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Introductory Lecture Branches and methods of economics: Microeconomics versus Macroeconomics and models Economics can be seen as divided into two main branches: Microeconomics and macroeconomics. Microeconomics deals with parts of the economy. Macroeconomics views the economy as a whole. Microeconomics... sees the economy as composed of... a very large number of... very small parts. Parts: Producers, firms, companies Households, workers, investors Governments, municipalities Markets (market for cars, market for peanuts, ...) … and it tries to answers questions like: How do economic agents (firms, households, governments) take decisions? How are the quantity produced and sold over a given period of time and the price of each good or service within that period of time are determined? Macroeconomics... sees the economy as composed of... a very small number of... very large parts. Parts: Market for goods and services Market for labor Market for money Market for financial securities … and it tries to answers questions like: How are inflation unemployment economic growth interest rates... determined? Microeconomics and macroeconomics can feel very different from each other, but they do have certain common aspects: They both refer to markets. They both use demand and supply analysis. They both try to explain real events by constructing and using models. What is a “model”? What is a “model”? A model is a set of simple ideas that capture the most important aspects of a class of phenomena, and that can be used to describe, understand, or explain those phenomena. These ideas are put in the form of propositions, laws (as in “laws of nature”), or equations, usually expressing some causation or relation between different aspects of what we try to understand. A model doesn’t fully or exactly represent the reality it tries to explain because it gives a simplified picture of the reality by reducing it to its essentials,... but it does help us to see what essentially happens and how it happens in reality when something happens that would be too complex to discuss in all of its realistic details. Example: The subway map of a city Subway lines in the shape of complex curves are drawn in the form of straight lines preserving only the order of stations along them and the crossing points between different lines. A model consists of assumptions relationships between causes and effects propositions that are extracted by analyzing those relationships Example: The assumption underlying the subway map Subway lines are straight. As economists are constructing and using models to understand and explain how economic events affect or cause each other, they are dealing with causes and effects, when and how and why things happen as they happen, how things are. In this case we say that they are doing “positive economics.” Here the term “positive” is not to be contrasted with “negative” but with “normative.” Economists could also make propositions about how things should be or, rather, what we should do in order to make them as they should be. In this case economists will go from their value judgements and we say they are doing “normative economics.” In short, positive economics is about answering the question of “what happens if...” and normative economics is about stating “what should be done.” For example, if an economist studies the effects of increasing minimum wages and finds out when and how and why unemployment is caused to increase by an increase in minimum wages, then he or she is making a positive statement. But if he or she defends the position that minimum wages should be increased, then that would be a normative statement. Or, as another example, if we study the effects of abolishing all taxes other than the tax on land ownership, then we are doing positive economics. But if we assert that all taxes other than the tax on land ownership should be abolished, then we are doing normative economics. Consequently, economists can disagree on two grounds: They either disagree on their analyses and explanations of economic events (disagreement on positive propositions), Or the disagree on their value judgements and assertions about what should be done (disagreement on normative propositions).