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Econ 101 Introduction to Microeconomics

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Title: Econ 101 Introduction to Microeconomics


1
Econ 101Introduction to Microeconomics
  • Why study Economics?
  • Whats it all about?

Lorne Priemaza, M.A. Lorne.priemaza_at_ualberta.ca

2
Whats it all about?
  • Not business or finance
  • Not the stock market
  • Economics examines issues from a social
    perspective Social Science
  • Analysis of human behavior
  • Close relative of psychology and sociology
  • Economics Social Studies Math

3
DEFINITION
  • 1. ECONOMICS
  • The study of how individuals societies allocate
    limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants
  • The study of how choices are made coordinated

4
Whats it all about? SCOPE
  • MACROECONOMICS
  • business cycles
  • unemployment/ employment
  • inflation
  • trade, international markets (global economy)
  • MICROECONOMICS
  • scarcity
  • supply demand
  • markets
  • consumer
  • producer
  • changes/impacts
  • efficiency
  • technology
  • resources

5
SCOPE
  • MACROECONOMICS
  • The study of the national economy the global
    economy, the way that overall economic variables
    fluctuate grow, the effects of government
    actions on them.
  • MICROECONOMICS
  • The study of the decisions and interactions of
    individual people businesses, the effects of
    government regulation taxes on prices
    quantities of goods services.

6
DEFINITION
  • 1. ECONOMICS
  • The study of the problems that arise from
    scarcity, of the institutions that resolve the
    inescapable conflicts over the uses of scarce
    resources.

7
DEFINITION
  • 2. ECONOMIC RESOURCES
  • people or things that possess the ability to help
    produce commodities (goods services) that
    people value.

8
DEFINITION
  • 2. ECONOMIC RESOURCES
  • i) LAND (natural resources)
  • sites productive items on
    or under the earths surface

9
DEFINITION
  • 2. ECONOMIC RESOURCES
  • ii) LABOUR
  • productive people their efforts to
    produce goods services

10
DEFINITION
  • 2. ECONOMIC RESOURCES
  • iii) PHYSICAL CAPITAL
  • all human made items used to produce goods
    services.
  • (produced means of production)
  • ie Computers and Factories
  • not Money

11
DEFINITION
  • 2. ECONOMIC RESOURCES
  • iv) HUMAN CAPITAL
  • characterization of the education and training
    of workers
  • (productivity of workers)
  • ie years of university or years of job
    experience or innate ability

12
DEFINITION
  • 2. ECONOMIC RESOURCES
  • v) Other ENTREPRENEURIAL ABILITY
    the innovator,
    the risk bearer, the initiator

13
RETURNS TO RESOURCES
  • Rent, Wages, Interest, Profit
  • Rent is income earned by land
  • Wages are income earned by labour
  • Interest is income earned by capital
  • Profit is income earned by entrepreneurs

14
DEFINITION
  • 3. Scarcity
  • Peoples wants are greater than the economys
    ability to produce desirable goods services

scarcity scarce (limited)
resources unlimited wants (always want more)
Scarce Resources Unlimited Wants Choice
15
Scarcity ? Poverty
  • A homeless man who wants to eat but cannot faces
    scarcity
  • A university student who wants to own a Mustang
    convertible but cannot faces scarcity
  • A millionaire who wants to be Prime Minister but
    cannot faces scarcity (only one spot available)

16
Scarcity ? CHOICES
1.)What do we do with our scarce
resources? 2.)How do we make the best
use of our resources?
(Efficiency) 3.)For Whom will things be produced?
(Who will get what is available?)
(Equity)
17
Rationing
Scarcity necessitates a rationing device -
which guides choices.
Prices are the rationing device in our Economy
Prices direct scarce resources to their most
valued uses.
18
Rationing
Sometimes market forces alone do the rationing,
sometimes other forces are operating as well
E.g. legal moral social
19
The Five Basics
  • 1.Terminology (definitions)
  • 2.Economic Thinking/Reasoning
  • 3.Economic Principles/Theory
  • 4.Economic Policy Options
  • 5.Economic Institutions

20
Basics 1.) Terminology
  • The language of Economics.
  • The world through economics glasses
  • You need to learn French to participate in a
    French literature class
  • You need to learn chemical notation to succeed in
    Chemistry
  • You need economic language to understand Economics

21
Basics 2.) Economic Reasoning
  • Choices made under conditions of scarcity involve
    tradeoffs
  • advantages and disadvantages costs and benefits
    incentives and disincentives.
  • Economic reasoning is making decisions by
    comparing costs and benefits.

22
The Rationality Assumption
  • An individual makes decisions based on maximizing
    his or her own self-interest.
  • Therefore
  • People do not intentionally make decisions that
    would leave them worse off

23
Non-Satiation Assumption
More goods are always preferable to fewer goods
people are never satiated
  • People will always pick a job with the highest
    wage
  • People will always eat 10 pieces of pizza instead
    of 1

24
Costs and Benefits
  • The relevant costs and benefits to economic
    reasoning are the expected incremental or
    additional costs incurred and the expected
    incremental or additional benefits of a decision
  • That is only the costs and benefits that will be
    affected by the decision are considered
  • ADDITTIONAL costs or ADDITIONAL benefits

25
Marginal Cost, Marginal Benefit
  • M.C.(marginal cost) is the extra cost associated
    with the additional activity.
  • M.B.(marginal benefit) is the extra benefit
    associated with the additional activity.
  • s are used to measure these in order to
    facilitate comparisons

26
No Sunk Costs
  • Sunk Costs
  • Have already been incurred and will not change as
    a result of the decision you are about to make.
  • Represent past decisions.
  • Are therefore not counted in a cost benefit
    decision
  • Ie Cost of factory, rental costs, training
    costs, membership costs

27
ECONOMIC DECISION MAKING RULE (COST/BENEFIT)
  • If the benefits of an action exceed the costs

DO IT
  • If the costs of an action exceed the benefits

DONT DO IT
  • In the case of more than one alternative

CHOOSE THE ACTION WITH THE GREATEST NET ADVANTAGE
28
Opportunity Cost
  • The basis of economic cost benefit analysis
  • When a choice is made in favour of one
    alternative, another alternative is given up
  • The next best alternative that is given up when a
    choice is made is called the opportunity cost of
    the choice.

29
THE OPPORTUNITY COST of an action is the next
best foregone alternative.
30
Cost Benefit ExerciseExample of economic
decision making in action Should I Go To
University?
  • Consider the marginal costs and the marginal
    benefits of this decision.
  • Consider the Opportunity Cost

31
Opportunity Cost Example
  • Cost of 1 year of University
  • Tuition 5000
  • Books 500
  • Opportunity Cost of 1 year University
  • 40 hr/week, 50 weeks/year,
  • 20/hour 40,000
  • Total University Cost 45,500

32
Basics 3.)Theory
  • Simplified statement/ generalization about some
    part of the economy, based on assumptions
  • Assumptions define the circumstances under which
    a theory is likely to apply
  • ceteris paribus assumption -everything else held
    constant
  • Abstraction from reality
  • Helps us to understand/explains some part of the
    economy

33
Theory Assumptions
  • Assumptions
  • Why make Assumptions?

? Set the Stage ? Simplify
  • In order you understand a theory, you must
    understand the assumptions underlying the theory.

34
Theory
  • Method
  • observe patterns in raw data
  • generalize about the observed pattern
  • Model
  • name for more specific statement of a theory

35
Testing Theories
  • It is wrong to judge the validity of a theory on
    the basis of
  • the unrealistic assumptions.
  • how closely it represents reality.
  • A model is good if it yields usable
    predictions and explanations of the real world
  • when a model is no longer supported by factual
    evidence, it is no good
  • we need a new theory

36
Basics 4) Policy
  • In order to carry out effective policy, the
    policy maker must understand how the economy
    works
  • The is called POSITIVE ECONOMICS The economics
    of facts theory
  • -ie Minimum wage increase causes unemployment
    increase

37
Basics 4) Policy
  • In order to conduct policy, the policy maker
    must have some goals in mind
  • NORMATIVE ECONOMICS is the study of what the
    goals of the economy should be
  • -ie We should lower the minimum wage in order
    to lower unemployment

38
Basics 4) Policy
  • Formulated to achieve the normative GOALS for the
    economy
  • Efficiency use all our resources, (full
    employment), use them in the best way possible.
  • Equity in the distribution of income
  • Economic Growth
  • Stability stable prices, stable growth
  • Full Employment Everyone looking for a job finds
    one fairly quickly

39
Basics 5.) Economic Institutions
  • Economic Institutions emerge from a complicated
    combination of historical circumstance
    economic, cultural, social political pressures.
  • Corporations, governments and cultural norms are
    all economic institutions. They differ
    significantly among nations
  • Institutions give models context
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