Introduction to Macroeconomics - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to Macroeconomics

Description:

Introduction to Macroeconomics Chapter 1 Market Interaction J. Patrick Gunning * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:369
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 62
Provided by: noma3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to Macroeconomics


1
Introduction to Macroeconomics
  • Chapter 1
  • Market Interaction
  • J. Patrick Gunning
  • October 25, 2015

2
Introduction (1) The Definition of Economics
  • Economics the study of market interaction.
  • Market Interaction an abstract image of
    interaction among purposeful, "normal human
    beings," or actors, under a given set of
    conditions.

3
Introduction (3) The Definition of Market
Interaction
  • Meaning of distinctly human action.
  • People have definite wants.
  • People have the goal of satisfying the wants.
  • People possess imagination, creativity, and
    inventiveness.
  • Compare normal, distinctly human beings with
  • Animals.
  • Robots.

4
Distinctly Human Action
5
Not Distinctly Human Action
6
Introduction (2) Subjects Covered in This
Chapter
  • The conditions of market interaction.
  • Roles in market interaction.
  • The pure market economy.
  • Why study economics?

7
First Subject The Conditions of Market
Interaction
  • Three Topics in This Part
  • 1. A system of private property rights.
  • 2. Free enterprise.
  • 3. The use of money.

8
The Private Property System It Has Two
Characteristics
  • 1. For every separable good or resource, there is
    an individual who is assigned by law as an owner
    of the legal right to control its use.
  • 2. The owner of a legal right also has a legal
    right to exchange it.

9
First Characteristic of Private Property Rights
  • Every separable good or resource has an owner.

10
The Assumption of Power andLoyalty to Enforcement
  • A private property system implies that
    government agents (the police or the soldiers)
    have the power to block others from using a good
    or resource to which an individual has a legal
    right.
  • It also implies loyalty of the police or soldiers
    to the duty of enforcement.

11
Definitions
  • Good a thing or behavior that can be used to
    satisfy a want directly.
  • Resource a thing of behavior that can be used to
    satisfy a want indirectly by helping to produce a
    good.

12
Ownership in a Complete PrivateProperty System
  • To own the legal right to control a good or
    resources use means that a person can (a) cause
    it to have or not have beneficial effects either
    on himself and others and (b) cause it to have or
    not have harmful effects.
  • This implies no government ownership of goods or
    resources.

13
Separable and Non-separableGoods and Resources
  • Separable good or resource one for which the
    benefits and harm due its control and use can
    only be felt by a single person.
  • Example of a separable good a banana. Your
    eating it does not ordinarily yield benefits to
    others.

14
Separable and Non-separableGoods and Resources
  • Non-separable good or resource one for which the
    benefits and/or harm due to controlling its use
    can be felt by more than one person.
  • Examples of non-separable goods If one person
    supplies it, others benefit
  • Clean air.
  • Defense against aliens.

15
Ownership and Negative Externalities
  • Negative externality the harm felt by one person
    resulting from the action of another person.
  • Example 1 throwing the banana peel on the
    ground.
  • Example 2 the pig farmers allowing waste to
    flow into the unpolluted river used for swimming
    by a neighbor.
  • A complete property system means that someone
    owns the legal right to control all such actions.
    Either the perpetrator or the victim could own
    the right. Even out outsider could own it. But it
    must be owned.

16
Second Characteristic of Private Property Rights
  • Individuals have the legal right to exchange
    ownership rights.

17
Exchangeability
  • The legal rights associated with ownership of
    property are exchangeable. A person may sell
    them or give them away.
  • The legal right to control and action having an
    external effect is also exchangeable.

18
Exchangeability and Specialization
  • The exclusive ownership and exchangeability of
    ownership rights in a private property system
    gives individuals an incentive to specialize.
  • A skilled rancher has an incentive to buy a
    ranch. Knowing that he can buy a ranch gives an
    individual an incentive to become a skilled
    rancher.

19
Exchangeability and Optimal Negative Externalities
  • Ownership and exchangeability give individuals
    incentives to allow the externalities to continue
    only when the expected benefits are greater than
    the expected harm, in terms of money.
  • The pig farmer will pollute only if her benefits
    are greater than the harm to the person who is
    damaged by the pollution.
  • Note Either the farmer owns the right control
    the action that pollutes the stream or the
    swimming neighbor owns the right.

20
Evolution of Private Property Rights
  • Two requirements for a modern system of private
    property rights
  • 1. Formalness this usually means a set of
    written laws or widely understood laws that are
    enforced by the police or military.
  • 2. Equality under the law if a person subject to
    a law is interchanged with any other member of
    the community, the enforcement, judgment and
    punishment for a crime would be the same.

21
Informal and Formal Private Property Rights
  • Informal private property rights can exist in a
    traditional society. But rewards and punishments
    in such a society depend only roughly on ones
    contribution to the society. When such societies
    grow large, statuses are usually established.
    Families favored by the leaders are often given
    special privileges that are passed on to heirs.
    But descendants may be incompetent specialists.
    To give them rewards similar to their ancestors
    is harmful to the community long run interests.
  • A more flexible system evolved in England and its
    codified principles are called the common law.

22
England as a Mother Country
  • Due to its military power and policy of
    colonization, England can be regarded as the
    mother country for the property systems that
    emerged in the U.S., Canada, Australia, the
    Indian subcontinent, several countries in Africa
    and a number of others through out the world.
    Many of these countries adopted the common law
    system and its principles after they became
    independent.

23
The Common Law
  • Common law a set of legal rights to control
    actions that have external effects.
  • The common law developed in England as a
    consequence of centuries of judgment in dispute
    resolution cases by government-appointed judges.
  • The judges traveled from place to place, made
    rulings, and sent written copies of their rulings
    back to the capital city.
  • Young judges could learn the principles by
    studying the rulings.

24
Dispute Resolution
  • Procedures under common law.
  • 1. A person who believed that someone else was
    responsible for harming him would make a damage
    complaint.
  • 2. A judge, appointed by the king, would decide
    whether the complaint was justified. He would
    rule on whether a damage payment should be made
    and how much it should be.
  • The dog and chicken example.

25
Emergence of Common Law
  • Early British judgments in dispute resolution
    cases were collected and used as precedents in
    judgments for later decisions.
  • Principles were established through trial and
    error.
  • These principles enabled new judges to decide the
    right of first possession in most cases on the
    basis of precedent.

26
Formality and Equality Under the Law
  • When judgments came to be made according to
    principles rather than according to tradition and
    norms, the judgments met the standard of equality
    under the law.
  • The long tradition of common law in England
    ultimately led to the formality that is necessary
    for a more complete system of private property
    rights.
  • Former colonies of England formally adopted the
    British common law as part of their written
    constitutions.

27
The Common Law and the Right of First Possession
  • Another example of a common law judgment A
    nurtures a crop and B takes it. A makes a damage
    claim. In ruling that B should pay compensation,
    the judge establishes the legal right of A to
    benefit from his actions with respect to
    nurturing the crop.
  • Note that in deciding the case, the judge is
    establishing the right of possession and even the
    right of first possession.

28
Evolution of the Right of First Possession
  • Two kinds of cases
  • 1. Harmful externality the dog and chicken
    example, assuming that no dog had ever caused
    damage before.
  • 2. Right of first possession a person produces,
    discovers or invents a good or resource.
  • Judges expanded the application by considering
    increasingly complex cases.

29
The Common Sense of the Common Law
  • A goal of the best common law judges was to show
    that the kings law i.e., judge-made law --
    could benefit the community.
  • The judge aimed to make judgments that he
    believed were in the long run community
    interest.
  • He took account of future generations.

30
First Possession in a Kingdom
  • We can understand the importance of the right of
    first possession under common law by comparing it
    with the right of first possession in a kingdom.
  • In a kingdom, the king has the right of
    possession to everything.
  • Do people have an incentive to discover, invent,
    specialize and produce goods in a kingdom?
  • It depends on how much the king knows and whether
    he rewards the discoverers, inventors,
    specialists and producers.
  • Could the king, or any other single person, know
    the kinds of discoveries and inventions that take
    place routinely in a modern capitalist society?
  • Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm,

31
Alternative Means Of Assigning The Right Of First
Possession
  • Assign it to the leading government official or
    agency in the community.
  • People would not produce, discover, or invent
    unless they expected a share of the benefit.
  • Assign it by means of a lottery.
  • Because each citizen would have an equal chance
    of receiving a share, the incentive to produce,
    discover and invent would be low.

32
Right of First Possession Under Common Law
  • The benefit of assigning the right of first
    possession to the producer, discoverer or
    inventor.
  • If the law gives the discoverer of a good or
    resource the legal right of first possession,
    people will have a greater incentive to discover
    goods and resources. The same is true of a right
    of first possession that is given to an inventor
    or a producer.

33
First Possession and Teamwork (1)
  • In the eyes of common law judges, an employment
    compact supersedes what would otherwise be the
    rule of first possession.
  • Under the legal right of first possession, every
    team member possesses a share of the total
    output. However, the members may agree to give up
    their rights.

34
First Possession and Teamwork (2)
  • Today the employment agreement is recognized in
    courts as an implicit agreement by employees to
    give up their legal rights to the output.
  • The seller of a resource a component in the
    production of another product also implicitly
    gives up his legal right to share in the output.

35
An Example of First Possession
  • Who has the right of first possession to a book
    that you own?

36
Contract Law
  • Example of another common law judgment A
    nurtures the crop and gives it to B in return for
    Bs promise to pay. B does not pay. In ruling
    that B should pay compensation, the judge helps
    to establish the law of contracts.
  • Besides establishing the right of first
    possession, common law established the law of
    contracts.
  • Contract a promise to perform some action,
    usually in writing.
  • Contract law the system of rules for determining
    whether a promise has been broken, whether the
    person who broke it should compensate the
    promissee, and what the compensation should be.

37
Free Enterprise (1)
  • Definition with some exceptions, individuals are
    free from coercion to enter into any kind of
    business they wish, to apply for any kind of job,
    to buy and sell, and to make binding contracts.
  • Exceptions
  • Slavery.
  • Free enterprise a person may cause damage to a
    competitor in an effort to sell his goods or
    services to others.

38
Free Enterprise (2)
  • Two implications for the role of government
  • 1. The government should make no laws that
    prevent or deter individuals from making business
    exchanges.
  • 2. The government should use its power to stop
    others from preventing or deterring people from
    making business exchanges.
  • Free enterprise means that everyone faces
    potential competition.

39
Free Enterprise (3)
  • Restrictions on free enterprise in history
  • Restrictions on entry onto business in 17th and
    18th century Europe.
  • Entrance into a particular trades was often
    limited to those whose families were already in
    the trade or who had apprenticed for many years.
  • Licenses are often required today by the U.S.
    state and federal governments.

40
Evolution of Free Enterprise
  • Proponents of free enterprise
  • Economists who recognize its benefits.
  • Opponents of free enterprise
  • People who do not recognize its benefits
  • People who recognize the benefits and who want
    exceptions for themselves.
  • History of free enterprise begins with the
    development of economics but the conflict
    between opponents and proponents never ends.

41
Functions of money
  • Medium of exchange.
  • Store of value.
  • Unit of accounting.

42
Money as a Medium (1) Barter Vs. Money Exchange
  • Barter society a society in which individuals
    acquire goods directly by trading their own goods
    for those of others.
  • Money economy a society in which individuals
    acquire goods indirectly by trading their goods
    for money and then their money for the goods of
    others.

43
Money as a Medium (2) Barter Vs. Money Exchange
  • Barter society people trade
  • goods directly for other goods.
  • This is direct exchange.
  • Money society people trade
  • goods for money and then
  • trade the money for other
  • goods. This is indirect exchange.

44
Money as a Medium (3) Money vs. Other Media of
Exchange
  • Medium of exchange an item that is wanted not
    because one plans to use it but because one plans
    to exchange with others. It is wanted not because
    of its expected value in use but because of its
    expected value in exchange.
  • Money the generally accepted medium of exchange.
    This means that practically everyone will accept
    it in exchange.

45
Money As a Medium (4) The Origin and
Characteristics of Money
  • One theory the more marketable item becomes
    money.
  • Characteristics of a marketable money durable,
    cheap to store, small in relation to their value
    in exchange, divisible, and capable of easy
    quantitative measurement.
  • Whether a particular item is used as money
    depends on peoples' expectations about its
    marketability.
  • As barter exchange grows and becomes more
    complex, some items are acquired mainly because
    people want to exchange them for other items. The
    people who acquire them do not plan to use them,
    although others may.
  • One item eventually dominates the others in
    exchange.

46
Money As a Medium (5) Modern Money Forms
  • Government-issued paper money and coins.
  • Transferable deposits.

47
Money As a Store of Value (1)
  • Money enables people to economize on their
    savings. They prefer to save marketable items
    that do not deteriorate or become obsolete.
  • This is a major reason why durability is an
    important characteristic of money. Besides
    physical durability, people must believe that it
    will retain its exchange value.

48
Money As a Store of Value (2)
  • Historically, gold and silver coins have been
    good examples of durable money.
  • Children in a market economy must learn to use
    money.

49
Money As a Unit of Accounting
  • Definition of capital accounting using a rate
    of interest to compare the revenue and costs that
    are expected at one time in the future with those
    that are expected at a different time.
  • Examples
  • Should you continue your education beyond
    undergraduate school?
  • Choosing to buy a car or house.

50
Roles in Market Interaction (1) Introduction
  • The concept of a role
  • Example 1 the role of a student. Nobody is only
    a student. But it is often useful to refer to a
    person as a student.
  • Example 2 the roles of a father, mother, first
    son, grandmother in a family.

51
Roles in Market Interaction (2) Introduction
  • In market interaction, a person must first earn
    money. He can do this by being an employer of
    others resources or by allowing others to employ
    his resources. Thus, he becomes a producer or a
    resource supplier.
  • Once the money is received, a person must choose
    whether to spend or save. Usually, he chooses to
    spend some of his money and to save some.
  • Thus, he becomes a consumer and saver.

52
Roles in Market Interaction (3) the Most
Fundamental Roles
  • 1. Resource supplying hiring out work or other
    resources.
  • 2. Producing hiring resources to produce a
    saleable good and then selling it.
  • 3. Consuming using income to buy a good for the
    purpose of consuming it in the near future.
  • 4. Saving setting aside some income in order to
    buy goods in the future.

53
Impossibility of the Pure Market Economy
  • Pure market economy an economy in which the
    private property system is complete and there is
    completely free enterprise.
  • But a market economy can never be pure because
    the private property system can never be complete.

54
Why a Private Property System is Always
Incomplete (1)
  • The Reasons
  • 1. It is physically impossible or not worthwhile
    to enforce some private property rights.
  • 2. There are common property resources.
  • 3. There are public goods.
  • 4. Personal freedom means that no one can
    completely control another person's actions.
  • 5. Governments have other goals.

55
Why a Private Property System is Incomplete (2)
  • It is not worthwhile to enforce some private
    property rights.
  • The case of small benefits, such as rights to
    control the use of abusive and socially
    unacceptable language or actions.
  • The case of high costs, such as clean air, ocean
    minerals and food, sound waves, light waves, and
    radio waves.

56
Why a Private Property System is Incomplete (3)
  • There are common property resources and public
    goods.
  • Common property resource a resource for which
    members of a community have not established
    private property rights.
  • Two characteristics of public goods
  • 1. A number of people benefit simultaneously.
  • 2. It is impossible to exclude beneficiaries.
  • Examples dam, flood control project,
  • lighthouse.

57
Why a Private Property System is Incomplete (4)
  • There is personal freedom.
  • Personal freedom one person cannot own another
    person. In other words, slavery is prohibited
    because it would violate the principle of
    equality under the law and restrict freedom of
    enterprise.
  • A person cannot sell herself into slavery even if
    she wants to do so.

58
Why a Private Property System is Incomplete (5)
  • Governments have other goals.
  • Examples
  • Redistributing wealth.
  • Protecting the culture or state religion against
    foreign influence.
  • Enforcing moral values.

59
Why a Private Property System is Incomplete (6)
  • Cultural intervention
  • 1. Blocking the production and sale of particular
    goods or services that are generally unwanted
    although some individuals may want them drugs,
    prostitution, gambling, pork products.
  • 2. Making government decisions subject to the
    will of the people (democracy). Elected
    representatives may pass laws that lead to market
    interventions.

60
Types Of Government Intervention That Restrict
Free Enterprise
  • 1. Government regulation and price setting.
  • 2. Government enterprises.

61
Why Study Economics
  • To help evaluate arguments for and against
    intervention in market interaction.
  • To know what you are defending when you say you
    are defending the capitalist system.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com