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Economics: Principles and Practices

Economics: Principles and Practices. Chapter One. The Toy Problem. We witness scarcity with each year’s “hot” new toy Teddy bear in 1906, Cabbage patch kids in 1980’s Tickle Me Elmo in 1996 Pokemon game boy’s in 1999 Can you think of more recent scarce toys?.

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Economics: Principles and Practices

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  1. Economics: Principles and Practices Chapter One

  2. The Toy Problem • We witness scarcity with each year’s “hot” new toy • Teddy bear in 1906, • Cabbage patch kids in 1980’s • Tickle Me Elmo in 1996 • Pokemon game boy’s in 1999 • Can you think of more recent scarce toys?

  3. The Fundamental Economic Problem • Scarcity is the condition where unlimited human wants face limited resources. • Economics is the study of how people satisfy wants with scarce resources. • Needs are required for survival; wants are desired for satisfaction. • Someone has to pay for production costs; so there is no such thing as a free lunch. • Why is scarcity an issue for both rich and poor?

  4. Three Basic Economic Questions • What should we produce? Society must choose based on its needs • How should we produce it? Society must choose based on its resources. • For whom should we produce? Society must choose based on its population and other available markets. ? How might the economic decisions of a mountainous island differ from those of a mountainous landlocked society?

  5. The Factors of Production • These factors are the resources necessary to produce what people want and need. • Land, minerals, vegetation, animal life and climate are society’s limited natural resources. • Capital = means to production ($, tools, equipment, machinery, etc.) • Entrepreneurs = risk takers, combine land, labor, & capital into new products • Production = creating goods/services from land, capital, labor and entrepreneurs

  6. Why are entrepreneurs an economy’s driving force?

  7. The Scope of Economics • Economics deals with the description of economic activity = gross domestic product, unemployment, govt. spending, tax rates, etc. • Looks at how and why of econ activity (ex: why prices go up, how taxes affect savings) • Explanation = how economists communicate knowledge to society • Prediction = how yesterday’s and today’s economic activities advise us of potential future activity.

  8. What makes economics a social science?

  9. Did You Know? • The 20 percent of the world’s people live in the wealthiest nations consume 86 percent of the world’s goods and services. • The 20 percent who live in the poorest nations consume just 1.3 percent.

  10. Goods, Services, Consumers • Goods = useful and satisfy an economic want, tangible, classified as either consumer/capital and durable/nondurable. • Services = work performed by someone, nontangible. • Consumers use goods and services to satisfy wants and needs. • Why is the U.S. called a “society of consumption”?

  11. Value, Utility, and Wealth • Value is worth expressed in dollars and cents. Scarcity alone does not create value, it must also have utility. • Utility is a good’s or service’s capacity to provide satisfaction, which varies with the needs and wants of each person. • Wealth is the accumulation of goods that are tangible, scarce, useful, and transferable to another person. Wealth does not include services.

  12. Why might a wealthy society not have as much economic staying power as another wealthy society with a highly skilled labor force?

  13. The Circular Flow of Economic Activity • Markets are locations/mechanisms for buyers and sellers to trade. They are classified as local, regional, national, global, and cyberspace. (pg. 26 textbook) • A factor market is where people earn their incomes. They focus on 4 factors of production: land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurs. • A product market is where people use their income to buy from producers. Product markets center on goods and services. • Are landlords a part of a factor market?

  14. Productivity & Econ. Growth • Productivity is a measure of the amount of output produced by the amount of inputs within a certain time. Productivity increases with efficient use of scarce resources. • Specialization and division of labor may improve productivity because they lead to more proficiency (and greater economic interdependence) • Investing in human capital improves productivity because when people’s skills, abilities, health, and motivation advance, productivity increases. • Economic growth depends on high productivity. Yet, an economy’s productivity may be affected by its interdependence – reliance on others and their reliance on us to provide goods and services.

  15. How may economic interdependence be a strength of an economy? A weakness?

  16. Trade offs and Opportunity Costs • Trade-offs are the alternative choices people face in making an economic decision. A decision–making grid (pg. 15 textbook) lists the advantages and disadvantages of each choice. • Opportunity cost is the cost of the next best alternative among a person’s choices. The opportunity cost is the money, time, or resources a person gives up, or sacrifices, to make his final choice. • Why do you think economists believe opportunity cost is an important factor to consider in additional to monetary cost?

  17. Production Possibilities • Production possibilities frontier diagram illustrates opportunity cost – the combination of goods and/or services that can be produced when all productive resources are used. The line on the graph (pg. 16 textbook) represents full potential when the economy employs all productive resources. • Identifying possible alternatives allows an economy to examine how it can best put its limited resources into production. This can in turn lead to maximum output. • Economic growth made possible by more resources, a larger labor force, or increased productivity causes a new frontier for the economy.

  18. Thinking Like an Economist • Building simple models help economists analyze or describe actual economic situations. • Cost-benefit analysis helps economists evaluate alternatives by looking at each choice’s cost and benefit. • Taking small, incremental steps in implementing an economic decision helps economists test whether the estimated cost of the decision was correct. • How might economic growth stimulate greater production possibilities?

  19. The Road Ahead • Studying economics will help us know how the economy works on a daily basis. • It helps us understand a free enterprise economy, where people and privately owned businesses rather than the govt. make the majority of the economic decisions. • The study of economics helps us to become better decision makers. • The world of economics is complex and dynamic, as is our society. • What single economic goal have you set for yourself as a result of your study of economics?

  20. Chap. Two Traditional Economies • In traditional economy, roles and economic decisions are defined by custom. Ex: central African Mbuti, Australian Aborigines, and northern Canada’s Inuits. • Advantages: everyone knows which role to play, little uncertainty about WHAT, HOW and for WHOM to produce. • Disadvantages: discourages new ideas and new ways of thinking, lower standard of living than in other societies. • How would your life be different if you had grown up in a traditional economy?

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