Title: Principles of Economics
1Principles of Economics
Professor Gerald Groshek5 B 34
2Seminars
- Monday 1515 1645 ? D 109
- Monday 1700 1830 ? D 109
- Friday 915 1045 D 113
- Friday 1100 1230 D 113
3Access to Online ResourcesDiscoverEcon
- Login email eustudent_at_verizon.netPassword
9122006
4Economics The Core Issues
5Economics
- The efficient allocation of scarce resources
among abundant alternatives over time and under
uncertainty - The basic purpose of studying economics is
understanding how economies function. - How an economy is organized, how it behaves, and
how successfully it achieves its basic
objectives.
6The Basic Economic Objectives
- What to produce?
- What combination of output is to be produced?
- How to produce it?
- With which input combination is the output to be
produced? - For Whom to produce?
- Who will receive the output and how much will
each receive?
7Attaining the Basic Objectives
- Cultural
- Based on traditions, customs, social norms
- The collective programming of the mind
- Political
- Based on authoritative control of resources
- Market
- Based on incentives and self-interested behavior
of individuals via the price mechanism concerned
with efficiency - Adam Smith, the invisible hand, and laissez-faire
8Macro Versus Micro
- Macroeconomics is the study of aggregate economic
behavior, of the economy as a whole. - Microeconomics is the study of individual
behavior in the economy, of the components of the
larger economy.
9End Versus Means
- Economists do not formulate an economys
objectives. - They focus on the means available for achieving
given goals.
10Theory Versus Reality
- The economy is much too vast and complex to
describe and explain in one course (or one
lifetime). - Economists use theories, or models, of economic
behavior to evaluate and design economic policy. - In these theories, we typically ignore the
possibility that many things can change at one
time. - Ceteris paribus is the assumption that nothing
else is changing.
11The Economy Is Us
- The economy is an abstraction that refers to the
sum of all our individual production and
consumption activities. - The economy is us the aggregation of all of our
supply and demand decisions.
12Factors of ProductionResource inputs used to
produce goods and services
- Labor - skills and abilities to produce goods and
services. - Land - all natural resources such as crude oil,
water, forests, air, and minerals. - Capital man-made goods produced for use in the
production of other goods, e.g., equipment,
structures. - Entrepreneurship the assembling of resources to
produce new or improved products and technologies
13Limits to Output
- No matter how an economy is organized there is a
limit to how fast it can grow. - The most evident limit is the scarce resources
available for producing goods and services. - There is a limit to the amount we can produce in
a given time period with available resources and
technology. Scarcity - We can obtain additional quantities of any
desired good only by reducing the potential
production of another good.
14Production Possibilities
- Production possibilities are the alternative
combination of final goods and services that
could be produced in a given period of time with
all available resources and technology.
15The Production Possibilities Curve
16The Production Possibilities Curve
- Each point on the production possibilities curve
depicts an alternative mix of output.
17The Production Possibilities Curve
18Opportunity Costs
- Opportunity cost is the most desired goods or
services that are forgone in order to obtain
something else. - The next best alternative use of resources.
19Law of Increasing Opportunity Costs
- Resources do not transfer perfectly from the
production of one good to another. - Increasing quantities of any good can be obtained
only by sacrificing ever-increasing quantities of
other goods. - We can obtain additional quantities of any
desired good only by reducing the potential
production of another good.
20Law of Increasing Opportunity Costs
A
Step 1 give up one truck
5
B
4
Step 3 give up another truck
Step 2 get two tanks
C
3
OUTPUT OF TRUCKS
Step 4 get one more tank
D
2
E
1
F
0
1
2
3
4
5
OUTPUT OF TANKS
21Efficiency
- Efficiency means getting the maximum output of a
good from the resources used in production. - Every point on a production possibilities curves
is efficient.
22Inefficiency
- A production possibilities curves shows potential
output, not necessarily actual output. - If we are inefficient, actual output will be less
than the potential output. - Countries may end up inside their production
possibilities curve if resources are
inefficiently combined.
23Unemployment
- Countries may end up inside their production
possibilities curve if all available resources
are not used.
24Inefficiency and Unemployment
A
5
B
4
C
Y
3
OUTPUT OF TRUCKS
2
1
1
2
3
4
5
0
OUTPUT OF TANKS
25Economic Growth
- A point outside the production possibilities
curve suggests that we could get more goods than
we are capable of producing! - Economic growth is an increase in output (real
GDP) an expansion of production possibilities.
26Economic Growth
A
X
5
B
4
C
3
OUTPUT OF TRUCKS
2
1
1
2
3
4
5
0
OUTPUT OF TANKS
27Economic Growth
- Production possibilities increase with more
resources or better technology.
- The production possibilities curve shifts outward.
28Economic Growth
OUTPUT OF TRUCKS
0
OUTPUT OF TANKS
29A Mixed Economy
- A mixed economy is one that uses both market
signals and government directives to allocate
goods and resources. - Most economies use a combination of market
signals and government directives to select
economic outcomes.
30Market Failure
- A market failure is an imperfection in the market
mechanism that prevents optimal outcomes. - If the market signals dont give the best
possible answers, we say that the market
mechanism has failed.
31Government Failure
- Government intervention may move us closer to our
economic goals or it may fail. - A government failure is government intervention
that fails to improve economic outcomes.
32Seeking Balance
- The challenge for society is to minimize failures
by selecting the appropriate balance of market
signals and government directives.
33Thinking Like an Economist
- Economics trains you to. . . .
- Think in terms of alternatives.
- Evaluate the cost of individual and social
choices. - Examine and understand how certain events and
issues are related.
34The Economy A Global View
35GDP Comparisons
- Gross domestic product (GDP) is a basic measure
of an economys size. - the total market value of all final goods and
services produced within a nations borders in a
given time period.
36Comparative Output
37Per Capita GDP
- Per Capita GDP is the dollar value of GDP divided
by total population average GDP. - It indicates how much output the average person
would get if all output were divided up evenly
among the population.
38GDP Per Capita Around the World (2002)
35,060
28,070
26,070
26,180
16,480
12,600
8,540
7,820
7,570
4,390
4,070
2,570
1,500
1,280
770
720
U.S
Haiti
India
Cuba
China
Japan
Jordan
France
Mexico
Nigeria
Russia
Canada
Ethiopia
Slovakia
South Korea
World Average
39GDP Growth
- Economic growth is the increase in output (real
GDP) an expansion of production possibilities.
40Poor Nations
- The populations of rich countries are growing
slowly so that gains in per capita GDP are easily
achieved. - The populations of the poorest countries are
still growing rapidly, making it difficult to
raise living standards.
41Slovakia
5.5 0.13
5.37
42The Mix of Output
- A century ago, about 66 percent of U.S. output
consisted of goods while one-third of output
consisted of services. - Today, nearly 75 percent of U.S. output consists
of services, not goods.
43The Mix of Output
- The relative decline in goods production does not
mean the U.S. is producing fewer goods than
before.
- Manufacturing and farm output has increased
tremendously. - The mix of output is simply different.
44The Changing Mix of Output
45Todays Mix of Output
- The four major uses of total output are
- Consumption
- Investment
- Government services
- Net exports
46Consumer Goods and Services
- Consumer goods and services include items like
breakfast cereals, movie rentals, and college
education. - This category of production accounts for over
two-thirds of total output.
47Investment Goods and Services
- Investment includes expenditures on (production
of) new plant, equipment, and structures
(capital) in a given time period, plus changes in
business inventories. - Maintain our production possibilities by
replacing worn out equipment and factories. - Expand our production possibilities by increasing
and improving our stock of capital The U.S.
devotes 15 percent of output to investment.
48Government Services
- Only that part of federal spending used to
acquire resources and produce services is counted
in GDP. - Income transfers are payments to individuals for
which no current goods or services are exchanged.
49Net Exports
- Exports are goods and services sold to foreign
buyers. - Imports are goods and services purchased from
foreign sources. - Net Exports are the value of exports minus the
value of imports.
50Comparative Advantage
- Comparative advantage is the ability of a country
to produce a specific good at a lower opportunity
cost than its trading partners. - International trade allows countries to produce
and export goods what they do best and import
goods they dont produce as efficiently.
51Productivity
- Productivity is output per unit of input such as
output per labor hour. - The productivity of workers is more important
than sheer numbers.
52Factors of Production
- The high productivity of an economy results from
highly educated workers using capital-intensive
production processes.
53Productivity and Growth
- Capital Stock
- A capital-intensive production process is one
that use a high ratio of capital to labor inputs. - Human Capital
- Human capital is the knowledge and skills
possessed by the workforce. - The high productivity of an economy results from
using highly educated workers in
capital-intensive production processes.
54The Education Gap Between Rich and Poor Nations
Enrollment in secondary school
55Factor Mobility and Technology
- Our continuing ability to produce the goods and
services that consumers demand depends on our
ability in reallocating resources from one
industry to another. - Whenever technology advances, an economy can
produce more output with existing resources.