Chapter 1 Microeconomics Intro
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Transcript of Chapter 1 Microeconomics Intro
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Chapter 1Introducing Economics
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Definition of EconomicsThe study of how society chooses to allocate its scarce resources to the production of goods and services in order to satisfy unlimited wants
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Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics
• MacroeconomicsThe branch of
economics that studies decision-making for the economy as a whole
• MicroeconomicsThe branch of
economics that studies decision-making by a single individual, household, firm, industry, or level of government
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What isCeteris Paribus?
A Latin phrase that means that while certain variables can change, “all other things remain unchanged”
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BASIC CONCEPTS:• Scarcity - the fundamental economic problem that human wants exceed the availability of time, goods, and resources. • Choice – Because individuals and society can never have everything they desire, they therefore are forced to make choices • Opportunity cost – the second best
alternative foregone for a chosen option.
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1. Land Resource - any natural resource provided by nature
2. Labour - The mental and physical capacity of workers to produce goods and services
3. Capital - The physical plants, machinery, and equipment used to produce other goods(Financial capital - The money used to purchase capital)
4. Entrepreneurs - The creative ability of individuals to seek profits by combining resources to produce innovative products
Factors of Production
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LandLabor
Capital
Entrepreneurship organizesresources to produce goods
and services
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Graphs provide a means to clearly show economic relationships in two-dimensional space. Economic analysis is often concerned with two variables confined to the upper right-hand (northeast) quadrant of the coordinate number system.
Graph
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A shift in a curve occurs only when the ceteris paribus assumption is relaxed and a third variable not on either axis of the graph is allowed to change
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Marginal Analysis- An examination of the
effects of additions to or subtractions from a current situation
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Production Possibilities Curve:
- A curve that shows the maximum combinations of two outputs that an economy can produce, given its available resources and technology
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Technology:The body of knowledge and skills applied to how goods are produced
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A
B
Mili
tary
Goo
ds
Consumer Goods
Unattainable
Inefficient
Production Possibilities Curve
Efficient
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• A production possibilities curve illustrates an economy’s capacity to produce goods, subject to the constraint of scarcity. • The production possibilities curve is a graph of the maximum possible combinations of two outputs that can be produced in a given period of time, subject to three conditions:
Production Possibilities Curve
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(1) All resources are fully employed
(2) The resource base is not allowed to vary during the time period.
(3) Technology, which is the body of knowledge applied to the production of goods, remains constant.
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• Inefficient production occurs at any point inside the production possibilities curve. • All points along the curve are efficient points because each point represents a maximum output possibility. • All points outside the curve are unattainable due to scarcity of resources.
Points “inside”, “along” and “outside” the PPC
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• PPC is usually concave to the origin because of the law of increasing opportunity costs that states that the opportunity cost increases as the production of an output expands. •The explanation for the law of increasing opportunity costs is that the suitability of resources declines sharply as greater amounts are transferred from producing one output to producing another output.
The shape of PPC
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Economic Growth• The ability of an economy to
produce greater levels of output, represented by an outward shift of its production possibilities curve as a result of an increase in resources or an advance in technology
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AMili
tary
Goo
ds
Consumer Goods
Increase in Resources
B
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Agr
icul
ture
Manufacture
Technological Advance in Manufacturing Sector
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Increase in Resources
Balanced Economic
growth
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Technologicaladvance
Unbalanced Economic
growth
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- The fundamental economic questions facing any economy are What, How, and For Whom to produce goods. - The WHAT question asks exactly which goods are to be produced and in what quantities. - The HOW question requires society to decide the resource mix used to produce goods. -The FOR WHOM problem concerns the division of output among society’s citizens.
Basic Economic Problems