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Today Continue our introduction to economics. Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2
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Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Jan 05, 2016

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James Farmer
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Page 1: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Today

Continue our introduction to economics. Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2

Page 2: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

The Economic Way of Thinking

A Special Way of Looking at the World

Page 3: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

People Act with Rational Self-Interest Rational: consistent with one’s goals,

taking all relevant information into account. Self-interest: One’s self interest may

include altruism.

Page 4: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Consider All Costs

Ex: What is the cost of going to a movie? Explicit cost: the money spent on tickets,

popcorn, gas, etc. Implicit cost: the value of time--what was

the next best use of your time, and how much was that worth?

Page 5: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Consider All Costs, Cont’d.

Opportunity Cost: The total implicit & explicit cost of an activity.

SAME AS: the value of the resources used in their next best alternatives.

Page 6: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Marginal Decision-Making

Most of our choices are about how much to buy or do.

When deciding whether to buy one more, look at the marginal benefit versus the marginal cost.

Page 7: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Prices as Signals

Prices signal the flow of resources into or out of industries.

Ex: High prices for coal lead firms to buy more machinery, hire more workers to mine coal.

Ex: Expectations that a lot of money can be made in dot.com ventures leads people to get education leading to that career path.

Page 8: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Chapter 2

Some Tools of Economic Analysis

Page 9: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Comparative Advantage

A producer has a comparative advantage in making a good if it can do so at a lower opportunity cost than another producer.

Page 10: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Specialization of Labor

When a person has a natural aptitude for doing a task, they can do it for a lower cost.– Ex: soldiers, artists, nurses, talk-show hosts,

computer programmers Specialization of labor makes it more

desirable to make a limited range of goods.

Page 11: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Division of Labor

When a person performs smaller tasks, he can be more productive.– Writing out a punishment– Ford’s assembly line

Division of labor makes it more desirable to make a limited range of goods.

Page 12: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Exchange

We can jointly produce a lot more stuff by specializing and exchanging among ourselves than by being independent.– Ex: Unabomber

Page 13: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Opportunity Cost from a Grand Perspective The world has opportunity costs! Ultimately, it is limited resources that force

us to make choices in what we produce.

Page 14: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Production Possibilities Frontier

Suppose we can lump everything into two types of goods: military or consumer.

In any given year, we are limited in how much labor, capital, and other resources we can use to produce goods & services.

We cannot make unlimited quantities of either type of good.

Page 15: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Production Possibilities Frontier

Shows all of the possible combinations of consumer and military goods that can be produced by an economy in a year.

Drawn for a given quantity of inputs available.

Page 16: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Production Possibilities FrontierProduction Possibilities Frontier

The PPF separates those combs. which can be produced from those that cannot.

Can you interpret each point?

Butter

Guns

A C

D

E

B

Page 17: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Opportunity Cost & the PPFOpportunity Cost & the PPF

The opp. cost of making one more gun is butter foregone.

Butter

Guns

A C

D

F

1 2 3

Page 18: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Opp. Cost & the PPFOpp. Cost & the PPF

The opp. cost of making one more gun is higher, the greater the current output of guns.

A similar statement is true for butter. This leads to a bowed-out PPF.

Page 19: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Opp. Cost & the PPF

Opp. cost rises, because some inputs are more readily used to produce a particular good (ex: land & metal).

As you produce more guns (& less butter) you find that you are forced to make additional guns using mostly add’l land. This is very costly in terms of butter, & doesn’t yield more guns very easily.

Page 20: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Purpose of the PPF

It illustrates our choices. It helps us understand that trade-offs must

be made. It doesn’t help us choose.

Page 21: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Next Time

Continue Ch. 2, Begin Ch. 3. If you need help understanding graphs, then

be sure to study the appendix to Ch. 1!

Page 22: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Group Work

Shifts in the PPF

Page 23: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

Instructions

For each of the four scenarios :– Draw an initial PPF. Be sure to label the axes.– Show a new PPF on the same graph that

represents how the PPF will shift for that scenario. Be sure to indicate which is the old PPF and which is the new PPF.

You should have 4 graphs, each with 2 PPFs on it.

Page 24: Today n Continue our introduction to economics. n Conclude Ch. 1 and Begin Ch. 2.

PPF of Military & Consumer GoodsPPF of Military & Consumer Goods What would technological progress do? What would a devastating war do to the

PPF? What would more available labor do to the

PPF? What would more available metal do to the

PPF?