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The Principals of Economics Chapters 1-2
23

Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Principals of Economics

Chapters 1-2

Page 2: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

EconomicsThe effort to satisfy unlimited wants with

limited meansChoice

NeedsWants

Page 3: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

ValueEverything has value

GoodsServices

Scarcity defines valueAll goods and services

have scarcity High Scarcity = High

Value Low Scarcity = Low

ValueScarcity v. Shortage

Example-The US Dollar

Inflation

Page 4: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

ProductionThe Factors of Production

LandLaborCapital

Physical Capital Human Capital

Entrepreneur

Page 5: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

CostDecisions have ramifications:

CostOpportunity Cost

Trade-OffsExample: Guns or Butter

Cost-Benefit AnalysisDecision

Benefits Cost Opportunity Cost Benefits Forgone

Thinking at the Margins

Page 6: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Maximizing ProductivityProduction Possibilities Curve

Frontier

Watermelons (millions of

tons)

Shoes(millions of

pairs)

Sh

oes

(mil

lion

s of

pair

s)

25

20

15

10

5

0 252015105

Production Possibilities Graph

Watermelons (millions of tons)

0

a (0,15)

15

8 14b (8,14)

14

18

20

21

12

9

5

0

A productionpossibilities frontier

c (14,12)

d (18,9)

e (20,5)

f (21,0)

Page 7: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

CostThe Law of Increasing Costs

Watermelons (millions of

tons)

Shoes(millions of

pairs)

Sh

oes

(mil

lion

s of

pair

s)

25

20

15

10

5

0 252015105

Production Possibilities Graph

Watermelons (millions of tons)

14

18

20

21

12

9

5

0

0 15

8 14

c (14,12)

d (18,9)

Page 8: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Efficiency and Underutilization

Sh

oes

(mil

lion

s of

pair

s)25

20

15

10

5

0 252015105

Watermelons (millions of tons)

Production Possibilities Graph

g (5,8)

A point of underutilization

c (14,12)

d (18,9)

e (20,5)

f (21,0)

a (0,15)b (8,14)

S

Page 9: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Future FrontierIncreases in Land,

Labor or Capital

Sh

oes

(mil

lion

s of

pair

s)

25

20

15

10

5

0 252015105

Watermelons (millions of tons)

Production Possibilities Graph

T

Future productionPossibilities frontier

c (14,12)

d (18,9)

e (20,5)

f (21,0)

a (0,15)b (8,14)

S

Page 10: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Types of Economic SystemsThree Key Questions

What goods and services should be produced?How should goods and services be produced?Who should consume these goods and

services?

Page 11: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Economic GoalsEconomic efficiencyEconomic freedomEconomic security and predictabilityEconomic equityEconomic growth and innovationOther goals

Ex- Environmental Protection, National Security

Page 12: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Four Economic SystemsTraditionalMarketCommandMixed

Page 13: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Market

ALL ACTIONS ARE SELFISH ACTIONS

Page 14: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Self-Regulating MarketSelf-InterestCompetition

IncentivesThe Invisible Hand

Page 15: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Market EconomicsActors

HouseholdsFirms

MarketsFactor MarketsProduct Markets

Page 16: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Circular Flow of the Market

monetary flow

physical flow

monetary flow

physical flow

Circular Flow Diagram of a Market Economy

Households

Firms

Product market

Factor market

Households pay firms for goods and services.

Firms supply households with goods and services.

Households supply firms with land, labor, and capital.

Firms pay households for land, labor, and capital.

Page 17: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Advantages of the Free MarketEfficiencyFreedomGrowthConsumer SovereigntyWidest possible array of goods and services

Page 18: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Command EconomicsThe “Central Planners” make the decisions

SocialismCommunism

Mandated EqualityLack of Incentives

Page 19: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Ex- The Two St. JeansCapitalist CommunistABCDF

B

Page 20: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The USSRMarxist-LeninistCollective Farming

Peasant ControlGovernment Goals

Failure 5-year plans

Heavy IndustrySoviet Consumers

ShortagesThe “Black Market”

Page 21: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Mixed MarketLimits of Laissez Faire

Market FailuresPrivate Property vs. Public PropertyCatch-up Time

Control vs. Freedom

Page 22: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

Circular Flow of the Mixed Market

monetary flow

physical flow

monetary flow

physical flow

Circular Flow Diagram of a Mixed Economy

Households Firms

Product market

Factor market

Government expendituresexpenditures

gover

nmen

t

-owned

fact

ors

taxes

taxesgove

rnm

ent

purchas

es

Page 23: Chapters 1-2. Economics The effort to satisfy unlimited wants with limited means Choice Needs Wants.

The Continuum of Mixed MarketsTransitions

Privatization Ex: Margret Thatcher and GB

Nationalization Ex: Fidel Castro and Cuba

Continuum of Mixed Economies

Centrally planned Free market

Source: 1999 Index of Economic Freedom, Bryan T. Johnson, Kim R. Holmes, and Melanie Kirkpatrick

Iran

North Korea

Cuba

China

Russia Greece Peru United States

South Africa France United Kingdom

Botswana Canada Singapore

Hong Kong