1 / 15

Ch. 1: What is Economics?

Ch. 1: What is Economics?. Objectives Define economics and distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics Explain the big questions of economics Explain the key ideas that define the economic way of thinking Explain how economists go about their work as social scientists.

bryson
Télécharger la présentation

Ch. 1: What is Economics?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch. 1: What is Economics? • Objectives • Define economics and distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics • Explain the big questions of economics • Explain the key ideas that define the economic way of thinking • Explain how economists go about their work as social scientists

  2. Definition of Economics Social science that studies the choices that individuals, businesses, governments, and societies make as they cope with scarcity and the incentives that influence and reconcile those choices.

  3. Micro vs Macro Microeconomics • study of choices made by individuals and businesses, and the influence of government on those choices. Macroeconomics • study of the effects on the national and global economy of the choices that individuals, businesses, and governments make.

  4. Economic Questions • What to produce? • How to produce? • Factors of production: • Land earns rent • Labor earns wages • Capital earns interest/dividends • Entrepreneurship earns profits • For whom to produce?

  5. Free market vs. Command • Free market allows individuals and businesses to decide without government intervention. • Command centralizes all decisions. • Mixed market is a combination of extremes. • Examples: • Education • Transportation • Energy

  6. Types of government intervention • Direct control • national defense, police, roads • Price Controls • Subsidies • Ethanol, hybrid cars, crops, wind/solar energy, higher education • Taxes • Tariffs on imports • Excise taxes on cigarettes, gasoline • Income • Property • Sales • Regulation • Anti-trust • Laws designed to encourage competition. • Environmental

  7. Views on government intervention • Communists versus Capitalists • Democrats versus Republicans • Equity versus Efficiency

  8. Economic Growth • Economic growth is an expansion in an economy’s ability to produce goods and services. • Economic growth is affected by: • Capital goods vs consumer goods. • Education and training. • Research and development (new tech)

  9. Why does income per capita vary so much around the world?

  10. The Economic Way of Thinking • Economists assume individuals compare costs and benefits in decision making. • Cost is measured by opportunity cost. • the highest-valued alternative that we give up to get something is the opportunity cost of the activity chosen.

  11. The Economic Way of Thinking • Economists assume that people make decisions “on the margin” • evaluate the consequences of making incremental changes in the use of their resources. • Marginal Benefit (MB): the benefit from pursuing an incremental increase in an activity. • Marginal Cost (MC): The opportunity cost of pursuing an incremental increase in an activity. • If MB>MC  pursue more of the activity. • If MB<MC  pursue less of the activity.

  12. The Economic Way of Thinking • Economists assume people respond to incentives. • Incentives can affect MB or MC • Taxes • Subsidies • Employer compensation methods. • Incentives are key to reconciling self-interest and the social interest. • Pollution • Crime • Fishing • Water usage

  13. The Economic Way of Thinking • Two types of economic statements: • positive statements • normative statements • A positive statement can be tested by checking it against facts • A normative statement cannot be tested.

  14. The Economic Way of Thinking • Economic models • a description of some aspect of the economic world that includes only those features of the world that are needed for the purpose at hand. • Testing Models • Experiments • Real world data

  15. The Economic Way of Thinking • Obstacles and Pitfalls in Economics • Ceteris paribus (other things being the same): • To isolate the effect of interest, economists use the logical device called ceteris paribus or “other things being equal”, or “other things being the same”. • The fallacy of composition: • The false conclusion that • what is true for the parts is true for the whole • what is true for the whole is true for the parts. • The post hoc fallacy • the error of reasoning that a first event causes a second event because the first occurs before the second

More Related