Title: 1'1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
11.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- All economic questions and problems arise because
human wants exceed the resources available to
satisfy them. - Scarcity
- The condition that arises because the available
resources are insufficient to satisfy wants. - Faced with scarcity, we must make choiceswe must
choose among the available alternatives. - The choices we make depend on the incentives we
face.
21.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- Incentive
- An incentive is a reward or a penaltya carrot
or a stickthat encourages or discourages an
action. - Economics
- The social science that studies the choices that
we make as we cope with scarcity and the
incentives that influence and reconcile our
choices. - The subject has two broad divisionsmicroeconomics
and macroeconomics.
31.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- Microeconomics
- Microeconomics The study of the choices that
individuals and businesses make, the way these
choices interact, and the influence that
governments exert on these choices. - Macroeconomics
- Macroeconomics The study of the aggregate (or
total) effects on the national economy and the
global economy of the choices that individuals,
businesses, and governments make.
41.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- Macroeconomic Questions
- The three big issues that macroeconomics tries to
understand are - The standard of living
- The cost of living
- Economic fluctuationsrecessions and expansions
51.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- The Standard of Living
- Standard of living
- The level of consumption of goods and services
that people enjoy, on the average it is measured
by average income per person. - Goods and services
- The objects that people value and produce to
satisfy human wants. Goods are physical objects,
and services are work done for people.
61.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- For most people achieving a high standard of
living means finding a good job. - Unemployment
- The state of being available and willing to work
but unable to find suitable work.
71.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- The Cost of Living
- Cost of living
- The number of dollars it takes to buy the goods
and services that achieve a given standard of
living. - Inflation
- A situation in which the cost of living is rising
and the value of money is shrinking.
81.1 DEFINITIONS AND QUESTIONS
- Economic Fluctuations Recessions and Expansions
- Business cycle
- A periodic but irregular up-and-down movement in
production and jobs. - The worst recession ever was the Great
Depression. - Great Depression
- A period during the 1930s in which the economy
experienced its worst-ever recession.
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101.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Goal of economists is to discover how the
economic world works. Economists distinguish
between - Positive statements What is
- Normative statements What ought to be
- The task of economic science
- To discover and catalog positive statements that
are consistent with what we observe in the world
and that enable us to understand how the economic
world works.
111.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- The task can be broken into three steps
- Observing and measuring
- Model building
- Testing
- Observing and Measuring
- Items such as
- Quantities of resources
- Wages and work hours
- Prices and quantities of goods and services
- Taxes and government spending
- Volume of international trade
121.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Model Building
- Economic model
- A description of some aspect of the economic
world that includes only those features of the
world that are needed for the purpose at hand.
131.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Testing
- A models predictions might correspond to or
conflict with the data. - Economic theory
- A generalization that summarizes what we
understand about the economic choices that people
make and the economic performance of industries
and nations.
141.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Unscrambling Cause and Effect
- The central idea that economists use to
unscramble cause and effect is ceteris paribus. - Ceteris Paribus
- Ceteris paribus means other things being
equal. - But ceteris paribus can be a problem in
economics when testing a model.
151.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Economist take three complimentary approaches
- Natural experiments
- Econometric investigations
- Economic experiments
Natural Experiments A situation that arises in
the ordinary course of economic life in which the
one factor of interest is different and other
things are equal.
161.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Econometric Investigations
- Economic investigations use statistical tools.
- Correlation
- The tendency for the values of two variables to
move in a predictable and related way. - Post hoc fallacy
- The error of reasoning that a first event causes
a second event because the first occurred before
the second.
171.2 ECONOMICS A SOCIAL SCIENCE
- Economic Experiments
- Economic experiments put real subjects in a
decision making situation and vary the influence
of interest to discover how the subjects respond
to one factor at a time. A relatively new
approach.
181.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Four core ideas
- Macroeconomic performance results from rational
choices that respond to incentives. - The standard of living improves when production
per person increases. - The cost of living rises when the quantity of
money increases faster than production. - Economic fluctuations result from expenditure and
productivity flucutations.
191.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Rational Choice and Incentives
- A rational choice is one that uses the available
resources to most effectively satisfy the wants
of the person making the choice. - Cost What You Must Give Up
- Opportunity cost
- The highest-valued alternative forgone.
201.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Benefit Gain Measured by What You Are Willing to
Give Up - Benefit
- The gain or pleasure that something brings.
- On the Margin
- Margin
- A choice that is made by comparing all the
relevant alternatives systematically and
incrementally.
211.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Marginal cost
- The cost of a one-unit increase in an activity
- Marginal benefit
- What you gain when you get one more unit of
- something.
- We make a rational choice when we take those
actions for which marginal benefit exceeds or
equals marginal cost.
221.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- The Standard of Living and Productivity
- The dollar value of production increases for
three reasons - Prices and wages rise
- The number of people employed increases
- Productivity increases
- Productivity
- Total production per person employed.
- Only an increase in productivity brings an
improvement in the standard of living.
231.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- The Cost of Living and the Quantity of Money
- A rising cost of living, called inflation, means
that more dollars are needed to buy the same
fixed quantity of goods and services. - Inflation is caused by an increase in the
quantity of money that is not matched by an
increase in the quantity of goods and services.
241.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Expenditure and Productivity Fluctuations
- The business cycle is the least well understood
aspect of macroeconomic performance. - The sources of economic fluctuations can be
grouped into - Expenditure fluctuations
- Productivity fluctuations
251.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Expenditure Fluctuations
- Expenditure fluctuations can arise from changes
in interest rates or from changes in profit
opportunities. - Productivity Fluctuations
- Productivity fluctuations can arise from negative
shocks such as an oil price hike or from positive
events like the spread of information-age
technologies.
261.3 MACROECONOMIC IDEAS
- Smoothing the Business Cycle
- Economic fluctuations are undesirable recession
brings unemployment and overly strong expansion
brings inflation. - Macroeconomics tries to develop techniques for
smoothing the business cycle.
271.4 WHY ECONOMICS IS WORTH STUDYING
- Two main benefits from studying economics are
- Understanding
- Expanded career opportunities
- Understanding
- Economic ideas is all around you. You cannot
ignore them. - As you progress with you study of economics,
youll gain a deeper understanding of what is
going on around you.
281.4 WHY ECONOMICS IS WORTH STUDYING
- Expanded Career Opportunities
- Most students of economics dont become
economists. - But knowledge of economics is vital is many
fields such as banking, finance, business,
management, insurance, real estate, law,
government, journalism, health care and the arts. - Economics graduates are not the highest-paid
professional, but they are close to the top.
29A P P E N D I X C H E C K L I S T
- When you have completed your study of this
appendix, you will be able to
Interpret a scatter diagram, a time-series graph,
and a cross-section graph.
Interpret the graphs used in economic models.
Define and calculate slope.
Graph relationships among more than two variables.
30APPENDIX MAKING AND USING GRAPHS
- Interpreting Graphs Used in Economic
- Positive relationship or direct relationship
- A relationship between two variables that move in
the same direction.
- Linear relationship
- A relationship that graphs as a straight line.
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34APPENDIX MAKING AND USING GRAPHS
- Negative relationship or inverse relationship
- A relationship between two variables that move in
opposite directions.
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42APPENDIX MAKING AND USING GRAPHS
- The Slope of a Relationship
- Slope
- The change in the value of the variable measured
on the y-axis divided by the change the value of
the variable measured on the x-axis. - Slope ?y ?x.
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45APPENDIX MAKING AND USING GRAPHS
- Relationships Among More Than Two Variables
- To graph a relationship that involves more than
two variables, we use the ceteris paribus
assumption. - Ceteris Paribus
- other things remaining the same.
- Figure A1.8 shows the relationships between ice
cream consumed, the temperature, and the price of
ice cream.
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