Key Principles Of Economics 1 C H A P T E R 2 © 2001 Prentice Hall Business PublishingEconomics:...

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Key Principles Of Economics 1 C H A P T E R 2 © 2001 Prentice Hall Business Publishing © 2001 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Economics: Principles and Tools, 2/e Economics: Principles and Tools, 2/e O’Sullivan & Sheffrin O’Sullivan & Sheffrin

Transcript of Key Principles Of Economics 1 C H A P T E R 2 © 2001 Prentice Hall Business PublishingEconomics:...

Page 1: Key Principles Of Economics 1 C H A P T E R 2 © 2001 Prentice Hall Business PublishingEconomics: Principles and Tools, 2/eO’Sullivan & Sheffrin.

Key PrinciplesOf Economics

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PRINCIPLE of Opportunity Cost

What you sacrifice is the next best choice. To determine opportunity cost we consider only the best of the possible alternatives.

PRINCIPLE of Opportunity CostThe opportunity cost of something is what you sacrifice to get it.

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PRINCIPLE of Opportunity Cost

As long as resources are scarce, an increase in the production of a good, which necessarily results in a decrease in the production of other goods, means that the production of a good is subject to increasing opportunity cost.

Prices are a measure of opportunity cost because they provide information about the value of one good relative to another.

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Opportunity Cost and Production Possibilities

The production possibilities frontier illustrates the concept of opportunity cost for the entire economy.

In order to increase the number of space missions by one, 80 thousand computers will have to be sacrificed.

It explains why the production possibilities frontier curve is negatively sloped.

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Marginal PRINCIPLE

Marginal PRINCIPLEIncrease the level of an activity if its marginal benefit exceeds its marginal cost, but reduce the level if the marginal cost exceeds the marginal benefit. If possible, pick the level at which the marginal benefit equals the marginal cost.

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Marginal Benefit and Marginal Cost

Marginal benefit: the extra benefit resulting from a small increase in some activity.

Marginal cost: the additional cost resulting from a small increase in some activity.

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Using the Marginal Principle

Consider this example of how a barbershop applies the marginal principle to decide whether to close or to remain open.

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PRINCIPLE of Diminishing Returns

PRINCIPLE of Diminishing ReturnsSuppose that output is produced with two or more inputs and that we increase one input while holding the other inputs fixed. Beyond some point—called the point of diminishing returns—output will increase at a decreasing rate.

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PRINCIPLE of Diminishing Returns

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Spillover PRINCIPLE

Spillover PRINCIPLE

For some goods, the costs or benefits associated with the good are not confined to the person or organization that decides how much of the good to produce or consume.

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Spillover PRINCIPLE

Another word for spillover is externality. Some goods generate spillover benefits (positive externalities), and others generate spillover costs (negative externalities).

A spillover occurs when the people who are external to a decision are affected by the decision.

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Spillover PRINCIPLE

The amount of certain goods produced or consumed by free markets may not be the socially optimal amount.

Externalities are an economic problem because the decisions of consumers and producers tend to be based on their own costs or benefits, not the costs or benefits for society as a whole.

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Spillover Benefits

A positive externality occurs when the production or consumption of a good generates benefits that are not confined to the producer or the consumer.

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Spillover Benefits

Examples of spillover benefits:

A flood control dam that benefits some people who have not paid for it

A contribution to public television benefits some who watch it but have not contributed themselves

A new scientific discovery that treats a common disease

More educated people become better workers and better citizens who benefit those around them

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Spillover Costs

A negative externality occurs when the production or consumption of a good generates costs that are not confined to the producer or the consumer. For example:

• Air pollution• Water pollution• Noise pollution• Ozone depletion

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Reality PRINCIPLE

Nominal value: the face value of a sum of money.

Real value: the value of a sum of money in terms of the quantity of goods the money can buy.

Reality PRINCIPLE What matters to people is the real value or purchasing power of money or income, not its face value.

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Reality PRINCIPLE

The reality principle applies to a variety of important economic measures including:

• Real wages versus nominal wages

• Real GDP versus nominal GDP

• Real interest rates versus nominal interest rates

• Real money supply versus nominal money supply