1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

30
1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western
  • date post

    15-Jan-2016
  • Category

    Documents

  • view

    218
  • download

    0

Transcript of 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

Page 1: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

1

Some Tools of Economic Analysis

Chapter 2

© 2006 Thomson/South-Western

Page 2: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

2

The Economic Problem

Economics examines how people use their scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants

Scarce resource Not freely available when its price exceeds zero

Resources Inputs Factors of production Used to produce goods and services

Page 3: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

3

Opportunity Cost

Opportunity cost of a chosen activity is the value of the best alternative that is forgone Similar to opportunity lost Focuses on the alternatives associated with making

choicesOpportunity cost is subjective

Only the individual making the choice can select the most attractive alternative

Chooser seldom knows the actual value of the “road not taken”

Page 4: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

4

Time and Information

Rational choice does not mean that individuals exhaustively calculate the value of all possible alternatives

Acquiring information about alternatives is costly and time consuming people usually make choices based on limited or even incorrect information some choices may turn out to be poor ones

Page 5: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

5

Opportunity Cost

Time is the ultimate constraint By pursuing one activity, we cannot at the same time

do something else each activity undertaken has an opportunity cost

May vary with circumstances Depends on the value of the alternatives

Monetary cost May be a reasonable approximation but can omit

the time involved which may be substantial for some activities

Page 6: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

6

Sunk Cost and Choice

Sunk cost A cost that has already been incurred Cannot be recovered regardless of further actions

Economic decision makers should consider only those costs that are affected by the choice already incurred sunk costs become irrelevant in making choices

Page 7: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

7

Law of Comparative Advantage

States that the individual with the lower opportunity cost of producing a particular output should specialize in producing that output

Absolute advantage means being able to produce a product using fewer resources than other resources require while comparative advantage focuses on producing where opportunity costs are lower

Page 8: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

8

Law of Comparative Advantage

Comparative advantage between nations exists because of Climate Workforce skills Natural resources Capital stock

Resources will be allocated more efficiently when production and trade conform to the law of comparative advantage

Page 9: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

9

Specialization and Exchange

Barter System of exchange in which products are traded

directly for other products Works best in simply economies with little

specialization and few goods In advanced economies with specialization, money

plays an important role in facilitating exchange Money serves as a medium of exchange because it is

the one thing that everyone is willing to accept in return for all goods and services

Page 10: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

10

Specialization and Exchange

Specialization and comparative advantage implyMost people consume little of what they produceProduce little of what they consume

Thus, they exchange what they produce for money which is in turn exchanged for other goods and services

Page 11: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

11

Division of Labor

Division of labor means that each worker specializes in separate tasks the group can produce more

How is this increase in productivity possible? First, tasks can be assigned according to individual

preferences and abilities according to comparative advantage Second, workers who perform the same task again and again

gets better at it Third, there is no time lost in moving from task to task Fourth, specialization of labor allows for the introduction of

specialized machines each worker becomes more productive

Page 12: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

12

Production Possibilities Frontier

Focus is on how much an economy can produce with the resources available What are the economy’s production capabilities?

Simplifying assumptions Two broad classes of products – consumer goods

and capital goods Production during a given time period – one year Resources available are fixed in both quantity and

quality during the time period The available technology does not change

Page 13: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

13

Production Possibilities Frontier

Identifies the various possible combinations of the two types of goods that can be produced when all available resources are employed fully and efficientlyNo change increases the production of one good

without decreasing the production of the other good

Involves getting the maximum possible output from available resources

Page 14: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

14

Exhibit 1: The Economy’s PPF

Page 15: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

15

The Economy’s PPF

Points A and F = amount of consumer goods and capital goods that can be produced per year if all resources are used efficientlyPoints between A and F = other possible combinations of the two goods produced when all resources are efficiently employedPoints inside the curve, I, = combinations that do not employ resources efficiently or fully Point C yields more consumer goods and no fewer capital goods than I, while point E yields more capital goods and no fewer consumer goods than I, and all points between C and E yield more of both goods Points outside the PPF, such as U, = unattainable combinations PPF serves as the frontier between unattainable and attainable combinations.

0

10

20

34

43

50

0 10 20 30 40 50

Capital Goods (millions of units per year)

Co

ns

um

er

Go

od

s (

mil

lio

ns

of

un

its

pe

r y

ea

r)

48A

C

D

E

F

B

U

I

Page 16: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

16

Movements along the PPF

Law of Increasing Costs Dictates the bowed-out shape of the PPF When the economy uses all resources efficiently, each

additional increment of one good requires the economy to sacrifice successively larger and larger increments of the other good

Occurs because resources drawn away from consumer goods are those that are increasingly better suited to producing consumer goods

First 10 million units of capital goods have an opportunity cost of only 2 million units of consumer goods while

Final 10 million (points E to F) have an opportunity cost of 20 million units of consumer goods

Page 17: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

17

Factors that can Shift the PPF

Changes in Resource Availability Increases / Improvements in Quality rightward

shift Decreases /Reductions in Quality leftward shift

Increases in the Capital Stock Increases rightward shift Decreases leftward shift

Technological Change Employs available resources more efficiently

Page 18: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

18

All of the following would lead to a rightward shift in the PPF from A to A‘:Increase in the size or health of the labor forceImprovement in the skills of the labor forceIncreases in the amount of capital Decreases in any of the above factors would shift the PPF from A' to A shift to the leftThe parallel shift implies the change that occurred affected the production of both goods equally

Exhibit 2a: Shifts in the Economy’s PPF

Page 19: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

19

A leftward shift from A to A" could be caused by any of the following:Decrease in the size or health of the labor forceDecline in the skills of the labor forceDecreases in the amount of capital The parallel shift implies the change that occurred affected the production of both goods equally

Exhibit 2b: Shifts in the Economy’s PPF

Page 20: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

20

Exhibit 2c: Shifts in the Economy’s PPF

Increase in resources or technological change that benefits consumer goods would rotate the PPF outward from the horizontal axis, from A to A'

Page 21: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

21

Exhibit 2d: Shifts in the Economy’s PPF

Increase in resources or technological advance that benefits capital goods would rotate the PPF outward from the vertical axis, F to F'

Page 22: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

22

Lessons of PPF

Efficiency PPF represents the combinations of output that are possible, given the economy’s resources and technology

Scarcity Given the stock of resources and technology, the economy can produce only so much

Economic Growth rightward shift or rotation of PPF

Choice

Page 23: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

23

Three Questions

How an economy selects the most preferred combination will depend on the decision-making rules employed

Regardless of how decisions are made, each economy must answer three fundamental questions

What goods and services will be produced?How will they will be produced?For whom will they be produced?

Page 24: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

24

Economic System

Economic System is a set of mechanisms and institutions that resolve the what, how, and for whom questions

Criteria used to distinguish among economic systems Who owns the resources What decision-making process is used to allocate

resources and products What type of incentives guide the economic decision

makers

Page 25: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

25

Pure CapitalismRules of the Game

Private ownership of all resources Coordination of economic activity based on price

signals generated in free, unrestricted markets Owners have property rights to use their resources

and are free to supply those resources to the highest bidder

Voluntary buying and selling Market prices guide resources to their most

productive uses and channel goods and services to consumers who value them most

Laissez-faire: let people do as they choose without government intervention

Page 26: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

26

Pure Capitalism

Markets Transmit information about relative scarcity of

goods and services Provide individual incentives Distribute income among resource supplies

Adam Smith’s invisible hand: although each individual pursues his or her self-interest, the “invisible hand” of markets promotes the general welfare

Page 27: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

27

Flaws in Capitalism

No central authority to protect property rights, enforce contracts, or ensure that rules of the game are followed

People with no resources to sell could starveSome producers may try to monopolize by

eliminating competitionProduction or consumption of some goods generates

byproducts – pollution – that affect people not involved in the market transaction

Public goods, such as national defense, will not be produced by private firms because they cannot prevent non-payers from enjoying the benefits of public goods

Page 28: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

28

Pure Command System

Resources are directed and production is coordinated not by markets buy by the “command,” or central plan, of government

Public or communal ownership of property

Central plans spell out answers to three questions

Page 29: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

29

Flaws of Command System

Running an economy is so complicated that some resources are used inefficiently

Because nobody owns resources, people have less incentive to employ them in their highest valued use

Central plans may reflect more the preferences of central planners than those of society

Since government is responsible for all production, the variety of products tends to be more limited than in a market economy

Each individual has less personal freedom in making economic choices

Page 30: 1 Some Tools of Economic Analysis Chapter 2 © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.

30

Mixed / Transitional Economies

Economic systems have grown more alike over time

Role of government increasing in market economies and role of markets increasing in command economies

United States represents a mixed system: government directly accounts for about one-third of all economic activity

Government also regulates the private sector in a variety of ways

Some economies based on custom or religion