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ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices The Economic Problem: The problem is that, although your wants, or desires, are virtually unlimited, the resources available to satisfy these wants are scarce. Scarce resources: means limited goods and services. Restricts options and demands choices. Price exceeds ZERO Because resources are scarce, you must choose from among your many wants, and you must forego some choices. No such thing as a free lunch Someone bears a cost Purposeful Behavior We assume that human behavior reflects “rational self interest” Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 1 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices Individuals look for and pursue opportunities to increase their utility The satisfaction, pleasure, happiness, obtained from consuming a good or service. Purposeful behavior Does not assume that people and institutions are immune from faulty logic and therefore are perfect decision makers. Rational Self-Interest o Means that individuals try to maximize the expected benefit achieved with a given cost or to minimize the expected cost of achieving a given benefit. o Marginal benefits to exceed Marginal cost Marginal Analysis: Comparison of marginal benefits and marginal costs usually for decision making. Marginal means extra, additional, or change in Always choices are made where o Marginal benefits > Marginal Costs Theories, Principles, and Models: The Scientific Method: o Elements: The observation of real-world behavior and outcomes. Based on those observations, the formulation of a possible explanation of cause and effect ( hypothesis) Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 2 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices The testing of this explanation by comparing the outcomes of specific events to the outcome predicted by the hypothesis. The acceptance, rejection, or modification of the hypothesis based on these comparisons. The continued testing of the hypothesis against the facts. Economic principle o A very well tested and widely accepted theory. Microeconomics and Macroeconomics o Microeconomics This study of the economic behavior in particular markets, such as that for computers or unskilled labor. o Macroeconomics The study of the economic behavior of the entire economy Normative versus Positive Normative: a statement that represents an opinion, which cannot be proved or disproved. Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 3 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices Incorporates value judgments about what the economy should be like or what particular policy actions should be recommended to achieve a desirable goal. Basis of economic policy Looks at the desirability of certain aspects of the economy What ought to be Ethical value judgments Positive: a statement that can be proved or disproved by reference to facts Focuses on facts and cause-and-effect relationships. Includes description, theory, development, and theory testing Avoids value judgments, tries to establish scientific statements about economic behavior, and deals with what the economy is actually like. Critical to good policy analysis What is Scientific portion Society’s Economizing Problem The need to make choices because economic wants exceed economic means Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 4 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices Scarce resources: o Society has limited or scarce economic resources Meaning all natural, human, and manufactured resources that go into the production of goods and services. Resources: The inputs, or factors of production, used to produce the goods and services that people want resources consist of: o Land: includes all the natural resources used in the production process. Land Forest Mineral Water resources Also called factors of production o Labor: the physical and mental effort used to produce goods and services. o Capital: the buildings, equipment, and human skill used to produce goods and service Physical capital: consists of factories, machines, tools, buildings, airports, highways, and other human creations employed to produce goods and services Human capital: consists of the knowledge and skill people acquire to enhance their productivity, such as entrepreneurial ability. o Entrepreneurial ability: managerial and organizational skills needed to start a firm, combined with the willingness to take risks. Functions The entrepreneur takes the initiative in combining the resources of land, labor, Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 5 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices and capital to produce a good or a service The entrepreneur makes the strategic business decisions that set t he course of an enterprise The entrepreneur is the innovator The entrepreneur is the risk bearer Payments to Resources: o Wages: payment to resource owners for their labor o Interest: payment to resource owners for the use of their capital o Rent: payment to resource owners for the use of their natural resources. o Profit: the reward for entrepreneurial ability. The revenue from sales minus the cost of resources used by the entrepreneur. Production Possibilities Frontier o Assumptions for our model o Two goods: Output in economy is limited to two products: consumer goods and capital goods. o Fixed resources: Economy’s resources are fixed in both quantity and quality during that period o Fixed techonology: Society’s knowledge about how these resources combine to produce output, the available technology does not change. Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 6 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices o Full employment: the economy is employing all its available resources. Production Possibilities Table A list the different combinations of two products that can be produced with a specific set of resources, assuming full employment. Type of Product Consumer good Capital good A 0 10 Production Alternatives B C D 1 9 2 7 3 4 E 4 0 Notice: the more we produce of one good, the less of the other good is produced. Society must give up one good to get the other. o Production Possibilities Frontier o A curve showing alternative combinations of goods that can be produced when available resources are used fully and efficiently; a boundary between inefficient and unattainable combinations. o Resources are employed fully and efficiently when there is no change that could increase the production of one good without decreasing the production of the other good o EFFICIENCY Involves getting the maximum possible output from available resources It is a point ON THE CURVE Points on the curve are attainable as long as the economy uses all its available resources. Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 7 ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices Consumer Goods 60 Unattainable: points outside the curve A 40 30 B Efficient: Points on the line 20 Inefficient : points inside the curve 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 o Efficient points: any point found on the production possibilities frontier such as A and B. o Inefficient points: any point inside the production possibilities frontier. We have idle resources such as unemployment o Unattainable points: any point outside the production possibilities frontier. Requires more than the resources and technology available to achieve. o Law of increasing opportunity cost o To produce each additional increment of a good, a successively larger increment of an alternative good must be sacrificed if the economy’s resources are already being used efficiently. o o Shifting the PPF o Economic growth An increase in the economy’s ability to produce goods and services; an outward shift of the production possibilities frontier Changes in resource availability Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 8 Capital goods ECO 2013 Chapter 1: Limits, Alternatives, and Choices Increases in capital stock Technological change Consumer Goods 60 Shift in the PPF 40 30 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 Capital goods Some Pitfalls of Faulty Economic Analysis The fallacy that association is causation The incorrect idea that if two variables are associated in time, one must necessarily cause the other The fallacy of composition The incorrect belief that what is true for the individual, or part, must necessarily be true for the group or whole. Secondary Effects Unintended consequences of economic actions that may develop slowly over time as people react to events. Created by: Maria Mari Fall, 2007 9