AP Microeconomics Course and Exam Description

Table of Contents

Based on the Official AP Microeconomics Course and Exam Description

Big Ideas, Units, and Unit Topics

The Four Big Ideas

The big ideas serve as the foundation of the course and allow students to create meaningful connections among concepts.

  • BIG IDEA 1: SCARCITY AND MARKETS (MKT)
    Limited resources and unlimited wants result in the need to make choices. In a market economy, the choices of buyers and sellers determine market prices and the allocation of scarce resources.

  • BIG IDEA 2: COSTS, BENEFITS, AND MARGINAL ANALYSIS (CBA)
    There are trade-offs associated with any decision. Making optimal decisions requires evaluating the additional costs and benefits of possible actions.

  • BIG IDEA 3: PRODUCTION CHOICES AND BEHAVIOR (PRD)
    Firms seek to minimize costs and maximize profits, which influences their production decisions in the short run and long run.

  • BIG IDEA 4: MARKET INEFFICIENCY AND PUBLIC POLICY (POL)
    Private markets can fail to allocate resources efficiently, and well-designed public policy can endeavor to promote greater efficiency and equity in the economy.

The Six Units

The course content is organized into commonly taught units. The units have been arranged in a logical sequence frequently found in many college courses and textbooks.

Units Exam Weighting
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts 12–15%
Unit 2: Supply and Demand 20–25%
Unit 3: Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model 22–25%
Unit 4: Imperfect Competition 15–22%
Unit 5: Factor Markets 10–13%
Unit 6: Market Failure and the Role of Government 8–13%

Relationship between the 4 Big Ideas and the 6 Units

The following table shows how the big ideas spiral across units.

Big Ideas Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Unit 5 Unit 6
Basic Economic Concepts Supply and Demand Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model Imperfect Competition Factor Markets Market Failure and the Role of Government
Scarcity and Markets
MKT
[x] [x]
Costs, Benefits, and Marginal Analysis
CBA
[x] [x]
Production Choices and Behavior
PRD
[x] [x] [x]
Market Inefficiency and Public Policy
POL
[x] [x]

Big Ideas, Units, and Unit Topics

  • SKILL CATEGORIES
    Skill categories spiral throughout the course.

    • 1: Principles and Models
    • 2: Interpretation
    • 3: Manipulation
    • 4: Graphing and Visuals
  • BIG IDEAS
    Big ideas spiral across topics and units.

    • MKT: Scarcity and Markets
    • PRD: Production Choices and Behavior
    • CBA: Costs, Benefits, and Marginal Analysis
    • POL: Market Inefficiency and Public Policy
UNIT 1 Basic Economic Concepts
~9–11 Class Periods 12–15% AP Exam Weighting
MKT 1 1.1 Scarcity
MKT 1 1.2 Resource Allocation and Economic Systems
MKT 4 1.3 Production Possibilities Curve
MKT 1 1.4 Comparative
CBA 1 1.5 Cost-Benefit Analysis
CBA 2 1.6 Marginal Analysis and Consumer Choice
UNIT 2 Supply and Demand
~13–15 Class Periods 20–25% AP Exam Weighting
MKT 4 2.1 Demand
MKT 4 2.2 Supply
MKT 3 2.3 Price Elasticity of Demand
MKT 3 2.4 Price Elasticity of Supply
MKT 3 2.5 Other Elasticities
MKT 2 2.6 Market Equilibrium and Consumer and Producer Surplus
MKT 3 2.7 Market Disequilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium
POL 4 2.8 The Effects of Government Intervention in Markets
POL 4 2.9 International Trade and Public Policy
UNIT 3: Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model
~11–13 Class Periods 22–25% AP Exam Weighting
PRD 1 3.1 The Production Function
PRD 4 3.2 Short-Run Production Costs
PRD 1 3.3 Long-Run Production Costs
CBA 1 3.4 Types of Profit
CBA 2 3.5 Profit Maximization
PRD 2 3.6 Firms’ Short-Run Decisions to Produce and Long-Run Decisions to Enter or Exit a Market
PRD 4 3.7 Perfect Competition

UNIT 4: Imperfect Competition
~8–10 Class Periods 15–22% AP Exam Weighting
PRD 1 4.1 Introduction to Imperfectly Competitive Markets
PRD 4 4.2 Monopoly
PRD 4 4.3 Price Discrimination
PRD 4 4.4 Monopolistic Competition
PRD 2 4.5 Oligopoly and Game Theory
UNIT 5: Factor Markets
~6–8 Class Periods 10–13% AP Exam Weighting
PRD 1 5.1 Introduction to Factor Markets
PRD 3 5.2 Changes in Factor Demand and Factor Supply
PRD 2 5.3 Profit-Maximizing Behavior in Perfectly Competitive Factor Markets
PRD 2 5.4 Monopsonistic Markets
UNIT 6 Market Failure and the Role of Government
~9–11 Class Periods 8–13% AP Exam Weighting
POL 2 6.1 Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes
POL 4 6.2 Externalities
POL 1 6.3 Public and Private Goods
POL 4 6.4 The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures
POL 1 6.5 Inequality

Unit 1 Basic Economic Concepts

  • 12–15%  AP EXAM WEIGHTING
  • ~9–11 CLASS PERIODS

Unit at a Glance

BIG IDEA 1
Scarcity and Markets MKT

  • How do individuals and economies confront the problem of scarcity?
  • Why do people and countries trade with one another?

BIG IDEA 2
Costs, Benefits, and Marginal Analysis CBA

  • Why do all decisions have costs?
  • Why do people consider the additional costs and benefits of possible actions rather than just the total costs and benefits when making decisions?
Enduring Understanding Topic Suggested Skills
MKT-1 1.1 Scarcity 1.A Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.
1.2 Resource Allocation and Economic Systems 1.D Describe the similarities, differences, and limitations of economic concepts, principles, or models.
1.3 Production Possibilities Curve 4.A Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.
MKT-2 1.4 Comparative Advantage and Trade 1.C Identify an economic concept, principle, or model using quantitative data or calculations.
CBA-1 1.5 Cost-Benefit Analysis 1.C Identify an economic concept, principle, or model using quantitative data or calculations.
CBA-2 1.6 Marginal Analysis and Consumer Choice 2.C Interpret a specific economic outcome using quantitative data or calculations.

TOPIC 1.1 Scarcity

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-1
Most resources are scarce, and in most cases the use of resources involves constraints and trade-offs.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.A
Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-1.A
Define resources and the cause(s) of their scarcity.
MKT-1.A.1
Economic trade-offs arise from the lack of sufficient resources (scarcity) to meet society’s wants and needs.

MKT-1.A.2
Most factors of production (such as land, labor, and capital) are scarce, but some factors of production (such as established knowledge) may not be scarce due to their non-rival nature.


TOPIC 1.2 Resource Allocation and Economic Systems

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-1
Most resources are scarce, and in most cases the use of resources involves constraints and trade-offs.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.D
Describe the similarities, differences, and limitations of economic concepts, principles, or models.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-1.B
Define how resource allocation is influenced by the economic system adopted by society.
MKT-1.B.1
Resource allocation involves answering three basic questions: What goods and services to produce? How to produce those goods and services? And who consumes those goods and services?
MKT-1.B.2
Resource allocation is significantly influenced by the economic system adopted by society, such as command economy, market economy, or mixed economy. Each system involves a particular set of institutional arrangements and a coordinating mechanism for allocating scarce resources and distributing output.

TOPIC 1.3 Production Possibilities Curve

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-1
Most resources are scarce, and in most cases the use of resources involves constraints and trade-offs.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.A
Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-1.C
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) the production possibilities curve (PPC) and related terms.
  2. Explain (using graphs as appropriate) how the production possibilities curve (PPC) illustrates opportunity costs, trade-offs, inefficiency, efficiency, and economic growth or contraction under various conditions.
  3. Calculate (using data from PPCs or tables as appropriate) opportunity cost.
MKT-1.C.1
The PPC is a model used to show the trade-offs associated with allocating resources.

MKT-1.C.2
The PPC can be used to illustrate the concepts of scarcity, opportunity cost, efficiency, underutilized resources, and economic growth or contraction.

MKT-1.C.3
The shape of the PPC depends on whether opportunity costs are constant, increasing, or decreasing.

MKT-1.C.4
The PPC can shift due to changes in factors of production as well as changes in productivity/technology.

MKT-1.C.5
Economic growth results in an outward shift of the PPC.


TOPIC 1.4 Comparative Advantage and Trade

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-2
The consequences of scarcity can be mitigated through specialization in production and by exchange.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.C
Identify an economic concept, principle, or model using quantitative data or calculations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-2.A
  1. Define absolute advantage and comparative advantage.
  2. Determine (using data from PPCs or tables as appropriate) absolute and comparative advantage.
MKT-2.A.1
Absolute advantage describes a situation in which an individual, business, or country can produce more of a good or service than any other producer with the same quantity of resources.

MKT-2.A.2
Comparative advantage describes a situation in which an individual, business, or country can produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than another producer.

MKT-2.B
  1. Explain (using data from PPCs or tables as appropriate) how specialization according to comparative advantage with appropriate terms of trade can lead to gains from trade.
  2. Calculate (using data from PPCs or tables as appropriate) mutually beneficial terms of trade.
MKT-2.B.1
Production specialization according to comparative advantage, not absolute advantage, results in exchange opportunities that lead to consumption possibilities beyond the PPC.

MKT-2.B.2
Comparative advantage and opportunity costs determine the terms of trade for exchange under which mutually beneficial trade can occur.


TOPIC 1.6 Marginal Analysis and Consumer Choice

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
CBA-2
To determine the optimal level at which to pursue an activity whose total benefits exceed total cost, rational economic agents compare marginal benefits and marginal costs.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.C
Interpret a specific economic outcome using quantitative data or calculations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
CBA-2.A
  1. Define the key assumptions of consumer choice theory.
  2. Explain (using a table or graph as appropriate) how a rational consumer’s decision making involves the use of marginal benefits and marginal costs.
  3. Calculate (using a table or a graph when appropriate) how a rational consumer’s decision making involves the use of marginal benefits and marginal costs.
CBA-2.A.1
Consumers face constraints and have to make optimal decisions accounting for these constraints.

CBA-2.A.2
In a model of rational consumer choice, consumers are assumed to make choices so as to maximize their total utility.

CBA-2.A.3
Consumers experience diminishing marginal utility in the consumption of goods and services.

CBA-2.A.4
Consumers allocate their limited income to purchase the combination of goods that maximizes their utility by equating/comparing the marginal utility of the last dollar spent on each good.

[X] Exclusion:
Indifference curves are beyond the scope of the course and the AP Exam, but equating the ratios of marginal utility to price is within the scope.

CBA-2.B
  1. Define marginal analysis and related terms.
  2. Explain a decision using marginal analysis (using a table or a graph when appropriate).
CBA-2.B.1
Marginal analysis involves comparing the additional benefit of increasing a given activity with the additional cost. Comparing marginal benefit (MB) with marginal cost (MC) helps individuals (firms) decide whether to increase, decrease, or maintain their consumption (production) levels.

CBA-2.B.2
The optimal quantity at any point in time does not depend on fixed costs (sunk costs) or fixed benefits that have already been determined by past choices.

CBA-2.B.3
The optimal quantity is achieved when marginal benefit is equal to marginal cost or where total benefit is maximized.


UNIT 2 Supply and Demand

  • 20–25% AP Exam Weighting
  • ~13–15 Class Periods

UNIT AT A GLANCE

BIG IDEA
Scarcity and Markets MKT

  • What determines the market price for a good or service?
  • What causes market prices to change?

BIG IDEA 4
Market Inefficiency and Public Policy POL

  • How does government policy affect market outcomes?
Enduring Understanding Topic Suggested Skills
MKT-3 2.1 Demand 4.A Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.
2.2 Supply 4.A Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.
2.3 Price Elasticity of Demand 3.C Determine the effect(s) of a change in an economic situation using quantitative data or calculations.
2.4 Price Elasticity of Supply 3.C Determine the effect(s) of a change in an economic situation using quantitative data or calculations.
2.5 Other Elasticities 3.C Determine the effect(s) of a change in an economic situation using quantitative data or calculations.
MKT-4 2.6 Market Equilibrium and Consumer and Producer Surplus 2.A Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.
2.7 Market Disequilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium 3.A Determine the outcome of an economic situation using economic concepts, principles, or models.
POL-1 2.8 The Effects of Government Intervention in Markets 4.C Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.
2.9 International Trade and Public Policy 4.C Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.

TOPIC 2.1 Demand

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-3
Individuals and firms respond to incentives and face constraints.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.A
Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-3.A
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) key terms and factors related to consumer decision making and the law of demand.
  2. Explain (using graphs as appropriate) the relationship between price and quantity demanded and how buyers respond to incentives and constraints.
MKT-3.A.1
A well-defined system of property rights is necessary for the market system to function well.

MKT-3.A.2
Economic agents respond to incentives.

MKT-3.A.3
Individuals often respond to incentives, such as those presented by prices, but also face constraints, such as income, time, and legal and regulatory frameworks.

MKT-3.A.4
The law of demand suggests that a change in the own-price causes a change in quantity demanded in the opposite direction and a movement along a demand (marginal benefit) curve.

MKT-3.A.5
The conceptual relationship between price and quantity stated by the law of demand leads to downward-sloping demand curves explained by the income effect and substitution effect and/or by diminishing marginal utility.

MKT-3.A.6
The market demand curve (schedule) is derived from the summation of individual demand curves (schedules).

MKT-3.B
Explain (using graphs as appropriate) buyers’ responses to changes in incentives and constraints.
MKT-3.B.1
Changes in the determinants of consumer demand can cause the demand curve to shift.

TOPIC 2.2 Supply

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-3
Individuals and firms respond to incentives and face constraints.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.A
Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-3.C
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) the law of supply.
  2. Explain (using graphs as appropriate) the relationship between price and quantity supplied.
MKT-3.C.1
A change in own-price causes a change in quantity supplied in the same direction and a movement along a supply curve.

MKT-3.C.2
The market supply curve (schedule) is derived from the summation of individual supply curves (schedules). The market supply curve is upward-sloping.

MKT-3.D
Explain (using graphs as appropriate) producers’ (sellers’) responses to changes in incentives and technology.
MKT-3.D.1
Changes in the determinants of supply can cause the supply curve to shift.

TOPIC 2.3 Price Elasticity of Demand

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-3
Individuals and firms respond to incentives and face constraints.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Manipulation
3.C
Determine the effect(s) of a change in an economic situation using quantitative data or calculations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-3.E
a. Define measures of elasticity.
b. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) measures of elasticity and the impact of a given price change on total revenue or total expenditure.
c. Calculate (using data from a graph or a table as appropriate) measures of elasticity.
MKT-3.E.1
Economists use the concept of elasticity to measure the magnitude of percentage changes in quantity owing to any given changes in the own-price, income, and prices of related goods.

MKT-3.E.2
Price elasticity of demand is measured by the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price or the responsiveness of the quantity demanded to changes in price. Elasticity varies along a linear demand curve, meaning slope is not elasticity.

MKT-3.E.3
Ranges of values of elasticity of demand are described as elastic or inelastic with the separating benchmark being a magnitude of 1, where the change in the price and the change in the quantity demanded are proportional.

  1. When the magnitude of the value of elasticity is greater than 1, the demand is described as being elastic with respect to that price in the range of the given change.
  2. When the magnitude of the value of elasticity is less than 1, the demand is described as being inelastic with respect to that price in the range of the given change.
  3. When the magnitude of the value of elasticity is equal to 1, the demand is described as being unit elastic with respect to that price in the range of the given change.

MKT-3.E.4
The price elasticity of demand depends on certain factors such as the availability of substitutes.

MKT-3.E.5
The impact of a given price change on total revenue or total expenditure will depend on whether demand is elastic, inelastic, or unit elastic.


TOPIC 2.4 Price Elasticity of Supply

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-3
Individuals and firms respond to incentives and face constraints.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Manipulation
3.C
Determine the effect(s) of a change in an economic situation using quantitative data or calculations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-3.E
  1. Define measures of elasticity.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) measures of elasticity and the impact of a given price change on total revenue or total expenditure.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or a table as appropriate) measures of elasticity.
MKT-3.E.6
Price elasticity of supply is measured by the percentage change in quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price, or the responsiveness of the quantity supplied to changes in price.

MKT-3.E.7
Ranges of values of elasticity of supply are described as elastic or inelastic with the separating benchmark being a magnitude of 1, where the change in the price and the change in the quantity supplied are proportional.

  1. When the magnitude of the value of elasticity is greater than 1, the supply is described as being elastic with respect to that price in the range of the given change.
  2. When the magnitude of the value of elasticity is less than 1, the supply is described as being inelastic with respect to that price in the range of the given change.
  3. When the magnitude of the value of elasticity is equal to 1, the supply is described as being unit elastic with respect to that price in the range of the given change.

MKT-3.E.8
The price elasticity of supply depends on certain factors such as the price of alternative inputs.


TOPIC 2.5 Other Elasticities

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-3
Individuals and firms respond to incentives and face constraints.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Manipulation
3.C
Determine the effect(s) of a change in an economic situation using quantitative data or calculations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-3.E
  1. Define measures of elasticity.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) measures of elasticity and the impact of a given price change on total revenue or total expenditure.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or a table as appropriate) measures of elasticity.
MKT-3.E.9
Elasticity can be measured for any determinant of demand or supply, not just the price.

MKT-3.E.10
Income elasticity of demand is measured by the percentage change in the quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in consumers’ income. Economists use the income elasticity of demand to determine whether a good is normal or inferior.

MKT-3.E.11
Cross-price elasticity of demand is measured by the percentage change in the quantity demanded of one good divided by the percentage change in the price of another good. Economists use the cross-price elasticity of demand to determine whether goods are substitutes, complements, or not related.


TOPIC 2.6 Market Equilibrium and Consumer and Producer Surplus

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-4
Although equilibria are stable, an economy can move from one equilibrium to another if market conditions change.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
3.A
Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-4.A
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) market equilibrium, consumer surplus, and producer surplus.
  2. Explain (using graphs as appropriate) how equilibrium price, quantity, consumer surplus, and producer surplus for a good or service are determined.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) areas of consumer surplus and producer surplus at equilibrium.
MKT-4.A.1
The supply-demand model is a tool for understanding what factors influence prices and quantities and why prices and quantities might differ across markets or change over time.

MKT-4.A.2
In a perfectly competitive market, equilibrium is achieved (and markets clear with no shortages or surpluses) when the price of a good or service brings the quantity supplied and quantity demanded into balance, in the sense that buyers wish to purchase the same quantity that sellers wish to provide.

MKT-4.A.3
Equilibrium price provides information to economic decision-makers to guide resource allocation.

MKT-4.A.4
Economists use consumer surplus and producer surplus to measure the benefits markets create to buyers and sellers and understand market efficiency.

MKT-4.A.5
Market equilibrium maximizes total economic surplus in the absence of market failures, meaning that perfectly competitive markets are efficient.


TOPIC 2.7 Market Disequilibrium and Changes in Equilibrium

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
MKT-4
Although equilibria are stable, an economy can move from one equilibrium to another if market conditions change.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Manipulation
3.A
Determine the outcome of an economic situation using economic concepts, principles, or models.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
MKT-4.B
  1. Define a surplus and shortage.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how changes in underlying conditions and shocks to a competitive market can alter price, quantity, consumer surplus, and producer surplus.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) changes in price, quantity, consumer surplus, and producer surplus in response to changes in market conditions or market disequilibrium.
MKT-4.B.1
Whenever markets experience imbalances—creating disequilibrium prices and quantities, surpluses, and shortages—market forces drive price and quantity toward equilibrium.

MKT-4.B.2
Factors that shift the market demand and market supply curves cause price, quantity, consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total economic surplus (within that market) to change. The impact of the change depends on the price elasticities of demand and supply.


TOPIC 2.8 The Effects of Government Intervention in Markets

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
POL-1
Government policies influence consumer and producer behavior and therefore affect market outcomes.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.C
Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-1.A
  1. Define forms of government price and quantity intervention.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how government policies alter consumer and producer behaviors that influence incentives and therefore affect outcomes.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table where appropriate) changes in market outcomes resulting from government policies.
POL-1.A.1
Some government policies, such as price floors, price ceilings, and other forms of price and quantity regulation, affect incentives and outcomes in all market structures.

POL-1.A.2
Governments use taxes and subsidies to change incentives in ways that influence consumer and producer behavior, shifting the supply and demand curves accordingly.

POL-1.A.3
Taxes and subsidies affect government revenues or costs.

POL-1.A.4
Government intervention in a market producing the efficient quantity through taxes, subsidies, price controls, or quantity controls can only decrease allocative efficiency.

POL-1.A.5
Deadweight loss represents the losses to buyers and sellers as a result of government intervention in an efficient market.

POL-1.A.6
The incidence of taxes and subsidies imposed on goods traded in perfectly competitive markets depends on the elasticity of supply and demand.


TOPIC 2.9 International Trade and Public Policy

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
POL-1
Government policies influence consumer and producer behavior and therefore affect market outcomes.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.C
Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-1.B
  1. Define tariffs and quotas.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how markets are affected by public policy related to international trade.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) changes in market outcomes resulting from public policy related to international trade.
POL-1.B.1
Equilibria in competitive markets may be altered by the decision to open an economy to trade with other countries; equilibrium price can be higher or lower than under autarky, and the gap between domestic supply and demand is filled by trade. Opening an economy to trade with other countries affects consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total economic surplus.

POL-1.B.2
Tariffs, which governments sometimes use to influence international trade, affect domestic price, quantity, government revenue, and consumer surplus and total economic surplus.

POL-1.B.3
Quotas can be used to alter quantities produced and therefore affect price, consumer surplus, and total economic surplus.

[X] Exclusion:
The graphing of quotas is beyond the scope of the course and the AP Exam, but understanding how quotas affect quantities produced is within the scope.


UNIT 3 Production, Cost, and the Perfect Competition Model

  • 22–25% AP EXAM WEIGHTING
  • ~11–13 CLASS PERIODS

UNIT AT A GLANCE

BIG IDEA 2
Costs, Benefits, and Marginal Analysis CBA

  • How do businesses use marginal analysis to make decisions?

BIG IDEA 3
Production Choices and Behavior PRD

  • What drives producers’ decision making?
  • How can a market be perfectly competitive?
Enduring Understanding Topic Suggested Skills
PRD-1 3.1 The Production Function 1.A Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.
3.2 Short-Run Production Costs 4.A Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.
3.3 Long-Run Production Costs 1.D Describe the similarities, differences, and limitations of economic concepts, principles, or models.
CBA-2 3.4 Types of Profit 1.C Identify an economic concept, principle, or model using quantitative data or calculations.
3.5 Profit Maximization 2.A Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.
PRD-2 3.6 Firms’ Short-Run Decisions to Produce and Long-Run Decisions to Enter or Exit a Market 2.A Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs, or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.
PRD-3 3.7 Perfect Competition 4.A Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.

TOPIC 3.1 The Production Function

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-1
Firms’ production and cost constraints over different input and output levels shape optimal decisions in the short run and long run.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.A
Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-1.A
  1. Define (using graphs where appropriate) key terms and concepts relating to production and cost.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how production and cost are related in the short run and long run.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) the various measures of productivity and short-run and long-run costs.
PRD-1.A.1
The production function explains the relationship between inputs and outputs both in the short run and the long run.

PRD-1.A.2
Marginal product and average product change as input usage changes, and hence, total product changes.

PRD-1.A.3
Diminishing marginal returns occur as the firm employs more of one input, holding other inputs constant, to produce a product (output) in the short run.


TOPIC 3.2 Short-Run Production Costs

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-1
Firms’ production and cost constraints over different input and output levels shape optimal decisions in the short run and long run.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.A
Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-1.A
  1. Define (using graphs where appropriate) key terms and concepts relating to production and cost.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how production and cost are related in the short run and long run.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) the various measures of productivity and short-run and long-run costs.
PRD-1.A.4
Fixed costs and variable costs determine the total cost.

PRD-1.A.5
Marginal cost, average (fixed, variable, and total) cost, total cost, and total variable cost change as total output changes, but total fixed cost remains constant at all output levels, including zero output.

PRD-1.A.6
Production functions with diminishing marginal returns yield an upward-sloping marginal cost curve.

PRD-1.A.7
Specialization and the division of labor reduce marginal costs for firms.

PRD-1.A.8
Cost curves can shift in response to changes in input costs and productivity.


TOPIC 3.3 Long-Run Production Costs

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-1
Firms’ production and cost constraints over different input and output levels shape optimal decisions in the short run and long run.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.D
Describe the similarities, differences, and limitations of economic concepts, principles, or models.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-1.A
  1. Define (using graphs where appropriate) key terms and concepts relating to production and cost.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how production and cost are related in the short run and long run.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) the various measures of productivity and short-run and long-run costs.
PRD-1.A.9
In the long run, firms can adjust all their inputs, and as a result, all costs become variable.

PRD-1.A.10
The relationship between inputs and outputs in the long run is described by the scale of production—increasing, decreasing, or constant returns to scale.

PRD-1.A.11
The long-run average total cost is characterized by economies of scale, diseconomies of scale, or constant returns to scale (efficient scale).

PRD-1.A.12
The minimum efficient scale plays a role in determining the concentration of firms in a market and the market structure.


TOPIC 3.4 Types of Profit

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
CBA-2
To determine the optimal level at which to pursue an activity whose total benefits exceed total cost, rational economic agents compare marginal benefits and marginal costs.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.C
Identify an economic concept, principle, or model using quantitative data or calculations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
CBA-2.C
  1. Define the different types of profit.
  2. Explain how firms respond to profit opportunities.
  3. Calculate a firm’s profit or loss.
CBA-2.C.1
Firms respond to **economic profit (loss)** rather than **accounting profit**.

CBA-2.C.2
Accounting profit fails to account for **implicit costs** (such as cost of financial capital, compensation for risk, or an entrepreneur’s time), which, if fully compensated, result in **normal profit**.


TOPIC 3.5 Profit Maximization

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
CBA-2
To determine the optimal level at which to pursue an activity whose total benefits exceed total cost, rational economic agents compare marginal benefits and marginal costs.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.A
Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs, or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
CBA-2.D
  1. Define (using graphs or data as appropriate) the profit-maximizing rule.
  2. Explain (using a graph or data as appropriate) the profit-maximizing level of production.
CBA-2.D.1
Firms are assumed to produce output to maximize their profits by comparing marginal revenue and marginal cost.

TOPIC 3.6 Firms’ Short-Run Decisions to Produce and Long-Run Decisions to Enter or Exit a Market

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-2
Firms’ short-run decisions to produce output, and long-run decisions to enter or exit a market, are based on profitability.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-2.A
Explain (using graphs or data where appropriate) firms’ short-run decisions to produce positive output levels, or long-run decisions to enter or exit a market in response to profit-making opportunities.
PRD-2.A.1
In the short run, firms decide to operate (i.e., produce positive output) or shut down (i.e., produce zero output) by comparing total revenue to total variable cost or price to average variable cost (AVC).

PRD-2.A.2
In the absence of barriers to entry or exit, in the long run (i.e., once factors that are fixed in the short run become variable), firms enter a market in which there are profit-making opportunities and exit a market when they anticipate economic losses.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.A
Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs, or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.


TOPIC 3.7 Perfect Competition

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-3
Even with a common goal of profit-maximization, market structure constrains and influences prices, output, and efficiency.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-3.A
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) the characteristics of perfectly competitive markets and efficiency.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) equilibrium and firm decision making in perfectly competitive markets and how prices in perfectly competitive markets lead to efficient outcomes.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) economic profit (loss) in perfectly competitive markets.
PRD-3.A.1
A **perfectly competitive market** is efficient. Firms in perfectly competitive markets face **no barriers to entry** and have **no market power**.

PRD-3.A.2
In perfectly competitive markets, **prices communicate** to consumers and producers the magnitude of others’ **marginal costs of production** and **marginal benefits of consumption** and provide incentives to act on that information (i.e., **price equals marginal cost** in an efficient market).

PRD-3.A.3
In perfectly competitive markets, firms can sell all their outputs at a **constant price** determined by the market.

PRD-3.A.4**
At a competitive market equilibrium, firms are **price takers** and select output to **maximize profit** by producing the level of output where the **marginal cost equals marginal revenue (at the price)**.

PRD-3.A.5
At a competitive market equilibrium, the price of a product equals both the **private marginal benefit** received by the last unit consumed and the **private marginal cost** incurred to produce the last unit, thus achieving **allocative efficiency**.

PRD-3.A.6
In a **short-run** competitive equilibrium, price can either be **above or below its long-run competitive level** resulting in **profits or losses**, motivating **entry or exit of firms** and moving prices and quantities toward long-run equilibrium.

PRD-3.A.7
In a **long-run** perfectly competitive equilibrium, **productive efficiency** implies all operating firms produce at **efficient scale**, **price equals marginal cost and minimum average total cost**, and firms earn **zero economic profit**.

PRD-3.A.8
Firms may be in a **constant cost, increasing cost, or decreasing cost industry**. Long-run prices depend on the portion of the long-run cost curves on which firms operate.

PRD-3.A.9
A perfectly competitive market in long-run equilibrium is **allocatively and productively efficient**.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.A
Draw an accurately labeled graph or visual to represent an economic model or market.


UNIT 4 Imperfect Competition

  • 15–22% AP EXAM WEIGHTING
  • ~8–10 CLASS PERIODS

UNIT AT A GLANCE

BIG IDEA 3
Production Choices and Behavior PRD

  • What drives producers’ decision making?
  • How are imperfectly competitive markets inefficient?
Enduring Understanding Topic Suggested Skills
PRD-3 4.1 Introduction to Imperfectly Competitive Markets 1.D Describe the similarities, differences, and limitations of economic concepts, principles, or models.
4.2 Monopoly 4.B Demonstrate your understanding of a specific economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.
4.3 Price Discrimination 4.C Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.
4.4 Monopolistic Competition 4.B Demonstrate your understanding of a specific economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.
4.5 Oligopoly and Game Theory 2.C Interpret a specific economic outcome using quantitative data or calculations.

TOPIC 4.1 Introduction to Imperfectly Competitive Markets

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-3
Even with a common goal of profit-maximization, market structure constrains and influences prices, output, and efficiency.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-3.B
  1. Define (using graphs where appropriate) the characteristics of imperfectly competitive markets and inefficiency.
PRD-3.B.1
Imperfectly competitive markets include monopoly, oligopoly, and monopolistic competition in product markets and monopsony in factor markets.

PRD-3.B.2
In imperfectly competitive output markets and assuming all else is constant, a firm must lower price to sell additional units.

PRD-3.B.3
In imperfectly competitive markets, consumers and producers respond to prices that are above the marginal costs of production and/or marginal benefits of consumption (i.e., price is greater than marginal cost in an inefficient market).

PRD-3.B.4
Incentives to enter an industry may be mitigated by barriers to entry. Barriers to entry—such as high fixed/start-up costs, legal barriers to entry, and exclusive ownership of key resources—can sustain imperfectly competitive market structures.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.D
Describe the similarities, differences, and limitations of economic concepts, principles, or models.


TOPIC 4.2 Monopoly

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-3
Even with a common goal of profit-maximization, market structure constrains and influences prices, output, and efficiency.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-3.B
  1. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) equilibrium, firm decision making, consumer surplus, producer surplus, profit (loss), and deadweight loss in imperfectly competitive markets and why prices in imperfectly competitive markets cannot be relied on to coordinate the actions of all possible market participants and can lead to inefficient outputs.
  2. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) areas of consumer surplus, producer surplus, profit (loss), and deadweight loss in imperfectly competitive markets.
PRD-3.B.5
A monopoly exists because of barriers to entry.

PRD-3.B.6
In a monopoly, equilibrium (profit-maximizing) quantity is determined by equating marginal revenue (MR) to marginal cost (MC). The price charged is greater than the marginal cost.

PRD-3.B.7
In a natural monopoly, long-run economies of scale for a single firm exist throughout the entire effective demand of its product.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.B
Demonstrate your understanding of a specific economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.


TOPIC 4.3 Price Discrimination

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-3
Even with a common goal of profit-maximization, market structure constrains and influences prices, output, and efficiency.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-3.B
  1. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) equilibrium, firm decision making, consumer surplus, producer surplus, profit (loss), and deadweight loss in imperfectly competitive markets and why prices in imperfectly competitive markets cannot be relied on to coordinate the actions of all possible market participants and can lead to inefficient outputs.
  2. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) areas of consumer surplus, producer surplus, profit (loss), and deadweight loss in imperfectly competitive markets.
PRD-3.B.8
A firm with market power can engage in price discrimination to increase its profits or capture additional consumer surplus under certain conditions.

PRD-3.B.9
With perfect price discrimination, a monopolist produces the quantity where price equals marginal cost (just as a competitive market would) but extracts all economic surplus associated with its product and eliminates all deadweight loss.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.C
Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.


TOPIC 4.4 Monopolistic Competition

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-3
Even with a common goal of profit-maximization, market structure constrains and influences prices, output, and efficiency.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
  1. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) equilibrium, firm decision making, consumer surplus, producer surplus, profit (loss), and deadweight loss in imperfectly competitive markets and why prices in imperfectly competitive markets cannot be relied on to coordinate the actions of all possible market participants and can lead to inefficient outputs.
  2. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) areas of consumer surplus, producer surplus, profit (loss), and deadweight loss in imperfectly competitive markets.
PRD-3.B.10
In a market with monopolistic competition, firms producing differentiated products may earn positive, negative, or zero economic profit in the short run. Firms typically use advertising as a means of differentiating their product. Free entry and exit drive profits to zero in the long run. The output level, however, is smaller than the output level needed to minimize average total costs, creating excess capacity. The price is greater than marginal cost, creating allocative inefficiency.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.B
Demonstrate your understanding of a specific economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.


TOPIC 4.5 Oligopoly and Game Theory

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-3
Even with a common goal of profit-maximization, market structure constrains and influences prices, output, and efficiency.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-3.C
  1. Define (using tables as appropriate) key terms, strategies, and concepts relating to oligopolies and simple games.
  2. Explain (using tables as appropriate) strategies and equilibria in simple games and the connections to theoretical behaviors in various oligopoly market and non-market settings.
  3. Calculate (using tables as appropriate) the incentive sufficient to alter a player’s dominant strategy.
PRD-3.C.1
An oligopoly is an inefficient market structure with high barriers to entry, where there are few firms acting interdependently.

PRD-3.C.2
Firms in an oligopoly have an incentive to collude and form cartels.

PRD-3.C.3
A game is a situation in which a number of individuals take actions, and the payoff for each individual depends directly on both the individual’s own choice and the choices of others.

PRD-3.C.4
A strategy is a complete plan of actions for playing a game; the normal form model of a game shows the payoffs that result from each collection of strategies (one for each player).

PRD-3.C.5
A player has a dominant strategy when the payoff to a particular action is always higher independent of the action taken by the other player.

PRD-3.C.6
A Nash equilibrium is a condition describing the set of actions in which no player can increase his or her payoff by unilaterally taking another action, given the other players’ actions.

[X] Exclusion:
Dominant strategies and Nash equilibrium with more than two players or more than two actions per player, mixed-strategy equilibria, extensive form games, and normal form games with more than two players or more than two actions per player are beyond the scope of the course and the AP Exam.

PRD-3.C.7
Oligopolists have difficulty achieving the monopoly outcome for reasons similar to those that prevent players from achieving a cooperative outcome in the Prisoner’s Dilemma; nevertheless, prices are generally higher and quantities lower with oligopoly (or duopoly) than with perfect competition.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.C
Interpret a specific economic outcome using quantitative data or calculations.


UNIT 5 Factor Markets

  • 10–13% AP EXAM WEIGHTING

  • ~6–8 CLASS PERIODS

UNIT AT A GLANCE

BIG IDEA 3
Production Choices and Behavior

  • How are prices for resources determined?
  • How do firms use resource prices to make decisions?
Enduring Understanding Topic Suggested Skills
PRD-4 5.1 Introduction to Factor Markets 1.A Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.
5.2 Changes in Factor Demand and Factor Supply 3.B Determine the effect(s) of one or more changes on other economic markets.
5.3 Profit-Maximizing Behavior in Perfectly Competitive Factor Markets 2.C Interpret a specific economic outcome using quantitative data or calculations.
5.4 Monopsonistic Markets 2.A Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.

TOPIC 5.1 Introduction to Factor Markets

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-4
Factor prices provide incentives and convey information to firms and factors of production.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-4.A
  1. Define (using graphs where appropriate) key terms and concepts relating to factor markets.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) the relationship between factors of production, firms, and factor prices.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table where appropriate) the marginal revenue product and marginal resource cost.
PRD-4.A.1
Factors of production (labor, capital, and land) respond to factor prices (wages, interest, and rent), and employers’ (firms’) decision to hire is based on the productivity of the factors, output price, and cost of the factor.

PRD-4.A.2
The quantity of labor demanded is negatively related to the wage rate, while the quantity of labor supplied is positively related to the wage rate in a given labor market, other things constant.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.A
Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.


TOPIC 5.2 Changes in Factor Demand and Factor Supply

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-4
Factor prices provide incentives and convey information to firms and factors of production.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-4.B
Explain (using graphs where appropriate) firms’ and factors’ responses to changes in incentives and constraints.
PRD-4.B.1
Changes in the determinants of labor demand, such as the output price and the productivity of the worker, cause the labor demand curve to shift.

PRD-4.B.2
Changes in the determinants of labor supply (such as immigration, education, working conditions, age distribution, availability of alternative options, preferences for leisure, and cultural expectations) cause the labor supply curve to shift.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Manipulation
3.B
Determine the effect(s) of one or more changes on other economic markets.


TOPIC 5.3 Profit-Maximizing Behavior in Perfectly Competitive Factor Markets

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-4
Factor prices provide incentives and convey information to firms and factors of production.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-4.C
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) the characteristics of perfectly competitive factor markets.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) the profit-maximizing behavior of firms buying labor (with other inputs fixed) in perfectly competitive markets.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table where appropriate) measures representing the profit-maximizing behavior of firms buying labor (with other inputs fixed) in perfectly competitive markets.
PRD-4.C.1
In a perfectly competitive labor market, the wage is set by the market and each firm hires the quantity of workers, where the marginal factor (resource) cost (wage) equals the marginal revenue product of labor. A typical firm may be a perfect competitor in the labor market even if it is an imperfect competitor in its output markets.

PRD-4.C.2
A typical firm hires labor in a perfectly competitive labor market as long as the marginal revenue product of labor is greater than the market wage.

PRD-4.C.3
To minimize costs or maximize profits, firms allocate inputs such that the last dollar spent on each input yields the same amount of marginal product.

PRD-4.C.4
Marginal revenue product of a factor of production is the change in total revenue divided by the change in that factor of production, which is also equal to the marginal physical product of that factor multiplied by the marginal revenue (MRP = MP \times MR). Firms in a perfectly competitive output market will have marginal revenue product of labor that is equal to the value of the marginal product of labor (VMPL = MPL \times P) because marginal revenue for each unit of output is equal to price.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.C
Interpret a specific economic outcome using quantitative data or calculations.


TOPIC 5.4 Monopsonistic Markets

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
PRD-4
Factor prices provide incentives and convey information to firms and factors of production.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
PRD-4.D
  1. Define (using graphs as appropriate) the characteristics of monopsonistic markets.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) the profit-maximizing behavior of firms buying labor (with other inputs fixed) in monopsonistic markets.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table where appropriate) measures representing the profit-maximizing behavior of firms buying labor (with other inputs fixed) in monopsonistic markets.
PRD-4.D.1
In a monopsonistic labor market, a typical firm hires additional labor as long as the marginal revenue product is greater than the marginal factor (resource) cost (the wage of a new unit of labor plus the wage increase given to all existing labor).

PRD-4.D.2
When a typical firm hires additional workers in a monopsonistic labor market, the marginal factor (resource) cost is greater than the supply price of labor.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.A
Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.


UNIT 6 Market Failure and the Role of Government

  • 8–13% AP EXAM WEIGHTING
  • ~9–11 CLASS PERIODS

UNIT AT A GLANCE

BIG IDEA 4
Market Inefficiency and Public Policy POL

  • How do markets fail?
  • What role should the government play in markets?
Enduring Understanding Topic Suggested Skills
POL-2 6.1 Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes 2.A Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.
POL-3 6.2 Externalities 4.B Demonstrate your understanding of a specific economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.
POL-3 6.3 Public and Private Goods 1.B Identify an economic concept, principle, or model illustrated by an example.
POL-4 6.4 The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures 4.C Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.
POL-5 6.5 Inequality 1.A Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.

TOPIC 6.1 Socially Efficient and Inefficient Market Outcomes

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
POL-2
Perfectly competitive markets allocate resources efficiently, but imperfect competition often results in market inefficiencies.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-2.A
  1. Define social efficiency.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) why resource allocation in perfectly competitive markets is socially efficient.
POL-2.A.1
The optimal quantity of a good occurs where the marginal benefit of consuming the last unit equals the marginal cost of producing that last unit, thus maximizing total economic surplus.

POL-2.A.2
The market equilibrium quantity is equal to the socially optimal quantity only when all social benefits and costs are internalized by individuals in the market. Total economic surplus is maximized at that quantity. [See also PRD-3 and POL-3.]

POL-2.B
Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how private incentives can lead to actions by rational agents that are socially undesirable (inefficient) market outcomes.
POL-2.B.1
Rational agents can pursue private actions to exploit or exercise market characteristics known as market power.

POL-2.B.2
Rational agents make optimal decisions by equating private marginal benefits and private marginal costs that can result in market inefficiencies.

POL-2.B.3
Policymakers use cost-benefit analysis to evaluate different actions to reduce or eliminate market inefficiencies.

POL-2.B.4
Market inefficiencies can be eliminated by designing policies that equate marginal social benefit with marginal social cost.

POL-2.C
  1. Explain equilibrium allocations in imperfect markets relative to efficient allocations (using graphs where appropriate) and why these markets are inefficient.
  2. Calculate (using graphs where appropriate) the deadweight loss resulting from the production of a non-efficient quantity.
POL-2.C.1
Equilibrium allocations can deviate from efficient allocations due to situations such as monopoly; oligopoly; monopolistic competition; negative and positive externalities in production or consumption; asymmetric information; and insufficient production of public goods.

POL-2.C.2
Producing any non-efficient quantity results in deadweight loss.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Interpretation
2.A
Using economic concepts, principles, or models, explain how a specific economic outcome occurs, or what action should be taken in order to achieve a specific economic outcome.


TOPIC 6.2 Externalities

Enduring Understanding
POL-3
Private incentives can fail to account for all socially relevant considerations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-3.A
  1. Define externalities.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how in the presence of externalities, private markets do not take into consideration social costs or social benefits.
POL-3.A.1
The socially optimal quantity of a good occurs where the marginal social benefit of consuming the last unit equals the marginal social cost of producing that last unit, thus maximizing total economic surplus.

POL-3.A.2
Externalities are either positive or negative and arise from lack of well-defined property rights and/or high transaction costs.

POL-3.A.3
In the presence of externalities, rational agents respond to private costs and benefits and not to external costs and benefits.

POL-3.A.4
Rational agents have the incentive to free ride when a good is non-excludable.

POL-3.B
Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how public policies address positive or negative externalities.
POL-3.B.1
Policies that address positive or negative externalities include taxes/subsidies, environmental regulation, public provision, the assignment of property rights, and the reassignment of property rights through private transactions.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.B
Demonstrate your understanding of a specific economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.


TOPIC 6.3 Public and Private Goods

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
POL-3
Private incentives can fail to account for all socially relevant considerations.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-3.C
  1. Define whether goods are rival and/or excludable.
  2. Explain how the nature of rival and/or excludable goods influences the behavior of individuals and groups.
POL-3.C.1
Private goods are rival and excludable, and public goods are non-rival and non-excludable.

POL-3.C.2
Due to the free rider problem, private individuals usually lack the incentive to produce public goods, leaving government as the only producer.

POL-3.C.3
Governments sometimes choose to produce private goods, such as educational services, and to allow free access to them.

POL-3.C.4
Some natural resources are, by their nature, non-excludable and rival and therefore open access. Private individuals inefficiently overconsume such resources.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.B
Identify an economic concept, principle, or model illustrated by an example.


TOPIC 6.4 The Effects of Government Intervention in Different Market Structures

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
POL-4
In imperfect markets, well-designed government policy can reduce waste.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-4.A
  1. Define government policy interventions in imperfect markets.
  2. Explain (using graphs where appropriate) how government policies can alter market outcomes in perfectly and imperfectly competitive markets.
  3. Calculate (using data from a graph or table as appropriate) changes in market outcomes resulting from government policies in perfectly competitive and imperfectly competitive markets.
POL-4.A.1
Per-unit taxes and subsidies affect the total price consumers pay, net price firms receive, equilibrium quantity, consumer and producer surpluses, deadweight loss, and government revenue or cost. The impact of change depends on the price elasticity of demand and supply.

POL-4.A.2
Lump-sum taxes and lump-sum subsidies do not change either marginal cost or marginal benefit; only fixed costs will be affected.

POL-4.A.3
Binding price ceilings and floors affect prices and quantities differently depending on the market structures (perfect competition, monopoly, monopolistic competition, and monopsony) and the price elasticities of supply and demand.

POL-4.A.4
Government intervention in imperfect markets can increase efficiency if the policy correctly addresses the incentives that led to the market failure.

POL-4.A.5
Government can use price regulation to address inefficiency due to monopoly.

POL-4.A.6
A natural monopoly will require a lump-sum subsidy to produce at the allocatively efficient quantity.

POL-4.A.7
Governments use antitrust policy in an attempt to make markets more competitive.

[X] Exclusion:
A graph of inefficiency and policy due to collusion is beyond the scope of the course and the AP Exam.

SUGGESTED SKILL
Graphing and Visuals
4.C
Demonstrate the effect of a change in an economic situation on an accurately labeled graph or visual.


TOPIC 6.5 Inequality

ENDURING UNDERSTANDING
POL-5
Market outcomes can result in income inequality.

LEARNING OBJECTIVE ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE
POL-5.A
Define measures of economic inequality in income and wealth.
POL-5.A.1
Income levels and poverty rates vary greatly both across and within groups (e.g., age, gender, race) and countries.

POL-5.A.2
The Lorenz curve and Gini coefficient are used to represent the degree of inequality in distributions and to compare distributions across different countries, policies, or time periods.

Exclusion:
Drawing the Lorenz curve and calculating Gini coefficients are beyond the scope of the course and the AP Exam.

POL-5.B
Explain sources of income and wealth inequality.
POL-5.B.1
Each factor of production receives the value of its marginal product, which can contribute to income inequality.

POL-5.B.2
Sources of income and wealth inequality include differences in tax structures (progressive and regressive tax structures), human capital, social capital, inheritance, effects of discrimination, access to financial markets, mobility, and bargaining power within economic and social units (firms, labor unions, and families).

SUGGESTED SKILL
Principles and Models
1.A
Describe economic concepts, principles, or models.


References

Spread the love

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *