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TUI University Winter 20081 Basic Terminology in Economics ECO202 Macroeconomics TUI University.

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Presentation on theme: "TUI University Winter 20081 Basic Terminology in Economics ECO202 Macroeconomics TUI University."— Presentation transcript:

1 TUI University Winter 20081 Basic Terminology in Economics ECO202 Macroeconomics TUI University

2 2 What is economics? It’s the study of the choices people and institutions make about scarce resources Society’s wants exceed the resources available to satisfy them Everybody faces scarcity to some degree Thus, we’re all interested in the choices we make

3 TUI University Winter 20083 Five big economic questions What? How? When? Where? Who?

4 TUI University Winter 20084 What? What goods and services are produced, and in what quantities? Military hardware or flat-panel TV’s?

5 TUI University Winter 20085 How? How are goods and services produced? Humans or machines?

6 TUI University Winter 20086 When? When are goods and services produced and consumed? Increase or decrease production? Speed up or slow down consumption?

7 TUI University Winter 20087 Where? Where are goods and services produced? US or abroad? Large or small facilities?

8 TUI University Winter 20088 Who? Who consumes goods and services? Rich or poor?

9 TUI University Winter 20089 Big Ideas of Economics Idea 1: Choices involve tradeoffs – we always give something up to get something else

10 TUI University Winter 200810 Big Ideas of Economics Idea 2: We make choices in small steps, and choices involve incentives.

11 TUI University Winter 200811 Big Ideas of Economics Idea 3: Voluntary exchange makes both sellers and buyers better off, and markets are an efficient way to organize that exchange.

12 TUI University Winter 200812 Big Ideas of Economics Idea 4: The market doesn’t always work efficiently; government action may be needed.

13 TUI University Winter 200813 Big Ideas of Economics Idea 5: A key macro-economic proposition. For the economy as a whole, expenditure equals income equals the value of production. This idea provides the foundation for the national income and product accounts (NIPA) of the Bureau of Economic Analysis at the U.S. Department of Commerce.

14 TUI University Winter 200814 Big Ideas of Economics The overall burden: How people approach the choices they make about resources matters A LOT to our lives – and we’d better understand what’s going on.

15 TUI University Winter 200815 Macro vs. Micro MACRO-economics is about how choices affect the national economy or a major aggregate of the economy: total consumer expenditures, for example. MICRO-economics is about individual people and companies and how their choices and decisions interact.

16 TUI University Winter 200816 Positive vs. Normative Economics Positive statements are about what is Can be proven right or wrong Can be tested with facts Normative statements are about what ought to be Depends on personal values Cannot be tested as such

17 TUI University Winter 200817 Economics includes words The body of experience is yours The question is how you describe it to understand it. Importance of vocabulary Words are used in specialized ways. It’s important to understand precise definitions That’s what distinguishes economics from just muddling through an issue.

18 TUI University Winter 200818 Now let’s define some terms… What follows is some of the terminology near and dear to the hearts of economists. We’ll be using these terms a lot in this course, so you need to understand them well. Remember, they’re not always used in quite the way we’d ordinarily use them.

19 TUI University Winter 200819 Resources Things you need to survive and thrive. There aren’t enough of them to go around – hence, scarcity is a fact of life.

20 TUI University Winter 200820 Categories of resources Land (natural resources) Labor (human resources) Capital Produced goods that can be used as inputs for production. Entrepreneurship Sometimes called “human capital.”

21 TUI University Winter 200821 Choice and tradeoff There are different things you can do. Whatever you do means that you can’t do something else. What is it that you can’t do when you make a certain choice?

22 TUI University Winter 200822 Utility / Value A measure of the satisfaction, happiness, or benefit resulting from the use of a resource. Implies substitutability – the idea that one thing might be taken rather than another if it produces the same value.

23 TUI University Winter 200823 Cost What you give up in order to acquire a resource. May be material or non-material

24 TUI University Winter 200824 Opportunity cost What you give up to acquire a particular resource. What’s the value of what you can’t buy because you bought something else. What’s the next best alternative to doing what you did?

25 TUI University Winter 200825 Marginality How much of the next dollar of income you receive do you intend to spend?

26 TUI University Winter 200826 Production The creation of useful goods and/or services by the application of human ingenuity to nature’s stuff. For the macro-economy, it’s the market value of final goods and services produced during some period of time.

27 TUI University Winter 200827 Technology The body of skills and knowledge concerning the use of resources in production. May be physical or conceptual. An important contributor to economic growth.

28 TUI University Winter 200828 Efficiency The condition in which maximum output is produced with given resources and technology. Implies the possibility of gains in one area without losses in another.

29 TUI University Winter 200829 Optimality Doing the best we can within our constraints. Usually something less than the maximum theoretically possible.

30 TUI University Winter 200830 Supply The willingness and ability of sellers to produce and offer to sell different quantities of a resource at different prices during a given period.

31 TUI University Winter 200831 Demand The willingness and ability of buyers to purchase different quantities of a resource at different prices during a given period.

32 TUI University Winter 200832 Price What buyers and sellers are willing to exchange in order to compensate each other for a transfer of resources from one to another. Implies that there is a unit of measurement comparable across transactions. Prices are expressed in that unit of measurement, e.g., $.

33 TUI University Winter 200833 Equilibrium The point at which quantity supplied equals quantity demanded. Neither buyers nor sellers have any reason to change their positions.

34 TUI University Winter 200834 Money Anything that is generally acceptable in exchange for goods and services. As long as someone will give up products or services to receive a certain item, it makes little difference what item is used as money. What do we use today? Coins? Paper? Plastic?

35 TUI University Winter 200835 Market A place where buyers and sellers come together to carry out exchanges. May be physical or conceptual. The stock market. Even virtual, E-Bay, for example.

36 TUI University Winter 200836 Assumptions Things we agree on as a basis for discussion. Often we don’t even talk about them. Sometimes a problem…

37 TUI University Winter 200837 Model A simplified expression of the relationships among economic phenomena Usually based on a number of assumptions. But the map is not the territory…

38 TUI University Winter 200838 Ceteris Paribus: Other things being equal An important assumption in most economic models. Never literally true But functionally, maybe…

39 TUI University Winter 200839 Consequences What happens as a result of something we do. May be short- or long-term Visible or invisible

40 TUI University Winter 200840 Unintended consequences The things that happen that we didn’t plan on (i.e., most of life…)

41 TUI University Winter 200841 So – where does this leave us? - More or less ready to try thinking like economists. - With a lot left to learn and think about - And a lot more language to acquire and learn to use…


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