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Explore the essential elements of economics through practical examples and discussions, bridging common sense with basic economic principles. Learn how incentives drive behavior, affecting decisions at personal and societal levels. Delve into topics like scarcity, trade-offs, and marginal decision-making, gaining insights into why economic systems function as they do. Discover the impact of profits, income variation, and economic progress. Uncover the role of trade, investment, and economic institutions in driving prosperity and growth. Immerse yourself in the world of economics and start thinking like an economist today!
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Ten Key Elements of Economics • Bridge between common sense & basic principles of economics • Begin to help you “think like an economist” • Provide some explanation as to why the economy and the world work the way they do
What are Incentives? • Incentives are the costs and benefits of making specific decisions. • Changing incentives alters people’s behavior. • Incentives operate on all levels - personal, familial, industry and societal level.
Gasoline Prices… • When the price of gas rises, do you change your behavior? • Do you really? • What’s the difference between short-run changes and long-run changes in behavior?
Volunteerism… • Incentives don’t matter only to the greedy and selfish. • What incentives do volunteers have, if not monetary? • Why do / would you volunteer?
Seat belts save lives… • Does wearing a seat belt create any incentives? • Why do people get in more accidents now that cars are safer?
The condition of scarcity • Our resources are limited…but our desire for goods & services is NOT. • When production costs are high, it is because the resource in question is desired for other purpose(s) as well. • A resource is scarce if it has more than one valuable use.
To Choose is to Refuse • Because we are constantly faced with scarcity, we must make choices. • Every time we choose one thing (material or not) we refuse something else. • We constantly make trade-offs in our decisions.
But, but, but… • What if someone else buys your lunch? • Merely a shifting of cost, not an elimination • And is it really free?
Marginalism… • Few, if any, decisions are “all-or-nothing”. • Marginal means additional… • Marginalism is seldom ignored in our personal decisions, but frequently in our conversations and in politics. • To get the most out of our resources, we should only take an action when the marginal benefits are greater than the marginal costs.
Marginal Decision Examples… • How clean is your house / room? • Do you clean to 100% cleanliness? • How about when company is coming? • How about when selling your house? • You clean to the point where the marginal costs outweigh the expected marginal benefits!
People gain when they trade… • Trade moves goods from people who value them less to people who value them more. • Trade makes larger outputs/consumption possible as we specialize. • Voluntary exchange allows production costs to fall through mass production.
Trade exists at many levels… • Enrolling in college classes • Shopping at Walmart • Having a garage sale • Taking a vacation • Buying imports from China & Mexico
Transaction Costs Spending resources on: • Searching out trading partners • Searching out product information • Negotiating terms of trade • Closing sales
Why do we experience transaction costs? • Physical objects • Can’t get there from here! • Lack of information • Finding sellers / best deals • Political obstacles • Taxes, tariffs, licensing requirements, regulations, etc. • Role of middlemen? • Increase or decrease TC?
6. Profits direct business toward activities that increase wealth.
Why profits are not the enemy… • People of a nation are better off if their resources produce valuable goods & services. • Less productive use of resources should thus be discouraged. • This is the function of profits and losses. • Profit is a reward for transforming resources into something of greater value.
Losses just as important! • A T-shirt factory has total production costs of $20,000. • 1,000 T-shirts sold at $22 each = $2,000 in profit. • Wealth has been created for the producer and consumer. • What if shirts can only be sold for $17 each? • T-shirts are worth less to consumers than the resources required to produce them. • What’s the trade-off if firms continue to operate at a loss?
Earning Income • People are different in many ways…This is our greatest asset! • Differences in income arise because they affect the value of goods and services individuals are willing to provide. • There is a direct link (ceteris paribus) between helping others & income. • If you want a large income figure out how to “help”* others!!!
Income Variation • College students are rewarded for studying • Star athletes and entertainers are rewarded for their special skills • Entrepreneurs are rewarded for their innovations.
8. Economic progress comes primarily through trade, investment, better ways of doing things, and sound economic institutions.
What is Economic Progress? • Americans produce and earn THIRTY TIMES as much as they did in 1750. • Why are Americans so much more productive today than they were 250 years ago? • Why is economic progress important?
Sources of Economic Growth • Investments in productive assets • Tools, machines, “human capital” • Improvements in technology • Internal combustion engine, electricity, computers, by-pass surgeries, etc. • Improvements in economic organization • Legal system, competitive markets, etc.
9. The “invisible hand” of market prices directs buyers and sellers toward activities that promote the general welfare.
Invisible What? • Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (1776) • “It is his own advantage, indeed, and not that of society which he has in his view. But the study of his own advantage naturally, or rather necessarily, leads him to prefer that employment which is most advantageous to society…He intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was not part of his intention.”
Friedrich von Hayek • Primary function of markets is to provide information (both to buyers and sellers) • Consider the price of apples… • Price indicative of what consumers are willing and able to pay, but also incorporates costs of production / bringing to market • Things constantly happen to make both consumer value & production costs vary…
10. Too often long-term consequences, or the secondary effects, of an action are ignored.
Unintended Consequences • Perhaps the most common source of economic error. • Actions often promote secondary effects. • Tariffs & quotas to protect domestic industries • Paying for pencils in the 2nd grade class
Therefore, Economics is • Social science concerned with how individuals, institutions, and society make optimal decisions under conditions of scarcity
Water Education Food Oxygen Paper Apples Computers Lumber Manure Rocks Trees Information Concert Love Medication Oil Choose yes or no for each of the following goods: Which of the following resources are scarce?
The Fundamental Economic Problem • Scarcity: is the condition that results from society not having enough resources to produce all the things people would like to have. Thus a cost must be born in order to obtain a resource when this condition exists.
Fundamental Economic Questions • What do I produce? • How do I produce it? • For whom do I produce it for?
Factors of Production • Land • Labor • Capital • Entrepreneurs
How do we use these resources? • Economic choices--with the goal of increased productivity to minimize scarcity. • Trade offs • Opportunity cost • Benefit-Cost analysis
Tradeoffs • All of the other options available when making economic choices.
Opportunity Cost • What was Kevin Durant’s opportunity cost of entering the draft after one year of college? • What would have been his opportunity cost had he stayed in college?