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Benefit/Cost Analysis. “Things don’t have costs; choices do. . Benefit/Cost analysis involves the search for all alternatives. . The Five Steps . Identify the resources and state the goal List alternative uses of the resources to achieve the goal
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Benefit/Cost Analysis “Things don’t have costs; choices do.
Benefit/Cost analysis involves the search for all alternatives.
The Five Steps • Identify the resources and state the goal • List alternative uses of the resources to achieve the goal • Identify the advantages and disadvantages of each alternative • Identify the choice and the opportunity cost of the choice • Review the decision, was your choice right for you?
Vocabulary • Decision making – the process of identifying a choice • Goal – something that a person wants to have or do
Edward Advantages Disadvantages Danger to Bella Nerdy Abandons Bella Glows in sunlight Cold No tan Have to abandon father • Great car • Long life (death) • Good family • Handsome • Rich • Lots of education • Get to travel
Jacob Advantages Disadvantages Like a little brother Potential danger Abandons Bella Moody Bella has to take care of him Smells bad when he’s wet • Will protect Bella • Bella’s father approves • Hunk • Warm • Nice tan • Into motorcycles • Get to stay home
Benefit/Cost – another example • Sonja’s goal is to use her human capital to have the best time possible at the senior prom. With whom should she go? • Alternatives – Harry Potter or Spiderman • Advantages and disadvantages of each. • She chooses Spidey, the opportunity cost is Harry.
Harry Potter Advantages Disadvantages
Spider Man Advantages Disadvantages
Keep in mind • The choice is the alternative selected. • The opportunity cost is the alternative not selected, the opportunity given up. • Every choice has a cost; there is no such choice as a free choice. • Disadvantages are not costs. There is only one cost to each choice.
Your Decisions • List four decisions that you have made in the last month and the opportunity cost of the choice. e.g. To achieve the goal of ________, I used my _________ to _______ instead of _________. • To achieve my goal of maximizing my wealth on Sunday , I used 3 hours of my human capital to watch football instead of studying for my econ class.
Your students’ decisions • List three decisions that your students at the grade you hope to teach might make, placing them in the same format as the examples above.
Historical Decisions • List three decisions that historical characters made and put them in the same format as the two above. • e.g. To achieve the goal of winning the war, George Washington used his troops to withdraw from New York rather than stay to fight the British.
Historical Decisions • Colonist in 1776 – rebel or tory? • Caesar in 30 BC – enter Rome with or without army • Truman 1945 – bomb or troops? • Kennedy 1960 – Cuba bomb or blockade • 49er gold seeker – land or sea? • George Bush – Iraq or Bin Laden
Historical markets • Why did Marc Antony want Egypt? • Why did the English want to come into the U.S. Civil war on the side of the South? • Why did Columbus sail the ocean blue in 1492? • Why did the people of New England want to revolt against the English?
Alternative uses of your money (embedded human capital) • Eat at home or eat out? • What video? • School books or entertainment? • Brand name or generic shoes?
The importance of alternatives • Power – an impressive list of alternatives in terms of quantity and quality • Poverty – few good alternatives • Your job in school – build your human capital so that you will have power