relative elasticity determine incidence of a tax or subsidy.

Consumer Behavior

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 7

MobLab Game: Cobb Douglas Utility Maximization

Key Teaching Points:

  • Become familiar with the Cobb Douglas utility function.
  • Monotonic transformations of a utility function do not affect the utility-maximizing consumption bundle.
  • Utility maximization can be achieved by sequentially choosing the item with the highest marginal utility per dollar.

*See also our pre-built survey-based experiments to explore framing effects, heuristics, and biases with their students including representativeness, anchoring, availability, and more. Each of these help illustrate departures from the standard rational-choice model.

Behavioral Economics

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 8

MobLab Game: Ultimatum and Dictator

Key Teaching Points:

  • Preferences for fairness may lead a responder to reject a proposal she finds unfair even if it means losing money. Anticipating this, and perhaps also motivated by altruism or fairness, proposers propose splits more generous than predicted by the subgame-perfect equilibria.

*See also our pre-built survey-based experiments to explore framing effects, heuristics, and biases with their students including representativeness, anchoring, availability, and more. Each of these help illustrate departures from the standard rational-choice model.

Monopoly and Oligopoly Pricing

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 13-15

MobLab Game: Cournot (with Group Size=1)

Key Teaching Points:

  • Monopolies restrict output in order to increase price.
  • The tension between the quantity price effects of increased output.
  • The underlying logic of the Cournot model: how market price is determined by aggregate output.
  • The equilibrium outcomes of Cournot competition.
  • Repeat interaction may lead to collusive behavior.

Oligopoly and Collusion

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 13

MobLab Game: Cournot

Key Teaching Points:

  • The underlying logic of the Cournot model: how market price is determined by aggregate output.
  • The equilibrium outcomes of Cournot competition.
  • Repeat interaction may lead to collusive behavior.

Externalities

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 18

MobLab Game: Externalities with Policy Interventions

Key Teaching Points:

  • With externalities, the equilibrium of a competitive market without interventions is inefficient.
  • By reducing transactions, a tax can increase efficiency (total surplus) in a market with a negative externality
  • Marketable permits for an activity generating a negative externality leads to efficiently reducing that activity.

Public Goods

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 19

MobLab Game: Linear Public Good

Key Teaching Points:

  • Highlights the features of public goods: non-rival and non-excludable.
  • Demonstrates the distinction between private and social benefits of public goods.
  • Shows how individual profit maximization leads to the free-rider problem.

Labor Markets

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 26-27

MobLab Game: Simple Labor Market

Key Teaching Points:

  • When a perfectly competitive market determines wages, the equilibrium wage (per unit of labor) is equal to the value of the marginal product of labor of the last worker hired.

Interest Rate and Inflation

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 32

MobLab Game: Interest Rate and Inflation (Loan Market)

Key Teaching Points:

  • Supply and demand determines the equilibrium interest rate. Absent investment-return uncertainty, those with the lowest opportunity cost lend to those with the highest real return on investment.
  • Speculative asset bubbles can arise even if the asset's dividend distribution and terminal value are common knowledge.

Financial Markets

Textbook Chapter: Chapter 33

MobLab Game: Asset Market (Bubbles and Crashes)

Key Teaching Points:

  • With risk neutral investors, an asset's fundamental value is the present discounted value of expected dividends (plus discounted terminal value, if applicable).
  • Speculative asset bubbles can arise even if the asset's dividend distribution and terminal value are common knowledge.