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Economics. Chapter One . Chapter One. Scarcity and the Science of Economics Basic Economic Concepts Economic Choices and Decision Making. 1.1 Scarcity and the Science of Economics.
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Economics Chapter One
Chapter One • Scarcity and the Science of Economics • Basic Economic Concepts • Economic Choices and Decision Making
Bell work:On a separate sheet of Paper, define chapter one, section one vocabulary in your Economics Textbook.
Economics:Alabama Course of Study • Explain the role of scarcity in answering the basic economic questions of what, how, how much, and for whom to produce.
1.1 Objectives: • Identify the four key elements of economics • Explain the fundamental economic problem. • Examine the three basic economic questions every society must decide. • Identify the four factors of production.
1.1 Scarcity and the Science of Economics • Four Key Elements of Economics • Scarcity • TINSTAAFL • Three Basic Questions • Four Factors of Production • Production
Four Key Elements of Economics • study of how people try to satisfy what appears to be seemingly and unlimited and competing wants through the careful use of relatively scarce resources
Four Key Elements of Economics • Description • Economists simply tell what is happening. • They use Gross Domestic Product (GDP). • The dollar value of all final goods and services, and structures produced within a country’s borders in a 12-month period • Most comprehensive measure of a country’s total output • Key measure of an economy’s health
Four Key Elements of Economics • Analysis • Economists must discover why and how things happen. • Analysis helps economists understand the problems and will later help economists offer solutions.
Four Key Elements of Economics • Explanation • Economists must communicate their discoveries to the general public. • This helps the citizens understand the seriousness and complexities of economic issues.
Four Key Elements of Economics • Prediction • Economists must decide what they think will happen. • This helps the citizens of a country make decisions to determine what policies are best for the nation.
Scarcity • Scarcity: The fundamental economic problem • Condition that results from society not having enough resources to produce all the things people would like to have.
Scarcity • We all have needs: basic requirements for survival. • We all have wants: way of expressing a need. • Example: Need food, want pizza
TINSTAAFL • Everything has a cost. • Production costs • Opportunity costs: costs of the next best alternative use of money, time, or resources when one choice is made rather than another
Three Basic Questions • Because of scarcity, society must answer three questions: • WHAT to produce • We can’t have everything we want, so we must choose what we want most! • HOW to produce • A lot of equipment and a few workers • A lot of workers and few pieces of equipment • FOR WHOM to produce
Four Factors of Production • Land • “natural resources not created by humans” • Resources are fixed and in limited supply • Capital • Tools, equipment, machinery, and factories used in the production of goods and services • Also called capital goods • Financial capital: money used to buy the tools and equipment used in production
Four Factors of Production • Labor • People with their efforts, abilities, and skills • Includes all people except entrepreneurs • Entrepreneurs • Innovative people who take risks to do something new with existing resources • Driving force of the economy
Production • Combination of the land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurs • The process of creating goods and services
Economics:Alabama Course of Study • Explain the role of scarcity in answering the basic economic questions of what, how, how much, and for whom to produce.
1.2 Basic Economic Concepts Objectives: • Explain the relationship among scarcity, value, utility, and wealth. • Understand the circular flow of economic activity.
1.2 Basic Economic Concepts • Economic Products • Value and Wealth • Circular Flow of the Economy • Economic Growth • Economic Interdependence
Economic Products • They are goods and services that are useful, relatively scarce, and transferable to others. • A good is an item that is economically useful or satisfies an economic want. • Consumer goods are the final products. • Capital goods are produced to be used in the creation of other goods or services. • Durable goods are goods used regularly and last longer than three years. • Nondurable goods are goods that lasts less than three years when used regularly.
Economic Products • A service is a work that is performed for someone. • The difference between a good and service is that a service is intangible or cannot be touched. • Consumers use goods and services to satisfy their wants and needs.
Value and Wealth • Value is the worth of a good or service. • Scarcity is required for value. • The paradox of value is the situation in which some non-necessities have more value than some necessities.
Value and Wealth • Utility is also required for value. • Utility is the capacity to be useful and provide satisfaction. • Utility is not measurable and may differ between individuals.
Value and Wealth • Scarcity and utility are the solutions to the paradox of value. • Wealth is the accumulation of products (not services) that are tangible, scarce, useful, and transferable from one person to another.
Circular Flow of the Economy • A market is a location or other mechanism that allows buyers and sellers to exchange a certain economic product. • The factor market is the market where productive resources (Ex: labor) are bought and sold. • The factor market is where people earn their incomes. • The product market is the market where producers sell their goods and services to consumers. • The product market is where people use their income.
Economic Growth • Economic growth is the increase in a nation’s total output of goods and services to consumers. • Productivity is the most important factor in economic growth.
Economic Growth • Productivity is the measure of the amount of output produced by a given amount of inputs in a specific period of time. • It increases with efficient use of scarce resources.
Economic Growth • Division of labor and specialization also increase production. • Division of labor is work arranged so that individuals do fewer tasks than before. (Ex: an assembly line)
Economic Growth • FYI: The assembly line cut the time need to build a car from a day and a half to 90 minutes. It cut the price of the car by 50%
Economic Growth • Specialization is a situation in which a factor of production performs tasks that it can do relatively more efficiently than others. • Human capital adds to productivity.
Economic Growth • Human capital is the sum of the skills, abilities, health, and motivation of people. • Investments in human and physical capital increases productivity. • (Ex: education; See figure 1.4 on page 16)
Economic Interdependence • Countries rely on one another to provide goods and services. (ex: oil) • If one area is unable to perform its part, it effects other areas. (ex: drought creates famine)
Economics:Alabama Course of Study • Explain the role of scarcity in answering the basic economic questions of what, how, how much, and for whom to produce.
1.3 Economic Choices and decision making Objectives: • Analyze trade-offs and opportunity costs. • Explain decision-making strategies.
1.3 Economic Choices and decision making • Trade-offs • PPF • Free Enterprise Economy
Trade-Offs • Trade-offs are alternative choices. • An opportunity cost is the cost of the next best alternative use of money, time, or resources when one choice is made rather than another. • TINSTAAFL!
PPF • The Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF) is a diagram that shows different combinations of goods and/or services an economy can produce when all resources are fully employed. (guns and butter) • See figure1.6.
PPF • A PPF shows the trade-offs, opportunity costs, and economic growth between two goods and/or services. • Using a PPF helps economists make cost-benefit analysis.
PPF • Cost-benefit analysis is a way of thinking about a problem that compares the costs of an action to the benefits received.