Title: Business Economics
1Business Economics
Elisabeth Oltheten January 24, 2001
2Why Economics?
- Economic Theory helps us understand how and why
business models work or dont work. - Example of the Harvard student
- He didnt understand why the model didnt work
anymore. - Robust results depend on robust assumptions.
3Ten Principles of Economic
4How People Make Decisions
- People face tradeoffs
- The cost of something is what you give up to get
it - Opportunity Cost
- Rational People think at the margin
- Marginal Changes
- People respond to incentives
5How People Interact
- Trade can make everyone better off
- Markets are usually a good way to organize
economic activity - Governments can sometimes improve market outcomes
- Market failure
- Externality
- Market Power
6How the Economy Works
- A Countrys standard of living depends on its
ability to produce goods and services - ?Key Economic Data
- Prices rise when the government prints too much
money - ? The Aegean Gap Widens
- Society faces a short run tradeoff between
inflation and unemployment
7Economic Models
- An Economist is someone who,
- having observed that something works in reality,
- wonders if it works in theory.
8Economic Models
- Observation
- Assumptions
- Models
9Model 1The Circular Flow Diagram
Markets (goods and services)
Firms
Households
Capital Markets Labour Markets
10Model 2Production Possibilities
0 tomatoes, 30 sheep
The opportunity costof 3 extra sheepis 80
tomato plants
550 tomatoes, 18 sheep is impossible
470 tomatoes, 15 sheep is inefficient
800 tomatoes, 0 sheep
Tradeoffs
Opportunity Cost
11Micro and Macro
- Microeconomics how households and firms make
decisions and interact in markets - Macroeconomics how economies behave
(production, growth, inflation, unemployment)
12Positive and Normative
- Positive minimum wage laws cause unemployment
- Normative the government should eliminate
minimum wage laws
13Graphing Techniques
- Review in the text pp. 34 to 43
14Gains from Trade
- George and Tasos are both farmers
- Tasos has a bigger better piece of land and can
produce - more tomatoes (5 bushels instead of 4)
- more lamb (40 kilos instead of 3)
- Tasos has an absolute advantage in both lamb and
tomatoes
15Absolute Advantage
1 kilo lamb 2 bushels of tomatoes
20 kilos lamb 2.5 bushels of tomatoes
Total Production 21 kilos lamb 4.5 bushels of
tomatoes
16Comparative Advantage
TRADE 3 kilos lamb for 1 bushel of tomatoes
17Gains from Trade
Consumption 3 kilo lamb 3 bushels of tomatoes
TRADE get 3 kilos lamb for 1 bushel tomatoes
Production4 bushels tomatoes
Note that the consumption is beyond the
production possibility curve
18Gains from Trade
TRADE get 1 bushel tomatoes for 3 kilos lamb
Production24 kilos lamb 2 bushels tomatoes
Consumption 21 kilos lamb 3 bushels of tomatoes
Note that the consumption is beyond the
production possibility curve
19Total Production 24 kilos lamb (up from 21) 6
bushels of tomatoes (up from 4.5)
Production 24 kilos lamb 2 bushels of tomatoes
Production 4 bushels of tomatoes