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Jones, Clifton T.; Thompson, Mark A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
There is some confusion about the nature of the short-run expansion path (SREP) for the firm as presented in many intermediate microeconomics textbooks. The traditional view is that the SREP is a horizontal line because the firm is stuck with a fixed amount of capital. However, this view does not usually acknowledge that the firm could choose to…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Microeconomics, Economics Education, Theories
Sawler, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The introduction of the concept of network effects is useful at the principles level to facilitate discussions of the determinants of monopoly, the need for standards in high-tech industries, and the general complexity of real-world competition. The author describes a demonstration and an extension that help students understand how consumers make…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Economics Education, Consumer Economics, Undergraduate Study
Kherfi, Samer – Journal of Economic Education, 2008
The author examines the determinants of success in introductory microeconomics, in the context of a Middle Eastern society but within an American educational setting. The data set is rich and covers over 3,500 students in one regional campus, allowing control for a wide range of student and class characteristics, one of which, nationality, is…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Introductory Courses, Undergraduate Students
Sanders, Shane; Weisman, Dennis L.; Li, Dong; Grimes, Paul, Ed. – Journal of Economic Education, 2008
The cross-price elasticity concept can be difficult for microeconomics students to grasp. The authors provide a real-life application of cross-price elasticities in policymaking. After a debate that spanned more than a decade and included input from safety engineers, medical personnel, politicians, and economists, the Federal Aviation…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Decision Making, Travel
Gratton-Lavoie, Chiara; Stanley, Denise – Journal of Economic Education, 2009
How do students enrolled in online courses perform relative to those who choose a more traditional classroom environment? What student characteristics help explain differences in student academic achievement in the two modes of instruction? What factors affect the students' choice of instruction mode? The authors address these questions in…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Online Courses, Introductory Courses, Economics Education
Hill, Roderick; Myatt, Anthony – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
Microeconomic principles courses focus on perfectly competitive markets far more than other market structures. The authors examine five possible reasons for this but find none of them sufficiently compelling. They conclude that textbook authors should place more emphasis on how economists select appropriate models and test models' predictions…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Microeconomics, Competition, Economics Education
Meister, J. Patrick; Anderson, Kyle J. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The authors describe an in-class exercise in which students participate in an auction to buy US Airways. The exercise is based on events of late 1995, in which neither United nor American Airlines decided to bid for US Airways. Two teams of students participate in an English auction. Students learn that the equilibrium of the sequential game is…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Simulation, Microeconomics, Class Activities
Pashigian, B. Peter; Self, James K. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
Authors of intermediate microeconomics textbooks devote relatively more space to imperfectly competitive markets than can be justified by their relative occurrence in actual markets. This gap has persisted for at least 40 years, even with an almost complete turnover of authors between the decades of the 1960s and the 2000s. This portrayal gives…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Textbooks, Textbook Content, Economics Education
Ando, Amy W.; Harrington, Donna Ramirez – Journal of Economic Education, 2006
An in-class game can be used to improve students' understanding of how a tradable discharge permit (TDP) program might work. There are, however, trade-offs one must face in designing such a game. An exercise might, in theory, demonstrate all the nuances of a TDP program and yet be so complex that students learn little from the experience. The…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Economics Education, Microeconomics
Eckalbar, John C. – Journal of Economic Education, 2006
The author shows how instructors might successfully introduce students in principles and intermediate microeconomic theory classes to the topic of bundling (i.e., the selling of two or more goods as a package, rather than separately). It is surprising how much students can learn using only the tools of high school geometry. To be specific, one can…
Descriptors: Geometry, Microeconomics, Economics Education, Teaching Methods
Round, David K.; McIver, Ron P. – Journal of Economic Education, 2006
Third-degree price discrimination is taught in almost every intermediate microeconomics class. The theory, geometry, and the algebra behind the concept are simple, and the phenomenon is commonly associated with the sale of many of the goods and services used frequently by students. Classroom discussion is usually vibrant as students can relate…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Consumer Economics, Economics Education, Textbook Content
Solman, Paul – Journal of Economic Education, 2008
The author describes and elaborates on how to use his public-television reports on the costs of the war in Iraq to teach economics. He shows how the Iraq war can provide economics instructors with an example for discussing cost-benefit analysis and opportunity costs in class. (Contains 4 notes.)
Descriptors: War, Foreign Countries, Economics Education, Cost Effectiveness
Chou, Yuan K. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author devises a simple way of incorporating the financial sector into a growth model that is pedagogically useful. Financial innovation raises the efficiency of financial intermediation by increasing the variety of financial products and services, resulting in improved matching of the needs of individual savers with those of firms raising…
Descriptors: Financial Services, Innovation, Economics Education, Macroeconomics
Somerville, R. A. – Journal of Economic Education, 2007
The author establishes a property of supply for a competitive firm: Assuming differentiability of the production frontier, linearly independent price vectors have disjoint image sets under the supply mapping. This property supports the main results. First, the author drew a simple proof of McFadden's proposition that differentiability of the…
Descriptors: Microeconomics, Consumer Economics, Theories, Economics Education
Kwon, Youngsun – Journal of Economic Education, 2006
The author derives the probability that price discrimination improves social welfare, using a simple model of third-degree price discrimination assuming two independent linear demands. The probability that price discrimination raises social welfare increases as the preferences or incomes of consumer groups become more heterogeneous. He derives the…
Descriptors: Consumer Economics, Microeconomics, Economics Education, Models