MGEC34H3 Lecture Notes - Economic Evaluation, Monopolistic Competition, Efficient-Market Hypothesis

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Theoretically, competition should ensure resources are allocated efficiently (assuming property rights, well-functioning legal systems, etc. ), with goods going to those who value them the most as measured by their willingness to pay. Due to market imperfections this outcome is rarely, if ever realized. Conditions necessary for efficient market allocation: an absence of market power (on both the demand and supply sides, adequate information (sufficient for both purchasers and producers to make good decisions, absence of externalities. Individual behavior and the demand for goods and services. The movement along the original indifference curve from a to b is the substitution effect. The movement from b to c (moving up to the new budget line) is the income effect. The income effect always starts where the substitution effect leaves off. An economic evaluation is the systematic, comparative analysis of two (or more) courses of action in terms of both their costs and their consequences. Three methods of economic evaluation: cost-effectiveness analysis:

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