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Basic Economics Concepts. Leo Koo, Chris Mendoza, Daniel Ye. Period 4 Mr. Lohman. Scarcity. “Limited quantities of resources to meet unlimited wants.” Limited resources of the world Economics is the process of allocating the limited resources of the world. Trade-offs.
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Basic Economics Concepts Leo Koo, Chris Mendoza, Daniel Ye Period 4 Mr. Lohman
Scarcity • “Limited quantities of resources to meet unlimited wants.” • Limited resources of the world • Economics is the process of allocating the limited resources of the world
Trade-offs • Given that resources are scarce it is implied that we face trade-offs • Trade-offs: accepting less of one thing in order to get more of something else
Opportunity Costs • The next best alternative that is given up in exchange for the better alternative • “There is no such thing as a free lunch” • Ex: Going to the movies in exchange for study time
Production Possibilities Curve/Frontier(PPC or PPF) • An economic model demonstrating scarcity, trade-offs, and opportunity costs • A=Impossible at the current production level • B=Underutilization
Comparative Advantage • One individual or nation can produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another • Specialization-Production of one good due to its lower opportunity cost
Absolute Advantage • One individual or nation can produce more with the same resources as compared to another individual or nation
Supply • The quantity firms are willing and able to produce at a range of prices • Law of Supply-As the price of a good increases, the quantity produced increases
Determinants of Supply • Cost of input resources • Technology and productivity • Producer expectations • Taxes or subsidies • The number of producers
Demand • The quantity consumers are willing to purchase at a range of prices • Law of Demand-As the price of a good increases, the quantity demanded decreases (Inverse Relationship)
Determinants of Demand • Consumer Income • Price of a substitute good • Price of a complementary good • Consumer tastes and preferences • Consumer expectations • The number of consumers
Market Equilibrium • The intersection point of a supply and demand graph, therefore where the quantity demanded equals the quantity produced
The Business Cycle • The fluctuations in economic activity (GDP) over several months or years • Recession-An instance of sustained decline in GDP • Expansion-Period of economic recover and increase in GDP
Unemployment • Those who are jobless and are actively looking for work are considered unemployed • Discouraged workers-unemployed workers who have stopped trying to find jobs
Types of Unemployment • Cyclical Unemployment • Unemployment due to fluctuations in the business cycle • Frictional Unemployment • The transition of a worker from one job to another • Structural Unemployment • A mismatch between the demanded skills and the skills of a worker • Seasonal Unemployment • Unemployment due to the changes in season
Inflation • A sustained increase of prices over a period of time • Often measures by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) • Stagflation-A decrease in output (RGDP) as prices and unemployment increase • Hyperinflation-A rapid increase in prices due to the rapid decrease in the value of a currency
Growth • An increase in the production of goods and services in the economy over a period of time; therefore an increase in productivity