c hapter 1

Post on 08-Feb-2016

38 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

C hapter 1. Introduction. Economic Principles. The earth’s resources Renewable vs. nonrenewable resources Insatiable wants Scarcity and choice. Economic Principles. Economic model building Microeconomic and macroeconomic analysis Positive and normative economics. Natural Resources. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

© 2005 Thomson

CChapter hapter 11IntroductionIntroduction

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

2

Economic PrinciplesEconomic Principles

The earth’s resources

Renewable vs. nonrenewable resources

Insatiable wants

Scarcity and choice

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

3

Economic PrinciplesEconomic Principles

Economic model building

Microeconomic and macroeconomic analysis

Positive and normative economics

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

4

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

A natural resource is a gift of nature.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

5

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Examples of natural resources include:• Land• The uncultivated produce of land• Water• Minerals

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

6

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

There are two kinds of natural resources:• Renewable• Nonrenewable

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

7

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

• A renewable natural resource is one that can be replenished.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

8

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Renewable natural resources include:• Forests• Sea and land animals• Water• Grasses and forage on rangelands

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

9

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

• A nonrenewable natural resource is one that cannot be replenished.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

10

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Nonrenewable natural resources include:• Metals and ores• Oil and natural gas

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

11

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Are we running out of natural resources?• We live in a finite world

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

12

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Are we running out of natural resources?

• Our knowledge of a resource’s relative scarcity, particularly when considering its availability in the not-too-distant future, is less than exact.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

13

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Are we running out of natural resources?• Even though some resources are renewable, the overproduction of lands and overharvesting of resources to meet the needs of a rapidly growing human population can destroy our living resources.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

14

Natural ResourcesNatural Resources

Are we running out of natural resources?

• Properly managed conservation of resources can both protect natural resources and even increase their supply.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

15

ScarcityScarcity

Scarcity is the perpetual state of insufficiency of resources to satisfy people’s unlimited wants.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

16

ScarcityScarcity

Two competing facts create scarcity:

• Because we live on planet earth, the supple of resources available to us is limited.• Our wants for goods that are produced by the limited resources is unlimited.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

17

ScarcityScarcity

Examples of things that are scarce:• Super Bowl tickets

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

18

ScarcityScarcity

Examples of things that are scarce:• Meals at a fine restaurant

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

19

ScarcityScarcity

Examples of things that are scarce:• Admission to an elite university

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

20

ScarcityScarcity

Examples of things that are not scarce:• Snow and ice in Alaska

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

21

ScarcityScarcity

Examples of things that are not scarce:• Sand in a desert

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

22

ScarcityScarcity

Some things that are not scarce can become scarce.• Air in the atmosphere is not scarce.• Clean, unpolluted air is scarce in many metropolitan areas, however.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

23

Scarcity and Scarcity and ConsumersConsumers

No one will knowingly pay a positive price for something that is not scarce.

If something is not scarce, there is enough to satisfy everyone’s wants and the price system is not necessary to decide who can have it and who cannot.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

24

The Study of The Study of EconomicsEconomics

Economics is the study of how people work together to transform resources into goods and services to satisfy their wants.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

25

The Study of The Study of EconomicsEconomics

Four central questions of economics:• Who decides what goods to produce?• How are goods produced?• Who gets the goods produced?• Who produces what?

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

26

Consumer Consumer SovereigntySovereignty

Consumer sovereignty

• The Freedom of consumers to determine what goods and services they will buy.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

27

Consumer Consumer SovereigntySovereignty

Consumer sovereignty affects the economy in several ways.

• Consumer decisions ultimately determine what goods and services the economy will produce.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

28

Consumer Consumer SovereigntySovereignty

Consumer sovereignty affects the economy in several ways.

• Consumer decisions determine who gets what goods.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

29

Economic ModelsEconomic Models

Economic models

• Economic models are simplified abstractions of the real world.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

30

Economic ModelsEconomic Models

1. How can economic models be expressed?• Pictorially• Graphically• Algebraically• Verbally

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

31

Economic ModelsEconomic Models

Economists use models because the world is too complex to fully and comprehensively consider at one time.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

32

Economic ModelsEconomic Models

Ceteris paribus

• Ceteris Paribus is a Latin phrase meaning “everything else being equal.”

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

33

Economic ModelsEconomic Models

The ceteris paribus assumption allows economists to develop one-to-one, cause-and-effect relationships in isolation.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

34

Economic ModelsEconomic Models

The role of ceteris paribus:

• Isolates one factor at a time in an experiment or study.

• Allows researchers to identify cause-and-effect relationships removed from other factors.

© 2005 Thomson

35

EXHIBIT 1 THE CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

36

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

There are two principal players in the circular flow model• Households• Firms

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

37

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Households

• A household is an economic unit of one or more persons, living under one roof, that has a source of income and uses it in whatever way it deems fit.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

38

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Firms

• A firm is an economic unit that produces goods and services in the expectation of selling them to households, other firms, or the government.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

39

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Resource market

• The resource market is the market in which households supply resources to firms.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

40

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

These resources can include:

• Land• Labor• Capital• Entrepreneurship

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

41

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Firms pay for these resources with:

• Wages• Rent• Interest• Profit

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

42

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Product market

• The product market is the market in which firms supply goods and services to households.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

43

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Product market

• Households pay for goods and services they buy in the product market with the income they received from supplying resources in the resource market.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

44

Circular Flow ModelCircular Flow Model

Circular flow model

• In this model, households supply resources to firms, and firms supply goods and services to households.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

45

Micro vs. MacroMicro vs. Macro

The study of economics is divided into two areas• Microeconomics• Macroeconomics

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

46

Micro vs. MacroMicro vs. Macro

Macroeconomics

• Macroeconomics analyzes the behavior of the market as a whole.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

47

Micro vs. MacroMicro vs. Macro

Microeconomics

• Microeconomics analyzes individual and firm behavior, especially in market conditions.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

48

Positive vs. Positive vs. Normative EconomicsNormative Economics

There are two different approaches to the study of economics• Positive economics• Normative economics

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

49

Positive vs. Positive vs. Normative EconomicsNormative Economics

Positive economics

• Positive economics is a subset of economics that analyzes the way the economy actually operates.

Gottheil - Principles of Economics, 4e© 2005

Thomson

50

Positive vs. Positive vs. Normative EconomicsNormative Economics

Normative economics

• Normative economics is a subset of economics founded on value judgments and leading to assertions of what ought to be.

top related