Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600...

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Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the Given to the EMBA 8400 Class EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director Director

Transcript of Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600...

Page 1: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics

Given to theGiven to theEMBA 8400 ClassEMBA 8400 Class

Classroom South #600Classroom South #600January 5, 2007January 5, 2007

Dr. Rajeev DhawanDr. Rajeev DhawanDirectorDirector

Page 2: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Course Objective & Teaching Philosophy

Practical Course to Comprehend the Economic Environment so that Managers can make their Decisions

Philosophy is that Micro Sectors Add Up to a Macro Environment

Optimal Blend of Economics and Real World Experience/Common Sense

Train You to Critically Evaluate and Interpret Business Press Writings

Page 3: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Course Layout First 2 Weeks - Basic Micro Economic

Concepts Weeks 3&4 - Macro Basics and Basic

Workings of an Economy with the Help of a “Basic” Macromodel (weeks 5-7) that can Perform Real-Life Fiscal And Monetary Experiments

Mandatory Field Trip to the Economic Forecasting Conference on Feb. 22nd

Wrap up with Model Training, Special Topics and Project Presentations

Page 4: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Background Articles

My Economics Why Journalists Can't Add Where Presidents Have No Power Their Money Our Strength How to Stop Relatives from Bragging About

their Big Profits in Real Estate

Page 5: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Grading Policy

60% 3 Quizzes in Class20% Group Presentations on a

Selected Industry20% Take Home Final Exam

–Macroeconomic Model Exercise

–Based on Field Trip

Page 6: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Group PresentationsThe objectives of this group project are :

1. To help you bridge the gap between the economic theory and

models discussed in class and the “real world”

2. To confront the problems of trying to find data which are

appropriate for the questions under consideration and to deal

with the problems of incomplete information

3. To showcase your oral and written communication skills

4. To identify how the problems faced and the decisions made by

other firms are similar to your own.

Page 7: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Suggested Industries1. Wireless Communication

2. Networking & Security Systems

3. Oil Industry

4. Healthcare Industry

5. Hospitality Industry

6. Paper & Pulp Industry

7. Utility & Power Industry

8. Consumer Products

9. Insurance

10. REIT (Real Estate Investment Trust)

Page 8: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Macro Framework

Households: Consume & WorkFirms: Production & InvestmentGovernment: Money Supply,

Taxes, ExpendituresForeign Sector: Exports,

Imports & Exchange Rate

Page 9: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Macroeconomic Model For Teaching

Section 1: A Model Simulation Approach to Macroeconomics Section 2: Classification of Equations Section 3: Glossary of Variables Section 4: Listing of Equations in the Integrated Macro Model Section 5: Flow Diagram of Integrated Macro Model Section 6: Policy Experiments with Integrated Macro Model Section 7: Guidelines to Use the Model

Page 10: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Variable Meaning Units

C Consumption Billions of $

EX Exports Billions of $

EXCH Exchange Rate Index

G Government Purchases Billions of $

GDP Gross Domestic Product Billions of $

GDP@FULL

GDP @ Full Employment Billions of $

GDP@ROW

GDP in Rest of the World Billions of $

I Investment Billions of $

IM Imports Billions of $

M Money supply Billions of $

NETEX Net Exports Billions of $

P Price Level Index

P% Inflation Percent

P@ROW Price Level, Rest of the World Index

R Real Interest Rate Percent

R@ROW Real Interest Rate, Rest of the World Percent

T Tax Revenues Billions of $

TAX% Tax Rate Fraction

YDP Disposable Income Billions of $

GLOSSARY OF VARIABLES

Page 11: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

money

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~Typical Macro-ModelTypical Macro-Model~~

Page 12: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~Typical Macro-ModelTypical Macro-Model~~

money

Page 13: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~Typical Macro-ModelTypical Macro-Model~~

money

Page 14: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~Typical Macro-ModelTypical Macro-Model~~

money

Page 15: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~”New Economy” Macro-Model”New Economy” Macro-Model~~

money

Tech/ProfitOpportunities

STOCK MARKET

CONSUMPTION

Page 16: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~”New Economy” Macro-Model”New Economy” Macro-Model~~

money

Tech/ProfitOpportunities

EUPHORIA

STOCK MARKET

Page 17: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~”New Economy” Macro-Model”New Economy” Macro-Model~~

money

Tech/ProfitOpportunities

EUPHORIA

STOCK MARKET

EUPHORIA

Page 18: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

world interest

rateworld GDP

IMPORTS

price level lag 1

worldprice

government

tax rate

capital stock lag 1

EXCHANGE RATE

INTEREST RATE

INVESTMENT

TAX REVENUES

investmentlag 1

EXPORTS

NETEXPORTS

REAL GDP

CONSUMPTION

DISPOSABLE INCOME

CAPITAL STOCK

inflationlag 1

PRICE LEVEL

INFLATION

EXPECTED INFLATION

UNEMPLOYMENT

POTENTIAL GDP

labor force

~~””New Economy” Macro-ModelNew Economy” Macro-Model~~

money

Tech/ProfitOpportunities

STOCK MARKET

EUPHORIA

Page 19: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Field Trip to the Forecasting

Center’s Quarterly Forecast Conference on Feb. 21nd!

Page 20: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

The Economic Forecasting Center at Georgia State University collects and analyzes macroeconomic data and develops procedures to forecast the national, regional and local economies.

Page 21: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

What Products Do We Offer?The Center offers:

–Forecast ReportsGeorgia and Atlanta (Quarterly)Nation (Quarterly)Southeast Indicators (Bi-Annual)

–Quarterly Conferences– Sponsorships– Custom Consulting Services

Page 22: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Quarterly Conferences

Consortium of GSU Experts and the Business Executives

My Forecast! 4 Industry Speakers Forecast Reports Networking Breakfast, at

Break and at Lunch

Page 23: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

How to Attend Our Conferences?How to Attend Our Conferences?

It Costs Money! $150 per Person Institutional Discounts Available.

BUT MY STUDENTS ARE IN FOR FREE!Check Our Website for Latest Program:

www.robinson.gsu.edu/efc

Page 24: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Introduction

The 10 Principles of Economics

Page 25: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

What is Economics? Economics is the study of how we use our scarce

productive resources for consumption, now or in future.– Paul Samuelson

Resources are scarce:– Society has limited resources and therefore cannot

produce all the goods and services people wish to have

– Example: clean air & water

– Scarcity is not poverty

Page 26: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Basic Questions

What to produce in what quantity? How to produce them? When and where to produce? For whom? Who makes economic decisions and by

what process?

Page 27: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Basic Concepts

Opportunity Cost: Things are Scarce

– Next Best Alternative Ex: Party on Friday night vs. study for examsEx: Party on Friday night vs. study for exams

– Cost of Time Ex: 1 hour wait time at the dentistEx: 1 hour wait time at the dentist

Page 28: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Basic Concepts Marginal Concept: At the Margin

Shot SatisfactionMarginal

Satisfaction1 50

202 70

103 80

54 85

15 86

06 86

Shots of Wild Turkey

Utility: Level of Satisfaction (here, drunkenness)

Page 29: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Basic Concepts

Sunk/Fixed Costs: Expenditures Made that Cannot be Recovered– Example:

You bought a computer laptop for $1500 A newer, upgraded model costs $1200 The dealer will accept a trade in + $400 What do you do?

Page 30: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

10 Principles of Economics1. People face tradeoffs :

• “No such thing as free lunch”• Give up one thing to get another –

Opportunity Cost (OC)2. Everything has an OC – whatever must be given

up to get that item3. People make decisions at the margins –

increments matter4. People respond to incentives – e.g. cigarette

laws, communism5. Free Trade is good (for everybody)

Page 31: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

10 Principles of Economics6. Markets organize economic activity

- Adam Smith “Invisible Hand”

7. Governments can sometimes improve market outcome

8. A country’s standard of living depends upon its production power (productivity)

9. Prices rise when government prints too much money

10. Phillips curve – short run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment

Page 32: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Branches of Economics

Micro: The Study of One Entity (firm, business, people)

Macro: The Study of a Collection of Things (national, aggregate)

Page 33: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

How are Theories Developed?

Decision-Makers– Firms, governments

Markets– Place where exchange takes place

Page 34: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Winnick’s Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea WSJ; by Andy Kessler

First Mover, FCC regulated + fixed costsRegulated utilityPrice protection

You can’t lose Traffic / use was of low economic value or

cashlessGlobal Crossing couldn't cut prices without running

the risk of either failing to cover its debt or being unable to raise more capital

Accounting Tricks…….

Page 35: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Who REALLY Owns that WineryTIME Magazine; by Terry McCarthy

Consolidation is the Norm 60% of U.S. wine is produced by the top five

companies– Consolidation among distributors is squeezing out the

medium-sized producers, who make from 100,000 to 1 million cases a year

Market is not growing– Only 10% of adults drink 86% of the wine

Fixed Costs– Some wineries do not have enough volume to get a

priority from distributors

Page 36: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Reshuffling to scarce resources– He can make lots of money just by shifting more of his

production - and more of his customers – from 1.5L jugs of generic red that sell for less than $5 retail to smaller bottles of $7 Merlot

The Future– The higher end is where the profits and the growth are to

be found– The Italians have figured it out – how to create tastes

that suit the American palate

Who REALLY Owns that Winery TIME Magazine; by Terry McCarthy

Page 37: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Chapter 3

Comparative Advantage & Trade

Page 38: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Positive vs. Normative Economics

Positive :– Descriptive statement ( is, was)– Refer to data– Examples of positive statements:

GDP in the U.S. economy was about $7 trillion last year The New York City rent control laws have created a shortage

of housing in the city Normative:

– Value judgment (ought to be, shall, will)– Examples of normative statements:

Higher interest rates would be good for the U.S. economy in the next six months

The U.S. government should be required to balance its budget every year

Page 39: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

The classic tale of the farmer and the rancher…or a better example if you have one.

What should each produce? Why should they trade?

Production Possibilities Frontier

Page 40: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Potatoes (ounces)

4

16

8

32

A

0

Meat (ounces)

(a) The Farmer’s Production Possibilities Frontier

If there is no trade, the farmer chooses this production and consumption.

Production Possibilities Frontier

FARMER:32 oz. of Potatoes in 8 hours8 oz. of Meat in 8 hours

Page 41: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Potatoes (ounces)

12

24

B

0

Meat (ounces)

(b) The Rancher’s Production Possibilities Frontier

48

24 If there is no trade, the rancher chooses this production and consumption.

Production Possibilities Frontier

RANCHER:48 oz. of Potatoes in 8 hours24 oz. of Meat in 8 hour

Page 42: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Trade Example

Without trade:

Page 43: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

““Farmer, my friend, have I got a deal for you! I know Farmer, my friend, have I got a deal for you! I know how to improve life for both of us. I think you should how to improve life for both of us. I think you should stop producing meat altogether and devote all your stop producing meat altogether and devote all your

time to growing potatoes. According to my time to growing potatoes. According to my calculations, if you work 8 hours a day growing calculations, if you work 8 hours a day growing potatoes, you’ll produce 32 ounces of potatoes. potatoes, you’ll produce 32 ounces of potatoes.

Specialization & Trade

If you give me 15 of those 32 ounces, I’ll give you 5 If you give me 15 of those 32 ounces, I’ll give you 5 ounces of meat in return. In the end, you’ll get to eat ounces of meat in return. In the end, you’ll get to eat 17 ounces of potatoes and 5 ounces of meat every 17 ounces of potatoes and 5 ounces of meat every week, instead of the 16 ounces of potatoes and 4 week, instead of the 16 ounces of potatoes and 4

ounces of meat you now get. If you go along with my ounces of meat you now get. If you go along with my plan, you’ll have more of both foods.”plan, you’ll have more of both foods.”

Page 44: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

How Trade Increases Consumption

Potatoes (ounces)

4

16

5

17

8

32

A

A*

0

Meat (ounces)

(a) The Farmer ’s Production and Consumption

Farmer's production & consumption without trade

Farmer's consumption with trade

Farmer's production with trade

Page 45: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

How Trade Increases Consumption

Potatoes (ounces)

12

24

13

27

B

0

Meat (ounces)

(b) The Rancher ’s Production and Consumption

48

24

12

18

B*

Rancher's consumption with trade

Rancher's production with trade

Rancher's production and consumption without trade

Page 46: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Example Continued..

With trade:

Page 47: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Trade According to Comparative Advantage (CA) or Opportunity Cost (OC)

CA is OC of two products – whatever must be given up to obtain a product

The producer who has the smaller OC of producing a good has a CA in producing that good

– Rancher has CA in producing meat

– Farmer has CA in producing potatoes

Absolute Advantage: Rancher beats the farmer in producing both meat and potatoes

Page 48: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Let’s Calculate OC(Meat in terms of Potatoes)

Page 49: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Benefits of Trade

Whenever potential trading parties have differences in opportunity costs, they can each benefit from trade.

Trade can benefit everyone in a society because it allows people to specialize in activities in which they have a comparative advantage.

Page 50: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Better Answer to Tough Questions WSJ; by David Wessel

“What do you say to someone…who has lost his job to someone overseas who’s being paid a fraction of what that job paid here?”

Those of us who benefit from low-cost imports – or who have well-paid export jobs that wouldn’t exist if we don’t allow imports and outsourcing – must not ask those who lose jobs to go it alone.

If trade and technology make us richer, then we can afford to help pay for health insurance and protect pensions forced to bear the cost.

Page 51: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Better Answer to Tough Questions WSJ; by David Wessel

That means pushing China and others to stop bending trade rules or manipulating currencies and pressing Europe and Japan to get their people spending so the U.S. Isn’t always the consumer of last resort. It means setting U.S. taxes so they cover government spending at least in good times, rewriting perverse tax laws that encourage companies to invest elsewhere and managing the unquenchable American thirst for health care without giving employers new excuses.

Discuss: wage insurance and role of education

Page 52: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Economic Focus – Trade Disputes (p.7)

Suppose the poor country, spurred by technical progress, improves productivity in the rich country’s export goods: think of China’s advances in semiconductors or India’s in financial services/ Then, says the theory, trade can turn entirely to the poor country's advantage. The improvement in productivity in the poor country can reduce the price of the rich country’s exports by enough to make it worse off, despite the increased availability or cheaper goods.

Europeans worried about American growth in the 1950’s for this reason, and Americans later worried about Japan.

Move of textile manufacturing to the American South may have caused net losses in the North. OR that Malaysia’s leap in rubber production may have had the same effect on Brazil . Might the new wave of outsourcing to poor countries be different, and make rich countries poorer?

Forrester Research claims that 3.4 million jobs will be outsourced by 2015, but considering that the American economy destroys 30 million jobs EACH YEAR and then creates slightly more, this dwarfs the effect of outsourcing.

Page 53: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Chapter 4

Demand & Supply

Page 54: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Some Basic Definitions

Market: a group of buyers and sellers of a particular good or service– E.g. Warren Buffet has been buying up junk

bonds– E.g. Bars, parties – informal market

Stock market – organized market

Page 55: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Example of Supply & Demand Hong Kong chicken flu scare? Price of chicken

Mad cow disease in US? Price of beef

Oprah bad mouths beef? Price of beef – Amarillo farmers sue her.

SARS? (Macro issue…)

Page 56: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

DemandQuantity demanded (Q): the amount of a good that buyers are willing and able to purchase at a given price (P).

Pints of BeerPints of Beer

P QD

$10.00 07.00 15.00 34.00 62.00 110.00 19

Demand for Beer

$0.00

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

0 5 10 15 20Quantity (Pints)

Pri

ce

Page 57: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Market Demand versus Individual Demand

Market demand refers to the sum of all individual demands for a particular good or service.

Graphically, individual demand curves are summed horizontally to obtain the market demand curve.

Page 58: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

The Market Demand Curve

Price of Beers

Price of Beers

Price of Beers

5.00 5.00 5.00

3 4 7

4.00 4.004.00

6 7 13

Quantity of Beers Quantity of Beers Quantity of Beers

Catherine’s Demand Nicholas’s Demand Market Demand+ =

When the price is $5.00, Catherine will demand 3 beers.

When the price is $5.00, Nicholas will demand 4 beers.

The market demand at $5.00 will be 7 beers.

When the price is $4.00, Catherine will demand 6 beers.

When the price is $4.00, Nicholas will demand 7 beers.

The market demand at $4.00, will be 13 beers.

The market demand curve is the horizontal sum of the individual demand curves!

Page 59: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Graph Results

Demand curve/schedule is downward sloping and shows the relationship between price of a good and the quantity demanded

Why downward sloping?– Law of demand: Ceteris Paribus (all other

things being equal) the quantity demanded falls when price rises

Page 60: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Other Determinants of Demand

Income (I) :– I , D Normal Goods: car, Ferrari– I , D Inferior goods: bus rides, potatoes

Price of related goods– Substitutes (inversely correlated)– Compliments (directly correlated)

Page 61: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Other Determinants of Demand

Tastes – taken as above– You get old and prefer Lincoln Town cars to sports cars

Expectations – about future– Income potential with EMBA degree – Loss of jobs, layoffs prospects

Market Demand – More players Increase in demand

– Buy IPO’s in 90’s

Page 62: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Shifts in Demand Curve

Variables that shift the demand curve:

Page 63: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Shifts in the Demand CurvePrice of

Beer

Quantity ofBeer

Increasein demand

Decreasein demand

Demand curve, D3

Demandcurve, D1

Demandcurve, D2

0

Page 64: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

SupplyQuantity supplied (Q): the amount of a good that sellers are willing and able to sell at a given price (P).

Pints of BeerPints of Beer

P QS

$10.00 127.00 75.00 44.00 32.00 10.00 0

Supply of Beer - Neighbors

$0.00

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

0 2 4 6 8 10 12Quantity (Pints)

Pri

ce

Page 65: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Supply

Supply graph for another bar

Supply of Beer - Hand in Hand

$0.00$1.00$2.00$3.00$4.00$5.00$6.00$7.00$8.00$9.00

$10.00

0 2 4 6 8 10 12Quantity (Pints)

Pri

ce Pints of BeerPints of Beer

P QS

$10.00 87.00 55.00 44.00 32.00 10.00 0

Page 66: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Determinants of Supply

Your own Price Input Prices

– Cost of bottle of beer: labor, capital, rent

Technology – Smoking laws separation of smoking &

drinking

Expectations– Future outlook

Page 67: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Shifts in The Supply Curve

Variables that shift the supply curve:

Page 68: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Shifts In Supply CurvePrice of

Beer

Quantity ofBeer0

Increasein supply

Decreasein supply

Supply curve, S3

curve, Supply

S1Supply

curve, S2

Page 69: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Equilibrium

Equilibrium: the price where quantity supplied is equal to quantity demanded

Market for Beer

$0.00

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

0 5 10 15 20Quantity (Pints)

Pri

ce

Equilibrium

6

Page 70: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Markets Not In Equilibrium

Price ofBeer

0

Supply

Demand

Excess Supply

Quantitydemanded

Quantitysupplied

Surplus

Quantity ofBeer

2

$6.50

10

4.00

6

Page 71: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Markets Not In EquilibriumPrice of

0

Supply

Demand

Excess Demand

Quantity ofBeer

Beer

0Quantitysupplied

Quantitydemanded

2.50

10

$4.00

62

Shortage

Page 72: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Changes in Equilibrium Decide whether the event shifts the supply or demand

curve (or both). Decide whether the curve(s) shift(s) to the left or to the

right. Use the supply-and-demand diagram to see how the shift

affects equilibrium price and quantity.

Page 73: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Changes in Equilibrium

Price ofBeer

0 Pints of Beer

Supply

Initialequilibrium

An increase in wealth

increases demand for beer

0

Demand

Newequilibrium

Initial equilibrium

S1

S2

An increase in the

price of hops reduces

the supply of beer

4.00

6

$6.50

2

D1

Price ofBeer

D2

Pints of Beer

4.00

6

New equilibrium

$6.50

10

Page 74: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Market for Beer

$0.00

$2.00

$4.00

$6.00

$8.00

$10.00

0 5 10 15 20Quantity (Pints)

Pri

ce

S2

S1

One bar closes…New

Equilibrium

4

$5.00

Page 75: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Market and Federal Govt. have given energy customers enough incentives to use natural gas. But, Oil and Gas Industry has got little encouragement to produce more.

Fed’s efforts to promote clean air and US energy independence meant surge in demand of Natural Gas.

Increase in oil prices has curtailed oil and gas exploration. Thus, there has been an increase in imports of natural gas, mainly from Canada. Net result is prices go from $2.17 to $8 per million BTUs

– Nation’s record long economic expansion – accompanying surge in energy consumption

– Cold winter weather over much of US (2001)

Article: Federal Policies, Industry Shifts Produced Natural-Gas Crunch WSJ; by: Barrionuevo, Fialka, Smith

Page 76: Lecture 1 Introduction & Basics of Economics Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South #600 January 5, 2007 Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director.

Federal govt. ordered the pipeline companies to become “open access” carriers. The move lowered the prices, which was a boon to the customers but a nightmare for the producers

Marketers emerged as a new breed of middlemen that took more profits without boosting gas production. As a result of narrow margins, some producers were forced to close and others to consolidate.

– Seasonal Relief– Crackdown on Coal– Bankers Balk

  Drilling for natural gas exploration, prohibited by federal agencies.

Alaskan producers pushing for a pipeline to continental US, but it will take another decade for that to materialize.

Article: Federal Policies, Industry Shifts Produced Natural-Gas Crunch WSJ; by: Alexi Barrionuevo, Fialka, Smith