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Section 1: Introduction to Economics

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Page 1: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Section 1: Introduction to Economics

Page 2: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics

Social ScienceStudy of human society and of the relationships between people and organizations/institutions.

Fields of studyHistory, sociology, psychology, anthropology, political science, economics

Page 3: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Weaknesses of Social Sciences

Lack of absolute answersConflicting claims and conclusions

Natural sciences more absolute

Too many unknown variables

Assumptions must be made in order to derive a hypothesis (question to be proved).

Theories and models change with time.

Page 4: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Reliability and Validity of Data

Who, what, where, why, and how

Sources and motivations (agendas) are always important when viewing data.

Ex. Global warming debate

Page 5: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

John Maynard KeynesEconomist

“Economics is the most difficult of sciences because one needs to be a mathematician, philosopher, politician, and psychologist.”

Page 6: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Economics (p. 6-8)

The study of society’s optimal use of scant resources focusing on societal systems of

Production

Consumption of goods and services

Distribution

Page 7: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Microeconomics

Def: Deals with the inter-relationship between individual components in the economy: firms, industries, and consumers (households). Firms output and pricing decisions vs. Individual purchasing decisions.Supply and DemandIndividual Markets

Page 8: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

If gasoline reaches $10.00/gallon, how will that affect consumer behavior?

What reasons might there be for oil companies to raise prices to this point?

Page 9: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Macroeconomics

Def: The aggregate (sum) of all individual markets.Main issues:

OutputPrice levelsLabor marketsForeign sector dealings

Trade and exchange rates

Page 10: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Macro (cont.)

Business cycle: total output of economy over time.

Expansion vs. recession

Deals with all products and all consumers

Ex. Pepsi Co. vs. U.S. economy

Page 11: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Question p. 10

Explain the main difference between micro and macro using the term “aggregate”.

Page 12: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Macroeconomic Policy

Government attempts to influence economic activity

Demand Side PolicyInfluence spending level in society

Ex: interest rates, taxes, govt. spending

Supply Side PolicyCreate more output by increasing willingness and ability of

– firms to produce

– laborers to work

Page 13: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Growth p.12

Increase in national output within an economy during a time period.

Real growth (adjusted for inflation)

national output or GDP (Gross Domestic Product)-

Sum of all goods produced in a country

National income

Page 14: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Development (12-15)

Difficult to define when comparing MDCs and LDCs (more and less developed countries)

Goals 1. Increase basic necessities (food, water, shelter, health care, safety)

2. Raise living standards, employment, education.

3. Economic and Social Choice, freedoms, rule of law

Page 15: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

What first hand examples do we have (among our class) of life in poor countries?

Examples pg. 15

Page 16: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Sustainable Development (14-15)

World Bank Def: Growth that “lasts” within the long-term capacity of the environment with respect to population and use of resources.

Ex: Amazon rain forests vs. short-term economic gain.

Page 17: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Ceteris Paribus (16-18)

Assumption in economic models that keeps certain variables (not addressed in the model) constant.

Ex. Change in weight by changing only eating habits, not exercise.

Page 18: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Positive and Normative Concepts

Positive- free from conjecture (speculation), judgements. Objective. Fact that can be proven.

The sun is in the sky.

Normative- subjective, opinionated, judgemental, cannot be proved

The war in Iraq is justified.

Page 19: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Toward which concept does economic theory strive to reach, positive or normative?

Page 20: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Factors of Production (18-19)

Land Raw materials, primary goods (dig it up, chop it down, pluck it)

Labor Transforms raw material to manufactured

CapitalItems used in the production of goods

Management/entrepreneurshipCreativity/Ambition +land, labor, capital

Page 21: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Scarcity

Lack of limited resources to satisfy the unlimited wants of people.

Central issue in economics

Faced by all nations.

Page 22: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Payments to Factors of Production (20-21)

Interaction between households and firms.

Firms pay Households for Factors of Production

Rent (Land)

Wages (Labor)

Interest (Capital)

Profit (Entrepreneur)

Households pay Firms for goods and services

Page 23: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Circular Flow Model (21)

What are the 2 sectors providing for each other?

Page 24: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Utility and Marginal Utility

Utility:

Benefit/satisfaction/usefulness one gets from consumption of a good.

Differs from person to person.

Impossible to measure

Key economic concept

Page 25: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Mmmmm Wings

Page 26: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Marginal UtilityThe addition to Total Utility by consuming one more good.

Page 27: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Opportunity Costs

The 2nd best alternative that is given up in order to obtain the 1st alternative.Permeates most economic issues.The decision about what is the 2nd best alternative is central to social and political debate.How do you rank the alternatives on page 27?

Page 28: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Production Possibility Frontier

Total attainable output based on the limits of available resource.

All output shown using two groups.Ex. Guns and Roses

Page 29: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

What does A and B represent?

Page 30: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Are points a and b possible?

Page 31: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Opportunity Costs and the PPF

OC is on the PPF

If PPF is straightOC is constant

Why can’t OCs be incurred inside the PPF?

Page 32: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Increasing OC

How does this curved PPF represent an increasing OC?

Diminishing Returns

OC = Returns

Real world example?

Page 33: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Increasing Output

Growth (within the PPF)

Better utilization of available resources

Ex. Longer workdays, increasing land use.

Page 34: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

What causes a shift of the curve?

Page 35: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Increasing Potential Output

Possible Growth

Shift PPF out

Real Output unchanged

Point F (inside PPF)

Potential Output improved.

How?

Page 36: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Changing Quality of FOP

Ex. Quality of LaborEducation, training, experience

LandNew farming methods

CapitalImproved technology

Potential to produce more.

Page 37: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Quantity of the FOP

More FOP means greater potential for growth.

Page 38: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

PPF and Development

Public /Merit Goods/ InfrastructureIncreases Potential Output

Page 39: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Rationing Systems

How do we deal with scarcity?

Page 40: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Answer:

Choices

Economic systems deal with choices3 Basic Questions

Page 41: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Free Market Economy

Characteristics

Page 42: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Command Economy

Characteristics

All Countries are “mixed”

Page 43: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Public Ownership

Public Sector Vs. Public Ownership

PS Govt. Bureaucracy

Funding from Taxes

POGovt. control of firms

Nationalized industriesOften utilities

Page 44: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Justification for Public Ownership/Control

PoliticalBenefits reach all rather than the “few” =rich

Equality in societyRedistribution of wealth (taxation and social welfare)

Enlightenment

Page 45: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Economic Argument

Private ownership fails to provide goods at the right:

Quantity

Price

Under-Provision

Ex. Roads, Education, Health CareOver-provision of “harmful” goods

Page 46: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Govt. Influences w/o direct control

Sin Taxes

Subsidies

Page 47: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Private

Self-InterestAre all actions based on self-interest?

Profit= IncentivesHard work

Innovation

Private Ownership Rule of Law / Property Rights (vs. Corruption)

Essential element of free markets and democracies

Page 48: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Adam Smith 1723-1790

Father of Economics

Quote pg. 57

Wealth of NationsInvisible Hand

Self-Interest creates maximum efficiency

Page 49: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

The Firm

Creates goods and services

Add value to resourcesLabour value-added

Provides national incomePromotes consumption

Tax base

New products and innovation.

New technology

Page 50: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between

Milton Friedman-Free to Choose

4 ways to spendOn oneself

On others

Others money on oneself

Others money on others

In terms of efficiency, which is most desirable? Why?

Page 51: Section 1: Introduction to Economics. 1.1 Definitions of Social Science and Economics Social Science Study of human society and of the relationships between