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Chapter 1 Economics: The Study of Choice

Chapter 1 Economics: The Study of Choice. 1. DEFINING ECONOMICS. Learning Objectives Define economics. Explain the concepts of scarcity and opportunity cost and how they relate to the definition of economics.

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Chapter 1 Economics: The Study of Choice

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  1. Chapter 1 Economics: The Study of Choice

  2. 1. DEFINING ECONOMICS Learning Objectives • Define economics. • Explain the concepts of scarcity and opportunity cost and how they relate to the definition of economics. • Understand the three fundamental economic questions: What should be produced? How should goods and services be produced? For whom should goods and services be produced?

  3. 1.1 Scarcity, Choice, and Cost • Economics is a social science that examines how people choose among the alternatives available to them. • Scarcity is the condition of having to choose among alternatives. • A scarce good is a good for which the choice of one alternative requires that another be given up. • A free good is a good for which the choice of one use does not require that another be given up. • e.g. when you use gravity it does not prevent your neighbor from using gravity.

  4. Scarcity and the Fundamental Economic Questions • What should be produced? • How should goods and services be produced? • For Whom should goods and services be produced? • Opportunity cost is the value of the best alternative forgone in making any choice. • e.g. If you were not in college you could have spent the money for tuition, fees, and books on other things. Additionally, you could have used your time spent studying and attending class on other things.

  5. 2. DEFINING ECONOMICS Learning Objectives • Explain the distinguishing characteristics of the economic way of thinking. • Distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics

  6. 2.1 The Economic Way of Thinking • A choice at the margin is a decision to do a little more or a little less of something. • The Margin is the current level of an activity. • e.g. suppose I run a t-shirt shop. I currently produce 500/month and it costs me $700 in machinery, labor, and materials to do so. If I produce 600/month next month and my costs increase to $750 then, given I am initially producing 500/month, the marginal cost of the next 100 shirts is $50.

  7. 2.2 Microeconomics and Macroeconomics • Microeconomics is the branch of economics that focuses on the choices made by consumers and firms and the impacts those choices have on individual markets. • Macroeconomics is the branch of economics that focuses on the impact of choices on the total, or aggregate, level of economic activity.

  8. 2.3 Putting Economics to Work • Economics majors typically have a wide range of employment opportunities. • Careers • Economists work in government, for businesses, and in colleges and universities. • Applying economics to other fields • When taking LSAT exams, economics majors on average are among the highest ranking students. • Average salary offers for economics majors are also among the highest across the disciplines.

  9. 3. THE ECONOMISTS’ TOOL KIT Learning Objectives • Explain how economists test hypotheses, develop economic theories, and use models in their analyses. • Explain how the all-other-things unchanged (ceteris paribus) problem and the fallacy of false cause affect the testing of economic hypotheses and how economists try to overcome these problems. • Distinguish between normative and positive statements.

  10. 3. THE ECONOMISTS’ TOOL KIT • Avariable is something whose value can change. • A constant is something whose value does not change. • The scientific method is a systematic set of procedures through which knowledge is created. • A hypothesis is an assertion of a relationship between two or more variables that could be proven to be false.

  11. 3. THE ECONOMISTS’ TOOL KIT • Atheory is a hypothesis that has not been rejected after widespread testing and that wins general acceptance. • A law is a theory that has been subjected to even more testing and that has won virtually universal acceptance.

  12. 3.1 Models in Economics • A model is a set of simplifying assumptions about some aspect of the real world. • Economic models describe relationships among economic variables (price and quantity of a good for example). They help us understand the economy and help us generate hypotheses about the economy.

  13. 3.2 Testing Hypotheses in Economics • When making a hypothesis economists assume other factors are held constant. Ceteris paribus is a Latin phrase that means, “all things being equal.” • Hypotheses in economics typically specify a relationship in which a change in one variable causes another to change. A dependent variable is a variable that responds to a change while an independent variable is a variable that induces a change.

  14. 3.2 Testing Hypotheses in Economics • A positive statement is a statement of fact or a hypotheses. • A normative statementis a statement that makes a value judgment.

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