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Economics and Economic Reasoning. Chapter 1. Laugher Curve. Q. Why did God create economists? A. In order to make weather forecasters look good. What Economics Is.
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Economics and Economic Reasoning Chapter 1
Laugher Curve • Q. Why did God create economists? • A. In order to make weather forecasters look good.
What Economics Is • Economics is the study of how human beings coordinate their wants and desires, given the decision-making mechanisms, social customs, and political realities of the society.
What Economics Is • One of the key words in the above definition is “coordination.”
What Economics Is • Three central coordination problems any economic system must solve are: • What, and how much, to produce. • How to produce it. • For whom to produce it.
What Economics Is • Scarcity ensues because individuals want more than can be produced. • Scarcity – the goods available are too few to satisfy individuals’ desires.
What Economics Is • The degree of scarcity is constantly changing. • The quantity of goods, services, and usable resources depends on technology and human action.
What Economics Is • Economics is the study of how to get people to do things they're not wild about doing and not to do things they are wild about doing.
What Economics Is • The following are the five important things to learn in economics: • Economic reasoning. • Economic terminology. • Economic insights economists have about issues, and theories that lead to those insights.
What Economics Is • The following are the five important things to learn in economics: • Information about economic institutions • Information about the economic policy options facing society today.
A Guide to Economic Reasoning • Economic reasoning is making decisions by comparing costs and benefits.
Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits • The relevant costs and benefits that matter are the expected incremental or additional costs incurred and the expected incremental benefits of a decision.
Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits • If the marginal costs of doing something exceeds the marginal benefits, don’t do it.
Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits • In economists’ jargon, marginal refers to additional or incremental. • Think of it as one more.
Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits • Marginal cost – the additional cost to you over and above the costs you have already incurred. • This means eliminating sunk costs – costs that have already been incurred and cannot be recovered.
Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits • Marginal benefit – the additional benefit above and beyond what you’ve already accrued.
Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits • According to the economics decision rule: • If the relevant benefits of doing something exceed the relevant costs, do it. • If the relevant costs of doing something exceed the relevant benefits, don’t do it.
Economics and Passion • Economic reasoning is based on the premise that everything has a cost.
Economics and Passion • Although economists can be as passionate as the next person, they must squelch this normal human response in order to do their work with objectivity.
Opportunity Cost • Opportunity cost – the basis of cost/benefit economic reasoning; it is a cost of the activity you have chosen measured by the benefit foregone, of the next-best alternative to the activity you have chosen.
Opportunity Cost • In economic reasoning, opportunity cost must be less than the benefit of what you have chosen.
Opportunity Cost • Opportunity costs are not limited to individual decisions but to government decisions as well.
Opportunity Cost • The opportunity cost concept applies to all aspects of life and is fundamental to understanding how society reacts to scarcity.
Economics and Market Forces • When goods are scarce, they must be rationed. • Rationing is a mechanism chosen to determine who gets what.
Economics and Market Forces • One of the important choices that a society must make is to what extent economic forces are allowed free rein.
Economics and Market Forces • A market force is an economic circumstance that is given relatively free rein by society to work through the market. • Market forces ration by changing prices.
Economics and Market Forces • Economic reality is controlled by three forces: • Economic forces (the invisible hand). • Social and cultural forces. • Political and legal forces. • Market forces ration by changing prices.
Economics and Market Forces • Economic forces: • The invisible hand is the price mechanism—the rise and fall of prices—that guides our actions in a market. • When there is a shortage, the price goes up. • When there is a surplus, the price goes down.
Economics and Market Forces • Social and cultural forces, political and legal forces: • Political and social forces often work together against the invisible hand. • What happens in society can be seen as a reaction to, and interaction of, the invisible hand, political and legal forces, and social and cultural forces.
Economic Terminology • Learning economic terminology takes repetition and memorization, hardly a fun things to do.
Economic Terminology • Hundreds of economic terms will be introduced in this book. • You will learn them as we go along.
Economic Insights • General insights into how economies work are often based on economic theory. • Economic theory – generalizations about the workings of an abstract economy.
Economic Insights • Theory ties together economists’ terminology and knowledge about economic institutions and leads to economic insights.
Economic Insights • Because theories are too abstract to apply to specific cases, a theory is often embodied in an economic model or an economic principle. • Economic model – a framework that places the generalized insights of the theory in a more specific contextual setting.
Economic Insights • Because theories are too abstract to apply to specific cases, a theory is often embodied in an economic model or an economic principle. • Economic principle – a commonly held insight stated as a law or general assumption.
Economic Insights • Theories, and the models and principles used to represent them, are abstract but efficient means of conveying information.
Economic Insights • In order to understand the theory you must understand the assumptions underlying the theory.
The Invisible Hand Theory • The invisible hand theory states that markets are efficient in coordinating individuals’ decisions, allocating scarce resources to their best possible use.
The Invisible Hand Theory • This insight is called the invisible hand theory – a market economy through the price mechanism will allocate resources efficiently.
Economic Theory and Stories • Economic theory and its models are a shorthand means of telling a story. If you can’t translate a theory into a story, you don’t understand the theory.
Microeconomics and Macroeconomics • Economic theory is divided into two parts: microeconomics and macroeconomics.
Microeconomics and Macroeconomics • Economic theory is divided into two parts: microeconomics and macroeconomics. • One must simultaneously develop a microfoundation of macro and a macrofoundation of micro.
Microeconomics • Microeconomics is the study of individual choice, and how that choice is influenced by economic forces.
Microeconomics • Microeconomic theory considers economic reasoning from the viewpoint of individuals and firms and builds up from there to an analysis of the entire economy.
Microeconomics • Microeconomics studies such things as: pricing policy of firms, households’ decisions on what to buy, and how markets allocate resources among alternative ends.
Microeconomics • Microeconomics analyses from the parts to the whole.
Macroeconomics • Macroeconomics is the study of inflation, unemployment, business cycles, and economic growth. • Macroeconomics analyzes from the whole to the parts.
Economic Institutions • Corporations, governments, and cultural norms are all economic institutions. They differ significantly among nations. • Economic institutions sometimes seem to operate in ways quite different than economic theory predicts.
Economic Institutions • In applying economic theory to reality, you’ve got to have a sense of economic institutions.
Economic Policy Options • Economic policies are actions (or inactions) taken by government to influence economic actions.