Title: Mankiw: Brief Principles of Macroeconomics, Second Edition (Harcourt, 2001)
1Mankiw Brief Principles of Macroeconomics,
Second Edition (Harcourt, 2001)
- Ch. 1 Ten Principles of Economics
2What Is Economics?
- Economics tries to capture the rules of rational
choice. - If choice is to be made then there must be
scarcity. - Examples of scarcity are limited income, limited
resources, limited time - So many books, so little time! is an economic
problem.
3Ten Principles of Economics
- How People Make Decisions.
- Principles 1-4.
- How People Interact.
- Principles 5-7.
- How the Economy as a Whole Works.
- Principles 8-10.
4Principle 1 People Face Tradeoffs
- Choices usually require giving up something else.
- This is true for individual and community
decisions. - Sometimes tradeoffs involve a choice between
fairness and more wealth (equity vs. efficiency).
5Principle 2 Opportunity Cost
- The cost of something is not only the payment but
also what one has to give up. - Opportunity cost is the true cost of an action.
- Opportunity cost includes the hypothetical cost
of sacrificing the best alternative.
6Principle 3 Thinking at the Margin
- Improvement to ones condition can usually take
place by making marginal decisions. - Marginal here means additional, extra.
- It is easier to identify and calculate the costs
and benefits of an additional work/leisure. - This is the source of the maximization rule
- Marginal benefit gt Marginal cost gt increase the
activity. - Marginal benefit lt Marginal cost gt reduce the
activity.
7Principle 4 People Respond to Incentives
- When prices change, when new laws and regulations
are put in practice, costs and benefits of
actions also change forcing different actions and
behavior. - Unintended consequences of legislation may be
more important because of the changed incentives.
8Principle 4 Trade Can Make Everyone Better Off
- Self-sufficiency forces families, countries to
use their resources to produce a number of goods
and services that they are not suited for. - The cost of those activities are very high.
- By concentrating on activities they are suited
for and produce cheaply, they can increase the
ability to obtain a higher amount of goods that
are costly to produce. - Trade also increases the variety of choice.
9Principle 6 Markets Are Usually More Efficient
Than Government
- Individual producers and individual consumers
know the costs and benefits of their actions
best. - When prices are determined through the
interaction of buyers and sellers, each price
reflects the cost and benefit of the last unit
produced and consumed.
10Principle 7 Governments Can Sometimes Improve
Markets
- Externalities lead to market failure. The
allocation of resources becomes non-optimal. - Government (collective action) can improve the
outcome. - Market power (monopoly) also leads to market
failure. - Public goods may not be provided by the market
unless governments intervene.
11Principle 8 Standard of Living in A Country
Depends on Productivity
- Productivity is the value of goods and services
produced in an hour by average worker. - Increasing the amount of labor, amount of capital
or technology all increase the total amount of
goods and services produced, raising the standard
of living. - Investment (increasing capital stock) and
improving technology both increase productivity.
12Principle 9 Inflation Is The Result of Fast
Increase of Money
- An increase in the overall level of prices is
called inflation. - Growth in the money supply is the culprit for
persistent inflation. - Money is defined as any payment accepted in
exchange for goods, services, assets. - In US it is currency outside the banks plus
checking account deposits.
13Principle 10 Only in the Short-run There Is a
Trade-off Between Inflation and Unemployment
- Because prices may not adjust to upward pressure
immediately, in the short-run, output may
increase because of higher demand in the economy. - Likewise, during high inflation, efforts to lower
the total demand in the economy may first result
in increasing unemployment and after a while, in
reducing inflation.