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Samir K Mahajan , M.Sc , Ph.D.,UGC -NET Assistant Professor (Economics)

BASIC ECONOMIC CONCEPTS. Samir K Mahajan , M.Sc , Ph.D.,UGC -NET Assistant Professor (Economics) Department of Mathematics & Humanities Institute of Technology Nirma University Email: samir.mahajan@nirmauni.ac.in https://sites.google.com/a/nirmauni.ac.in/2hm203-_-eebm_even_2014/.

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Samir K Mahajan , M.Sc , Ph.D.,UGC -NET Assistant Professor (Economics)

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  1. BASIC ECONOMIC CONCEPTS Samir K Mahajan, M.Sc, Ph.D.,UGC-NET Assistant Professor (Economics) Department of Mathematics & Humanities Institute of Technology Nirma University Email: samir.mahajan@nirmauni.ac.in https://sites.google.com/a/nirmauni.ac.in/2hm203-_-eebm_even_2014/

  2. WHAT IS ECONOMICS??? The fact is that economics affects our daily lives. Virtually everyone agrees on the importance of economics but there is far less agreement on just what economics is. • To know what economics is, we must first know what an economy is.

  3. WHAT IS ECONOMICS contd. Some Definitions of Economy • An economy is the system of earning livelihood (Brown). • An economy is just a group of people dealing with one another as they go about their lives. • Another more common definition: Economy is a system of four basic economic activitiessuch as: production, distribution, consumption and investment of goods and services. • In nutshell, • An economy is the sum total of all economic (activities which are rewarded/paid) of the society. These activities create utilities i.e. produce goods and services. Thus economy consists of cultivation, manufacturing, construction, mining, trade and business, transportation and all other productive activities.

  4. WHAT IS ECONOMICS contd. • A WIDELY ACCEPTED DEFINITION OF ECONOMICS • Economics is the study of the use of scarce resources which have alternative uses. An economy exists because two basic facts, such as: • Multiplicity of wants (Human wants for goods and services are unlimited). • Scarcity of means of production (Productive resources which produce goods and services are limited). With our wants being virtually unlimited and resources scare, we cannot satisfy all our wants and desires by producing everything we want. At any one time the society can produce only a limited amount of goods and services. Goods are scarce because productive resources are scarce. • Economics studies how society manages its scarce resources to satisfy unlimited human wants having different priorities.

  5. SCARCITY • The reasons for scarcity are: human wants are unlimited, and means (resources) available to satisfy these want are limited. • Scarcity, thus,is the excess of human wants over what can actually be produced. Scarcity is the mother of all economic problems. • Had resources been unlimited, economic problems would not have arrived. • Economics thus studies how people deal with scarcity

  6. ECONOMIC PROBLEMS : THE PROBLEM OF CHOICE • The economic problems are the problems of choice. Problem of choice arise due to the flowing facts of life. • Though human wants are unlimited, all wants are not equality important, and thus have different priorities. • Limited means available to satisfy unlimited wants have alternative uses. • Thus the mismatch between multiplicity wants having different priorities and limited means having alternative uses gives rise to the problem of choice. Because of scarcity, various choices have to be made between alternatives and this gives rise to economic problems. • Problem of scarcity are not of same degree. They vary from persons to persons. Economists do not claim that we all face an equal problem of scarcity.

  7. BASIC CHOICES AND THE CENTRAL PROBLEM OF AN ECONOMY • There are three basic choices that must be made in any society. These basic choices forms the part of central problem of an economy. • What goods and services are going to be produced and in what quantities, since there are not enough resources to produce all the things people desire? This basic choice give rise to the problem of allocation of resources between alternative uses. • How are things going to be produced, given that there is normally more than one way of producing things? What resources are going to be used and in what quantities? What techniques of production are going to be adopted? This problem relates to the choice of a product method or technique of production. • For whom are things going to be produced? In other words, how will the national income/ produced goods and services be distributed among different individuals that comprises the society? This is the problem of distribution. Ideally, it is sought that distribution of income is more equal so that share of individuals are more equal. • All societies have to make these choices, whether they be made by individuals, groups or the government.

  8. BASIC CHOICES AND THE CENTRAL PROBLEM OF AN ECONOMY contd. • Apart from the basic choices, the society faces two other basic problems. These are: • Problem of efficient or fuller utilization of resources: Resources being scarce, it is desirable that they are most efficiently/properly used. There should not be any wastage of these resources. Resources would be utilized efficiently or fully when maximum output can be produced by using the given resources or a given level output can be produced by using minimum resources. • Problem of Economic Growth: Increase in population is a common feature. It is desirable that a reasonable standard of living of the growing population is mentioned. For this, it is important to know whether the productive capacity of the economy is growing, declining or remaining static over time. If the productive capacity of the economy is growing, it will be able to produce progressively more and more goods and services with the result that the standard of living standard of will rise. The increase in the capacity to produce goods over time is called economic growth.

  9. CHOICE, TRADE-OFF AND OPPORTUNITY COST Choice involves sacrifice. “There is no such thing as a free lunch.”To get one thing that we like, we usually have to give up another thing that we like. ALL decisions thus (whether or production or consumption) involve trade-offs.Trade-offs are all the alternatives that we give up / sacrifice whenever we choose one course of action over others. The most desirable alternative given up (sacrifice) as a result of a decision is known as opportunity cost. In other words, the sacrifice of best alternative in the production or consumption of a good is known as its opportunity cost.

  10. RATIONAL CHOICES • Economists often refer to rational choices. Rational choices are choices that involve weighing up the benefit of any activity against its opportunity cost. This simply means the weighing-up of the costs and benefits of any activity, whether it be firms choosing what and how much to produce, workers choosing whether to take a particular job or to work extra hours, or consumers choosing what to buy. • rational decision making, as far as consumers are concerned, involves choosing those items that give you the best value for money – i.e. the greatest benefit relative to cost/expenses. • The same principles apply to firms when deciding what to produce. The firm takes rational decision when sale proceeds/revenues earned exceed the costs entailed i.e. if it adds to profit.

  11. BASIC ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES • Basic economic activities are production, distribution, consumption and investment. • Production is transformation of inputs into output/finished products. It is creation or addition of utilities. We can not produce matter. Matters are free gift of nature. We make them more useful by transforming them into finished goods. • Distribution is the sharing of produced goods and services among the various individuals that comprises a society. • Consumption is use of goods and services. It is destruction or decrease in utility in a particular commodity. • Investment also called captain formation is surplus of current year’s production over its consumption which is used for further production of goods and services. It is the production of new capital goods.

  12. RESOURCES / MEANS OF PRODUCTION/ FACTORS OF PRODUCTION / INPUTS OF PRODUCTION • Resources are the inputs into the production of goods and services which includes the followings: • Human Resources: Labour. It All forms of human input, both physical and mental, into current production. The labour force is limited both in number and in skills. • Natural Resources: Land, mineral resources and Raw Materials. These are inputs into production that are provided by nature: e.g. unimproved land and mineral deposits in the ground. The world’s land area is limited, as are its raw materials. • Manufactured Resources: Capital. Capital consists of all those inputs in production that have themselves been produced: e.g. factories, machines, transport equipments and tools. The world has a limited stock/supply of capital: The productivity of capital is limited by the state of technology.

  13. NEED, WANT AND UTILITY • Need is something one have to have . Something one can't do without say food and water, shelter, clothing, basic health. • Want  is something one would like to have/a specific feeling of desire • Everything that goes beyond this –say a big house, name-brand clothes, fancy foods and drinks, a new car – is a want. • Utility is the capacity of a commodity to satisfy a want . In other words, utility is the want satisfying power of commodity.

  14. DIVIDING UP THE SUBJECT: MACRO ECONOMICS VS MICRO ECONOMICS • Subject matter of Economics is traditionally divided into two main branches – macroeconomics and microeconomics, where ‘macro’ means big, and ‘micro’ means small. • These terms were firs coined by Ragner Frisch.

  15. DIVIDING UP THE SUBJECT: MACRO ECONOMICS VS MICRO ECONOMICS CONTD. MACROECONOMICS • Macroeconomics looks at the economy as an organic whole. Macro economics studies economic aggregates such as: total output, total demand, aggregate income, total savings, total investment, total employment, rise and fall in general price level, interest rates. • Study of economic growth or how governments use monetary and fiscal policy to seek growth with economic stability etc. also falls under the domain of macroeconomics. • Macroeconomics focuses on the big picture and ignores the fine details. • Micro economic theory studies theory of employment, theory of general price level, theory of economic growth, macro/aggregate theory of distribution.

  16. DIVIDING UP THE SUBJECT: MACRO ECONOMICS VS MICRO ECONOMICS CONTD.

  17. DIVIDING UP THE SUBJECT: MACRO ECONOMICS VS MICRO ECONOMICS CONTD. MICROECONOMICS • Microeconomicslooks at the individual parts of the economy. Microeconomics studies the behavior of individual economic entities and small group of economic entities such as: households, business firms, markets and governments. • It looks at the choices these individual economic entities make and how they interact with each other. It seeks to determine the mechanism by which the different economic units attain the position of equilibrium/make rational choice, proceeding from the individual units to a narrowly defined group. The study of economy as a whole remains outside the domain of micro economics. Micro economic theory studies allocation of resources, product and factor pricing, theory of economic welfare/theory of economic efficiency.

  18. ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY Theory of economic efficiency involves efficiency in production, efficiency in distribution of goods among people (efficiency in consumption), efficiency in allocation of resources. Efficiency in production involves minimization of cost for producing a given level of output or producing maximum possible from output of various goods from form the given cost incurred on the productive resources. Efficiency in distribution consists of distributing the given amount of produced goods and services among the individuals of the society such that total satisfaction of the society is maximized. Allocative economic efficiency consists of producing those goods which are most desired most desired by the people.

  19. PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY CURVE Aproduction possibility curve (PPC)/production possibility frontier (PPF)/production possibility boundary/product transformation curve is a graph that shows the different combinations of amounts of two commodities  that could be produced (alternative production possibilities) by using a given amount of resources and given technology.

  20. Production Possibilities Curve contd. • 4 KEY ASSUMPTIONS ON WHICH MODEL of PPC IS BASED • Only two goods can be produced • Productive Resources are given • Technology is given • There is fuller /efficient utilization(employment) of resources

  21. PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES TABLE With given amount of resources and given technology, the following table showing production possibilities (A, B, C, D, E) between capital goods and consumer goods is constructed. A PPC is drawn from production possibilities table. Each production possibility (point) represents a specific combination of goods that can be produced given full employment of resources and given technology.

  22. Production Possibilities Curve contd. 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 A B G (Impossible/Unattainable with given current resources) C Capital Goods F D PPC: Line of maximum/efficient attainable combination Inefficient/ Unemployment E 0 2 4 6 8 Consumer goods

  23. Production Possibilities Curve contd. • The PPC here shows the trade-offs between two goods such as: capital goods and consumer goods. • Capital Goods (Investment Goods): • Goods that are used to /produce make other goods. • Goods for future consumption – Delayed gratification. • Goods that satisfy our wants INDIRECTLY and promote future growth or “happiness”. • e.g. Tools, equipment, factories, other infrastructure. • Consumer Goods: • Goods for present/immediate Consumption. – Instant Gratification. • Goods that satisfy our wants DIRECTLY. • e.g. . Food, clothes, consumer electronics, etc.

  24. Production Possibilities Curve contd. • Each point on the PPC represent an efficient combination of the two goods. Production possibilities (points ). A, B, C, D, E represents the different possible alternates available for he society. • Point A (choosing capital goods only) reflects choosing ‘less’ now (no current consumption) but ‘more’ later (delayed consumption). • Point E reflects choosing ‘more’ now (current consumption) ‘at the expense of more’ later ( no delayed consumption). • Point B is more likely to be chosen by a developed country relatively producing more capital goods that consumer goods. • Point D is more likely to be chosen by a developing country relatively producing more capital goods that consumer goods. • Point F is less than possibilities or an inefficient combination. There is underemployment/underutilization of resources. • Point G is outside our PPC. This point is desirable (more goods) but impossible/unattainable/currently unavailable with given current resources. but currently not attainable. It requires better technology, and more/better resources.

  25. Production Possibilities Curve contd. IMPORTANCE OF PPC • PPC is a basic tool of modern economics to study the nature of basic economic problems. The model PPC can be used to demonstrate the following: • Scarcity of  resources (  fundamental economic problem  all societies face) • Efficiency • Productive • Allocative • Productive Capacity/Economic Growth(or Decline) • Trade-offs • Opportunity costs (marginal rate of transformation)

  26. Production Possibilities Curve contd. PPC AND SCARCITY Scarcity is represented by the PPC or frontier line. Given the resource, the economy has to operate on the given frontier line(PPC). If the society wants to increase the production of one commodity by moving along the PPC, it has to it has to reduce some production of other commodity. With given resources and technology, the society can not increase production of the commodity represented on the two axes.

  27. Production Possibilities Curve contd. PPC AND PRODUCTIVE EFFICIENCY • The PPF curve shows the maximum possible/attainable output with current resources and technology which is productive efficiency. We can’t increase production of one good without decreasing that of another. • Each point on PPC thus represents productive efficiency. • Whole PPC represents “full production” /productive efficiency /full-employment of resources/producing at the lowest cost. • A point on the PPC indicates efficient use of the available inputs, while a point beneath the curve indicates inefficiency.

  28. Production Possibilities Curve contd. PPC AND ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY • As the productive resources are limited, the economy has to choose between different goods represented by production possibilities. It has therefore to decide which goods to be produced more and which less. In deciding what amounts of different goods are to be produced, the society would, in fact, decide about the allocation of resources among different possible goods. • There are an infinite number of points(combination of two goods) on the PPC. Any combination chosen on the PPC represents allocative efficiency (the combination most desired by the society). • Allocative efficiency is a value decision based on values/politics/ autocracy.

  29. Production Possibilities Curve contd. ECONOMIC GROWTH AND SHIFT IN PPC The PPC shows all possible combinations of two goods that can be produced if all available resources (land, labour, capital equipment) are fully employed (used) with the best technology currently available. Capital Goods A shift in PPC upward and to the right (showing more of both goods can be produced than before) indicates economic growth. B A G C F D E O Consumer Goods

  30. Production Possibilities Curve contd. ECONOMIC GROWTH AND SHIFT IN PPC contd. Economic growth or shift in PPC (How do we get to point G) occurs if • Productive resources expand • Technological advancement which increases productivity • Discover new resources • Take resources (War/ colonization) • Trade for Resources

  31. Production Possibilities Curve contd. TRADE-OFFS The PPC reflects numerous combination of two goods that can be produced with the given resources and technology. If a particular combination say ‘C’ is chosen, other alternative combinations are given up. These sacrificed alternatives say A,B, D,E are trade-offs.

  32. Production Possibilities Curve contd. OPPORTUNITY COST The opportunity cost to produce one extra unit of a commodity means the lost production another good. Opportunity cost is illustrated in terms of moving from one point to another along the frontier line. Opportunity cost can be studied with marginal rate of transformation (MRT). MRT is the rate at which one good must be sacrificed in order to produce a single extra unit (or marginal unit) of another good, resources and technology being given. MRT of consumers good for capitals good is given by == opportunity cost Where, K stands for capital goods C stands for consumer goods

  33. Production Possibilities Curve contd. OPPORTUNITY COST contd. The concavity of PPC is due to increasing opportunity cost/MRT. Opportunity cost rises or MRT as we move down along the PPC. Production possibilities and Opportunity Cost

  34. Thank You ADAM SMITH( 1723 – 1790) Cited as the "father of modern economics" and is still among the most influential thinkers in the field of economics today.

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