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微观经济学:第三版

微观经济学:第三版

定 价:¥49.00

作 者: (美)罗伯特·S.平代克(Robert S.Pindyck),(美)丹尼尔·L·鲁宾费尔德(Daniel L.Rubinfeld)著
出版社: 清华大学出版社
丛编项:
标 签: 微观经济学

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ISBN: 9787302024941 出版时间: 1997-04-26 包装: 平装
开本: 26cm 页数: 699 字数:  

内容简介

  内容提要 这是一本被美国许多著名院校广泛采用的微观经济学教材。它的第 一个特点是内容全面。包括了消费者行为与需求理论、生产者行为与 供给理论、供需均衡与市场理论、市场垄断与竞争对策、市场失效与 政府对市场的干预等各方面内容并有详细而精辟的叙述。本书的第二 个特点是内容叙述深入浅出,经济概念十分清晰,读后使人受益匪浅。 书中内容还通俗地反映了近年来在微观经济学科研与应用方面一些引 人注目的新发展。不仅使初学者能尽快获得接近前沿知识的基本经济 概念,即使经济学专家读后也会颇有收获。本书第三个特点是理论密 切联系实际。书中穿插了约90个具体例子用于理解各种经济概念如何 应用于社会实践。各章末尾配备习题供练习与思考。 本书适合各大专院校经济管理类专业本科生或研究生用作微观经 济学教材。对英文版原著的阅读可尽快接触到国外著名大学的最新教 材,也可提高专业英语水平,为进一步科研工作打下良好基础。本书 还可供经济管理类教师及科研人员用作参考书。

作者简介

暂缺《微观经济学:第三版》作者简介

图书目录

     Contents
   PART 1 Introduction: Markets and Prices
    1 PRELIMINARIES
    1.1 The Use and Limitations of Microeconomic Theory
    1.2 Positive Versus Normative Analysis
    1.3 Why Study Microeconomics?
    Corporate Decision Making: Ford Introduces the Taurus
    Public Policy Design: Automobile Emission Standards
    1.4 What Is a Market?
    Competitive Versus Noncompetitive Markets
    Market Price
    The Extent of a Market
    1.5 Real Versus Nominal Prices
    2 THE BASICS OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND
    2.1 The Market Mechanism
    2.2 Shifts in Supply and Demand
    2.3 Elasticities of Supply and Demand
    2.4 Short-Run Versus Long-Run Elasticities
    Demand
    Supply
    *2.5 Understanding and Predicting the Effects of Changing Market
    Conditions
    2.6 Effects of Government Intervention--Price Controls
   PART 11 Producers, Consumers, and Competitive Markets
    3 CONSCIMER BEHAVIOR
    3.1 Consumer Preferences
    Some Basic Assumptions
    Indifference Curves
    Ordinal Versus Cardinal Rankings
    The Marginal Rate of Substitution
    Perfect Substitutes and Perfect Complements 66
    3.2 Budget Constraints
    The Budget Line
    The Effects of Changcs in Income and Prices 71
    3.3 Consumer Choice
    A Corner Solution
    3.4 Revealed Preference
    3.5 The Concept of Utility
    Utility and Satisfaction
    Marginal Utility
    4 INDIVIDUAL AND MARKET DEMAND
    4.1 Individual Demand
    Price Changes
    The Demand Curve
    Income Changes
    Engel Curves
    Substitutes and Complements
    4.2 Income and Substitution Effects
    Substitution Effect
    Income Effect
    A Special Case-The Giffen Good
    4.3 Market Demand
    from Individual to Market Demand
    Point and Arc Elasticities of Demand
    4.4 Consumer Surplus
    4.5 Network Externalities
    The Bandwagon Effect
    The Snob Effect
    *4.6 Empirical Estimation of Demand
    Interview and Experimental Approaches to Demand Determination
    The Statistical Approach to Denund Estimation
    The Form of the Demand Relationship
    Appendix to 4 Demand Theory-A Mathematical Treatment
    Utility Maximization
    The Consumer's Optimum
    Marginal Rate of Substitution
    An Example
    Marginal Utility of Income
    Duality in Consumer Theory
    Income and Substitution Effects
    5 CHOICE CINDER CJNCERTAINTY
    5.1 Describing Risk
    Probability
    Expected Value
    Variability
    Decision Making
    5.2 Preferences Toward Risk
    Different Preferences Toward Risk
    5.3 Reducing Risk
    Diversification
    Insurance
    The Value of Information 154
    *5.4 The Demand for Risky Assets
    Assets
    Asset Returns
    The Trade-off Between Risk and Return
    The Investor's Choice Problem
    6 PRODUCTION
    6.1 The Technology of Production
    6.2 Isoquants 168
    The Short Run Versus the Long Run
    6.3 Production with One Variable Input (Labor;
    Average and Marginal Products
    The Law of Diminishing Returns
    Labor Productivity
    6.4 Production with Two Variable Inpurs
    Diminishing Returns
    Substitution Among Inputs
    Production Functions-Two Special Cases
    6.5 Returns to Scale
    7 THE COST OF PRODCICTION
    7.1 Measuring Cost: Which Costs Matter?
    Economic Cost Versus Accounting Cost
    Sunk Costs
    7.2 Cost in the Short Run
    The Determinants of Short-Run Cost
    The Shapes of the Cost Curves
    7.3 Costs in the Long Run
    The Cost-Minimizing Input Choice
    The Isocost Line
    Choosing Inputs
    Cost Minimization with Varying Output Levels
    7.4 Long-Run Versus Short-Run Cost Curves
    The Inflexibility of Short-Run Production
    Long-Run Average Cost
    Economies and Diseconomies of Scale
    The Relationship Between Short-Run and Long-Run Cost
    7.5 Production with Two Outputs--Economies of Scope
    *7.6 Dynamic Changes in Costs---The Learning Curve
    *7.7 Estimating and Predicting Cost
    Cost Functions and the Measurement of Scale Economies
    Appendix to 7 Production and Cost Theory--A Mathematical
    Treatment
    Cost Minimization
    Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution
    Duality in Production and Cost Theory
    The Cobb-Douglas Cost and Production Punctions
    8 PROFIT MAXIMIZATION AND COMPETITIVE SUPPLY
    8.1 Profit Maximization
    Do Firms Maximize Profit?
    8.2 Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization
    Demand and Marginal Revenue for a Competitive Firm
    Profit Maximization by a Competitive Firm
    8.3 Choosing Output in the Short Run
    Short-Run Profit Maximization by a Competitive Firm
    The Short-Run Profitability of a Competitive Firm
    8.4 The Competitive Firm's Short-Run Supply Curve
    The Firm's Response to an Input Price Change
    8.5 The Short-Run Market Supply Curve
    Elasticity of Market Supply
    Producer Surplus in the Short Run
    8.6 Choosing Output in the Long Run
    Zero Profit
    Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium
    Economic Rent
    Producer Surplus in the Long Run
    8.7 The Industry's Long-Run Supply Curve
    Constant-Cost Industry
    Increasing-Cost Industry
    Decreasing-Cost Industry
    The Short-Run and Long-Run Effects of a Tax
    Long-Run Elasticity of Supply
    8.8 When Is a Market Perfectly Competitive?
    Contestable Markets
    9 THE ANALYSIS OF COMPETITIVE MARKETS
    9.1 Evaluating the Gains and Losses from Government Policies-Consumer
    and Producer Surplus
    Review of Consumer and Producer Surplus
    Application of Consumer and Producer Surplus
    9.2 The Efficiency of a Competitive Market
    9.3 Minimum Prices
    9.4 Price Supports and Production Quotas
    Price Supports
    Production Quotas
    9.5 Import Quotas and Tariffs
    9.6 The Impact of a Tax or Subsidy
   PART III Market Structure and Competitive Strategy
    10 MARKET POWER: MONOPOLY AND MONOPSONY
    10.1 Monopoly
    Average Revenue and Marginal Revenue
    The Monopolist's Output Decision
    An Example
    A Rule of Thumbfor Pricing
    Shifts in Demand
    The Effect of a Tax
    *The Multiplant Firm
    10.2 Monopoly Power
    Measuring Monopoly Power
    The Rule of Thumb for Pricing
    10.3 Sources of Monopoly Power
    The Elasticity of Market Demand
    The Number of Firms
    The Interaction Among Firms
    10.4 The Social Costs of Monopoly Power
    Price Regulation
    Regulation in Practice
    10.5 Monopsony
    Monopsony and Monopoly Compared
    10.6 Monopsony Power
    Sources of Monopsony Power
    The Social Costs of Monopsony Power
    Bilateral Monopoly
    10.7 Limiting Market Power: The Antitrust Laws
    Enforcement of the Antitrust Laws
    11 PRICING WITH MARKET POWER
    11.1 Capturing Consumer Surplus
    11.2 Price Discrimination
    First-Degree Price Discrimination
    Second-Degree Price Discrimination
    Third-Degree Price Discrimination
    11.3 Intertemporal Price Discrimination and Peak-Load Pricing
    11.4 The Two-Part Tariff
    ll.5 Bundling
    Mixed Bundling
    Tying
    11.6 Advertising
    A Rule of Thumb for Advertising
    Appendix to ll-Transfer Pricing in the Integrated Firm
    Transfer Pricing When There Is No Outside Market
    Transfer Pricing with a Competitive Outside Market
    Transfer Pricing with a Noncompetitive Outside Market
    A Numerical Example
    12 MONOPOLISTIC COMPETITION AND OLIGOPOLY
    12.1 Monopolistic Competition
    The Makings of Monopolistic Competition
    Ecquilibrium in the Short Run and the Long Run
    Monopolistic Competition and Economic Efficiency
    12.2 Oligopoly
    Equilibrium in an Oligopolistic Market
    The Cournot Model
    Example: A Linear Demand Curve
    12.3 First Mover Advantage-The Stackelberg Model
    12.4 Price Competition
    Price Competition with Homogeneous Products-The Bertrand Model
    Price Competition with Differentiated Products
    12.5 Competition Versus Collusion: The Prisoners' Dilemma
    12.6 Implications of the Prisoners' Dilemma for Oligopolistic Pricing
    Price Rigidity
    Price Signaling and Price Leadership
    The Dominant Firm Model
    12.7 Cartels
    The Analysis of Cartel Pricing
    GAME THEORY AND COMPETITIVE STRATEGY
    13.1 Gaming and Strategic Decisions
    Noncooperative Versus Cooperative Games
    13.2 Dominant Strategies
    13.3 The Nash Equilibrium Revisited
    Maximin Strategies
    *Mixcd Strategies
    13.4 Repeated Games
    13.5 SequentialGames
    The Extensive Form of a Game
    The Advantage of Moving First
    13.6 Threats, Commitments, and Credibility
    Empty Threats
    Commitment and Credibility
    13.7 Entry Deterrence
    Strategic Trade Policy and International Competition
    13.8 Bargaining Strategy
    14 MARKETS FOR FACTOR INPUTS
    14.1 Competitive Factor Markets
    Demand for a Factor Input When Only One Input Is Variable
    Demand for a Factor Input When Several Inputs Are Variable
    The Market Demand Curve
    The Supply of Inputs to a Firm
    The Market Supply of Inputs
    14.2 Equilibrium in a Competitive Factor Market
    Economic Rent
    14.3 Factor Markets with Monopsony Power
    Marginal and Average Expenditure
    The Input Purchasing Decision of the Firm
    14.4 Factor Markets with Monopoly Power
    Monopoly Power over the Wage Rate
    A Two-Sector Model of Labor Employment
    Bilateral Monopoly in the Labor Market
    15 INVESTMENT, TIME, AND CAPITAL MARKETS
    15.1 Stocks Versus Flows
    15.2 Present Discounted Value
    Valuing Payment Streams
    15.3 The Value of a Bond
    Perpetuities
    The Effective Yield on a Bond
    15.4 The Net Present Value Criterion for Capital Investment Decisions
    The Electric Motor Factory
    Real Versus Nominal Discount Rates
    Negative Future Cash Flows
    15.5 Adjustments for Risk
    Diversifiable Versus Nondiversifiable Risk
    The Capital Asset Pricing Model
    15.6 Investment Decisions by Consumers
    15.7 Intertemporal Production Decisions-Depletable Resources
    The Production Decision of an Individual Resource Producer
    The Behauior of Market Price
    User Cost
    Resource Production by a Monopolist
    15.8 How Are Interest Rates Determined?
    A Variety of Interest Rates
   PART IV Information, Market Failure, and the Role ofGovernment
    16 GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM AND ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
    16.1 General Equilibrium Analysis
    Two Interdependent Markets-Moving to General Equilibrium
    The Attainment of General Equilibrium
    16.2 Efficiency in Exchange
    The Advantages of Trade
    The Edgeworth Box Diagram
    Efficient Allocations
    The Contract Curve
    Consumer Equilibrium in a Competitive Market
    16.3 Equity and Efficiency
    The Utility Possibilities Frontier
    Equity and Perfect Competition
    16.4 Efficiency in Production
    Production in the Edgeworth Box
    Input Efficiency
    Producer Equilibrium in a Competitive Input Market
    The Production Possibilities Frontier
    Output Efficiency
    Efficiency in Output Markets
    16.5 The Gains from Free Trade
    Comparative Advantage
    An Expanded Production Possibilities Frontier
    16.6 An Overview-The Efficiency of Competitive Markets
    16.7 Why Markets Fail
    Market Power
    Incomplete Information
    Externalities
    Public Goods
    17 MARKETS WITH ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION
    17.1 Quality Uncertainty and the Market for "Lemons"
    The Market for Used Cars
    Implications of Asymmetric Information
    Insurdnce
    The Market for Credit
    The Importance of Reputation and Standardization
    17.2 Market Signaling
    A Simple Model of Job Market Signaling
    - Guarantees and Warranties
    17.3 Moral Hazard
    17.4 The Principal-Agent Problem
    The Principal-Agent Problem in Private Enterprises
    The Principal-Agent Problem in Public Enterprises
    Incentives in the Principal-Agent Framework
    17.5 Managerial Incentives in an Integrated Firm
    Asymmetric Information and Incentive Design in the Integrated Firm
    Applications 616
    17.6 Asymmetric Information in Labor Markets: Efficiency Wage Theory
    18 EXTERNALITIES AND PUBLIC QOODS
    18.1 Externalities
    Negative Externalities and Inefficiency
    Positive Externalities and Inefficiency
    18.2 Ways of Correcting Market Failure
    An Emissions Standard
    An Emissions Fee
    Standards Versus Fees
    Transferable Emissions Permits
    Recycling
    18.3 Externalities and Property Rights
    Property Rights
    Bargaining and Economic Efficiency
    Costly Bargaining-The Role of Strategic Behavior
    A Legal Solution-Suiing for Damages
    18.4 Common Property Resources
    18.5 PublicGoods
    Efficiency and Public Goods
    Public Goods and Market Failure
    18.6 Private Preferences for Public Goods
    APPENDIX THE BASICS OF REGRESSION
    An Example
    Estimation
    Statistical Tests
    Goodness of Fit
    Economic Forecasting
    GLOSSARY
   ANSWERS TO SELECTED EXERCISES
   INDEX
   LIST OF EXAMPLES
    1.1 Unemployment and the Labor Force Participation of Women
    1.2 The Price of Eggs and the Price of a College Education
    2.1 The Price of Eggs and the Price of a College Education
    2.2 The Long-Run Behavior of Mineral Prices
    2.3 The Market for Wheat
    2.4 The Demands for Gasoline and Automobiles
    2.5 The Weather in Brazil and the Price of Coffee in New York
    2.6 Declining Demand and the Behavior of Copper Prices
    2.7 The World Oil Market on the Back of an Envelope
    2.8 Price Controls and the Natural Gas Shortage
    3.1 Designing New Automobiles
    3.2 Designing New Automobiles
    3.3 The Decision Making of a Local Public Offidal
    3.4 A College Trust Fund
    3.5 Revealed Preference for Recreation
    3.6 Gasoline Rationing
    4.1 Consumer Expenditures in the United States
    4.2 The Effects of a Gasoline Tax
    4.3 The Aggregate Demand for Wheat
    4.4 The Demand for Housing
    4.5 The Value of Clean Air
    4.6 Network Externalities and the Demands for Computers and FaxMachines
    5.1 Business Executives and the Choice of Risk
    5.2 Deterring Crime
    5.3 The Value of Title Insurance When Buying a Home
    5.4 The Value of Information in the Dairy Industry
    6.1 Malthus and the Food Crisis
    6.2 Will the Standard of Living in the United States Improve?
    6.3 A Production Function for Wheat
    6.4 Returns to Scale in the Rail Industry
    7.1 Choosing the Location for a New Law School Building
    7.2 The Opportunity Cost of Waiting in a Gasoline Line
    7.3 The Effect of Effluent Fees on Firms Input Choices
    7.4 Economies of Scope in the Trucking Industry
    7.5 The Learning Curve in the Chemical Processing Industry
    7.6 Cost Functions for Electric Power
    7.7 A Cost Function for the Savings and Loan Industry
    8.1 Some Cost Considerations for Managers
    8.2 The Short-Run Production of Petroleum Products
    8.3 The Short-Run World Supply of Copper
    8.4 The Long-Run Supply of Housing
    9.1 Price Controls and the Natural Gas Shortage
    9.2 The Market for Human Kidneys
    9.3 Airline Regulation
    9.4 Supporting the Price of Wheat
    9.5 The SugarQuota
    9.6 A Tax on Gasoline
    10.1 Markup Pricing: Supermarkets to Designer Jeans
    10.2 The Pricing of Prerecorded Videocassettes
    10.3 Monopsony Power in U.S. Manufacturing
    10.4 A Phone Call About Prices
    11.1 The Economics of Coupons and Kebates
    11.2 How to Set Airline Fares
    11.3 How to Price a Best-Selling Novel
    11.4 Polaroid Cameras
    11.5 The Complete Dinner vs. a la Carte: A Restaurant's Pricing Problem
    11.6 Advertising: Supermarkets to Designer Jeans
    12.1 Monopolistic Competition in the Markets for Colas and Coffee
    12.2 A Pricing Problem for Procter & Gamble
    12.3 Procter & Gamble in a Prisoners Dilemma
    12.4 Price Leadership and Price Rigidity in Commercial Banking
    12.5 The Cartelization of Intercollegiate Athletics
    13.1 Acquiring a Company
    13.2 Oligopolistic Cooperation in the Water Meter Industry
    13.3 Competition and Collusion in the Airline Industry
    13.4 Wal-Mart Stores' Investment Strategy
    13.5 Du Pont Deters Entry in Titanium Dioxide Industry
    13.6 Diaper Wars
    14.1 The Demand for Jet Fuel
    14.2 Labor Supply for One- and Two-Earner Households
    14.3 Pay in the Military
    14.4 Monopsony Power in the Market for Baseball Players
    14.5 The Decline of Private Sector Unionism
    15.1 The Value of Lost Earnings
    15.2 The Yields on Corporate Bonds
    15.3 Capital Investment in the Disposable Diaper Industry
    15.4 Choosing an Air Conditioner
    15.5 How Depletable Are Depletable Resources?
    16.1 The Interdependence of International Markets
    16.2 The Effects of Automobile Import Quotas
    16.3 The Costs and Benefits of Special Protection
    17.1 Lemons in Major League Baseball
    17.2 Reducing Moral Hazard-Warranties of Animal Health
    17.3 Crisis in the Savings and Loan Industry
    17.4 The'Managers of Nonprofit Hospitals as Agents
    17.5 Efficiency Wages at Ford Motor Company
    18.1 The Costs and Benefits of Reduced Sulfur Dioxide Emissions
    18.2 Emissions Trading and Clean Air
    18.3 Regulating Municipal Solid Wastes
    18.4 The Coase Theorem at Work
    18.5 Crawfish Fishing in Louisiana
    18.6 The Demand for Clean.Air
    A.l The Demand for Coal
   

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