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Fundamental Economic Concepts
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Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Fundamental Economic Concepts

Page 2: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

What is Economics?- The study of mankind’s

unlimited desires in a world of limited resources.-Economics is a social science, dealing with how people

react to changing variables.

-Economists form theories, based on economic models in which they manipulate variables.

-These theories, models and variables are used to describe what is (Positive Economics) and what ought to be (Normative Economics).

Microeconomics deals with individual decisions, Macroeconomics looks at the economy as a whole

Page 3: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

What is the Economy?

Page 4: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Why Do We Study It?

1. Description

2. Analysis

3. Explanation

4. Prediction

What? or How Much?

How? or Why?

When?

OR…

Page 5: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Why do we study Economics?

Sowe

don’t get

screwed.

Page 6: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Book AuctionWhat economic concepts were

demonstrated by the book auction?◦Scarcity◦Value◦Choices◦Rationing◦Equity vs. Efficiency

Which was the sealed auction?

◦Consumer surplus

}Stay Tuned

!

Page 7: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

ScarcitySituation that occurs when wants are greater than available resources.Scarcity is the fundamental problem in economics.

Page 8: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.
Page 9: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.
Page 10: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

In this classroom, is/are _________ scarce?Desks?Water?Books?Gasoline?Jolly Ranchers?…

Good looking economics instructors?

But not in the hallway…

Wants are satisfied by available resources

No want for it in classroom, but outside… yes

Wants exceed available resources

Page 11: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Good looking economics instructors?

Page 12: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

We always assume….People make decisions based

upon RATIONAL SELF-INTEREST

Page 13: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

We must consider…

Examples: Shelter is a need, a mansion is a want.

Food is a need, a large pizza is a want.

Page 14: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Scarcity forces us to ask the following questions…

WHAT to produce?

HOW to produce?

FOR WHOM to produce?

Page 15: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Imagine a scenario where…

…we take an all-expenses-paid class trip to…

Page 16: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Australia!

Page 17: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Our plane is forced to make a “water landing,” and we are able to swim to an uncharted island.

You are in charge. Prioritize 3-5 things we’ll have to do to survive and how (and with who) we should accomplish these tasks.

Page 18: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Specialization

• Allocating resources toward production for which they are best suited.

Page 19: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

FACTORS OF PRODUCTION• Land – all gifts of nature• Labor – human efforts and abilities• Capital – tools, equipment, space• Entrepreneurship – risk taking, ideas

– **The “spark” or driving force of the economy**

Page 20: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

EXAMPLES:

Page 21: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Adam Smith“Wealth of Nations”

◦1776Invisible hand

◦ Meat◦ Bread◦ Candles◦ How do we decide to provide these?

Page 22: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

CIRCULAR FLOW

Page 23: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

UtilityThe satisfaction that

consumption of a good or service provides

Page 24: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY

As you consume additional units of a good, at some point each additional unit will begin providing less utility than the one before it.

Page 25: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Paradox of ValueWater vs. DiamondsMonetary Value

◦Must be scarce◦Must give utility

Are diamonds scarce?Do they give utility?

Conspicuous consumption◦Examples?

Page 26: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Cost – Benefit Analysis

Question? :

What do you want RIGHT NOW?

Page 27: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Cost – Benefit Analysis

Follow up question? :

Why don’t you go get it?

Page 28: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Cost – Benefit Analysis

• We all make decisions in our own self-interest

• All decisions come with certain trade-offs and alternatives

• THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A FREE LUNCH!!!Seinfeld example

• Opportunity Cost: the next-best alternative given up when making a choice

Page 29: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Opportunity Cost

VS.

VS. VS.

Page 30: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Marginal Cost

Marginal = Additional, next

Additional cost vs. additional benefit

We constantly engage in marginal analysis

Page 31: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Production Possibilities ModelIllustrate production choices

Assumptions:◦Full employment◦Fixed resources◦Fixed technology◦Two goods

1-31

Page 32: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Production Possibilities FrontierGuns (thousands)

807560300

Butter (tons)

0150300400450

All possible combinations of two products that can be produced when employing 100% of available resources.

Page 33: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Production Possibilities Frontier

Page 34: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.
Page 35: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Type of Product

Pizzas (in hundred thousands)

Industrial Robots (in thousands)

Production Alternatives

A B C D E

10 9 7 4 0

0 1 2 3 4

Plot Points to Create Graph…

Production Possibilities Table

1-35

Page 36: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Production Possibilities Curve

Pizzas

Ind

ust

rial

Ro

bo

ts

Attainable

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

14

13

12

11

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Unattainable

AB

C

D

E

EconomicGrowth

Now Attainable

A’

B’

C’

D’

E’

1-36

Page 37: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Production Possibilities Curve

Pizzas

Ind

ust

rial

Ro

bo

ts

Attainable

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

14

13

12

11

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

Unattainable

AB

C

D

E

Law of IncreasingOpportunity Cost

A’

B’

C’

D’

E’

Shape of the Curve

1-37

Page 38: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Quick QuizWhy is the PPF bowed out

from the origin?◦Law of increasing opportunity

costs…◦…due to specialization of

resourcesWhat is the marginal

opportunity cost of the 2nd unit of pizza?◦2 thousand robots

Which point(s) on the curve represent full employment of resources?◦All points ON the curve

Page 39: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

The Future Economy

Consequences of unemployment

Economic growth◦More resources ◦Better quality resources◦Technological advances

1-39

Page 40: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Future Possibilities

Goods for the Present

Goo

ds f

or t

he F

utur

e

Goo

ds f

or t

he F

utur

eGoods for the Present

P

F

CurrentCurve

CurrentCurve

FutureCurve

FutureCurve

Compare Two Hypothetical Economies

Presentville Futureville

1-40

Page 41: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Specialization

Shift resources to export industry

Achieve higher overall output and income

Absolute advantage◦Higher output per worker for a good

Comparative advantage◦Lower domestic opportunity cost for a good

5-41

Page 42: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Comparative Advantage

Product A B C D E

Avocados 0 20 24 40 60Soybeans 15 10 9 5 0

**Optimal domestic production occurs at point C• Opportunity cost of 1 ton of

Soybeans is 4 tons of Avocados• Opportunity cost of 1 ton of

Avocados is .25 tons of Soybeans

Mexico’s Production Possibilities Table (in Tons)

Production Alternatives

5-42

Page 43: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Comparative Advantage

Avocados 0 30 33 60 90Soybeans 30 20 19 10 0

**Optimal domestic production occurs at point C• Absolute advantage in both goods• Opportunity cost of 1 ton of

Soybeans is 3 tons of Avocados• Opportunity cost of 1 ton of

Avocados is .33 tons of Soybeans

Product A B C D E

U.S.’s Production Possibilities Table (in Tons)

Production Alternatives

5-43

Page 44: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Comparative Advantage

Mexico will produce avocados

U.S. will produce soybeansU.S. gives up 3 A for 1 SMexico gives up 4 A for 1 S

Terms of trade◦3.5 A for 1 S◦Both countries benefit

5-44

Page 45: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Comparative AdvantageGains from tradeMexico starts at C (24 A and 9S)◦Move to E (60 A and 0 S)◦Trade 35 A for 10 S

U.S. starts at T (33 A and 19 S)◦Move to R (0 A and 30 S)◦Trade 10 S for 35 A

Overall gains?5-45

Page 46: Fundamental Economic Concepts. What is Economics? - The study of mankind’s unlimited desires in a world of limited resources. - Economics is a social.

Comparative Advantage

Terms of Trade – 1s : 3.5aTrade: 10 tons soybeans for

35 tons avocados