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1 WHAT IS ECONOMICS? CHAPTER 1.

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1 1 WHAT IS ECONOMICS? CHAPTER 1

2 WHY DO WE STUDY ECONOMICS??

3

4 BAHRAIN STOCK MARKET

5 Swine Flu & Economics

6 UNSOLD CARS & ECONOMICS

7 WHY STUDY ECONOMICS Among TOP TEN REASONS …..
Economists can supply it on demand. You can talk about money without ever having to make any. When you are in the unemployment line, at least you will know why you are there. So that you know more than the most world leaders about what is actually going on.

8 CHAPTER 1: WHAT IS ECONOMICS
Slide #1 Definition of Economics -scarcity and choices -economics -Microeconomics -Macroeconomics CHAPTER 1: WHAT IS ECONOMICS Economics: A Social Science -positive statement -normative statement -Economic theory -economic model -ceteris paribus Big Microeconomics Questions -What, How, For Whom -Factors of Production Land, Labor, Capital and Entrepreneur Economic Way of Thinking -Choice -Tradeoff -opportunity cost -Marginal benefit and Marginal Cost

9 Definition of Economics
All economic questions arise because we want more than we can get. Our inability to satisfy all our wants is called scarcity. Because we face scarcity, we must make choices. The choices we make depend on the incentives we face. An incentive is a reward that encourages or a penalty that discourages an action. No definition of economics can adequately capture the subject. For that reason, some teachers don’t like definitions and skip right over them. If you are one of these teachers, go ahead. Not much is lost. Other teachers regard a basic definition as essential, and the textbook takes this view. The definition in the text…“the social science that studies the choices that individuals, businesses, and governments, and entire societies make as they cope with scarcity,” is a modern language version of Lionel Robbins famous definition, “Economics is the science which studies human behavior as a relationship between ends and scarce means that have alternative uses.” Some teachers like to play with definitions a bit more elaborately. If you are one of these, here are four more, all of which add some useful insight and the last one a bit of fun: John Maynard Keynes: “The theory of economics does not furnish a body of settled conclusions immediately applicable to policy. It is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique of thinking, which helps it possessors to draw correct conclusions.” Alfred Marshall: “Economics is a study of mankind in the ordinary business of life; it examines that part of individual and social action which is most closely connected with the attainment and with the use of the material requisites of wellbeing.” Jacob Viner: “Economics is what economists do.” Jim Duesenberry: “Economics is all about how people make choices. Sociology is about why there isn’t any choice to be made.”

10 Economics We want more than what we get leads SCARCITY CHOICES
INCENTIVES depends

11 Definition of Economics
Economics is the social science that studies the choices that individuals, businesses, governments, and societies make as they cope with scarcity and the incentives that influence and reconcile those choices. No definition of economics can adequately capture the subject. For that reason, some teachers don’t like definitions and skip right over them. If you are one of these teachers, go ahead. Not much is lost. Other teachers regard a basic definition as essential, and the textbook takes this view. The definition in the text…“the social science that studies the choices that individuals, businesses, and governments, and entire societies make as they cope with scarcity,” is a modern language version of Lionel Robbins famous definition, “Economics is the science which studies human behavior as a relationship between ends and scarce means that have alternative uses.” Some teachers like to play with definitions a bit more elaborately. If you are one of these, here are four more, all of which add some useful insight and the last one a bit of fun: John Maynard Keynes: “The theory of economics does not furnish a body of settled conclusions immediately applicable to policy. It is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique of thinking, which helps it possessors to draw correct conclusions.” Alfred Marshall: “Economics is a study of mankind in the ordinary business of life; it examines that part of individual and social action which is most closely connected with the attainment and with the use of the material requisites of wellbeing.” Jacob Viner: “Economics is what economists do.” Jim Duesenberry: “Economics is all about how people make choices. Sociology is about why there isn’t any choice to be made.”

12 Economics Microeconomics Macroeconomics

13 Definition of Economics
Microeconomics Microeconomics is the study of choices made by individuals and businesses, and the influence of government on those choices. Macroeconomics Macroeconomics is the study of the effects on the national and global economy of the choices that individuals, businesses, and governments make.

14 TWO BIG ECONOMIC QUESTIONS

15 CHOICES 1. FIRST BIG ECON QUESTION What to produce How to Produce
For whom to produce 2. SECOND BIG ECON QUESTION Self Interest or Social Interest

16 Two Big Economic Questions
Two big questions summarize the scope of economics: How do choices end up determining what, how, and for whom goods and services get produced? When do choices made in the pursuit of self-interest also promote the social interest? Don’t skip the questions in a rush to get to the economic way of thinking. Open your students’ eyes to economic in the world around them. Ask them to bring a newspaper to class and to identify headlines that deal with stories about What, How, and For Whom. Use Economics in the News Today on your Parkin Web site for a current news item and for an archive of past items (with questions). Pose questions and be sure that the students appreciate that they will have a much better handle on questions like these when they’ve completed their economics course.

17 Two Big Economic Questions
What, How, and For Whom? Goods and services are the objects that people value and produce to satisfy wants. What? Given the resources or factors of production available to us, we have to decide on what to produce

18 Two Big Economic Questions
How? Goods and services are produced by using productive resources that economists call factors of production. Factors of production are grouped into four categories: Land Labor Capital Entrepreneurship

19 Factors of Production The “gifts of nature” that we use to produce goods and services are land. The work time and effort that people devote to producing goods and services is labor. The quality of labor depends on human capital, which is the knowledge and skill that people obtain from education, on-the-job training, and work experience.

20 Two Big Economic Questions
The tools, instruments, machines, buildings, and other constructions that are used to produce goods and services are capital. The human resource that organizes land, labor, and capital is entrepreneurship.

21 Two Big Economic Questions
For Whom? Who gets the goods and services depends on the incomes that people earn. Land earns rent. Labor earns wages. Capital earns interest. Entrepreneurship earns profit.

22 Two Big Economic Questions
When is the Pursuit of Self-Interest in the Social Interest? Every day, 6.3 billion people make economic choices that result in “What,” “How,” and “For Whom” goods and services get produced. Do we produce the right things in the right quantities? Do we use our factors of production in the best way? Do the goods and services go the those who benefit most from them?

23 Two Big Economic Questions
You make choices that are in your self-interest—choices that you think are best for you. Choices that are best for society as a whole are said to be in the social interest. Is it possible that when each one of us makes choices that are in our self-interest, it also turns out that these choices are also in the social interest? Talk about Adam Smith and the Wealth of Nations. Note that this book was the first systematic attempt to address this big question and that economists have been trying to answer it ever since. You might like to mention that several Nobel Prizes have been awarded to economists who have worked on the question including Ken Arrow, John Hicks, and Gerard Debreu, as well as John Nash of “Beautiful Mind” fame.

24 B. The second big question is “When is the pursuit of self-interest also in the social interest?”
1. People make choices in their own self-interest—they make choices they think are best for their own well-being. a) The incentives surrounding an individual’s choice amongst available alternatives influence the tradeoffs involved in making that choice. b) The choice made by one individual changes the incentives surrounding the tradeoffs facing other individuals, which influences their choices. c) In this way, many self-interested individuals making choices in society will bring about change to the incentive surrounding all decisions to be made by individuals in the economy.

25 2. When people make self-interested choices that are the best for society, they make choices that are considered in the social interest. a) In 1776 Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations describing how a market based system can theoretically motivate self-interested individuals to make choices that promote the social interest. b) Economists try to identify those characteristics of a market system that successfully promote self-interested individuals to make choices that coincide with the social interest

26 3. We can examine a number of current events to determine whether self- interested individuals made choices in the social interest: a) Privatization: The fall of socialism and the rise of capitalism in Europe b) Globalization: The local impact of growing international trade c) The “New” Economy: Workers adjusting to changing technologies d) The post 9-11 economy: Terror changes vacation habits e) Corporate scandals: Preventing stealing by corporate officials through lying f) HIV/AIDs: Poorest countries hit hardest but lack medicines g) Disappearing tropical rainforests: Lack of property rights creates waste h) Water shortages: Consumers fail to pay the opportunity cost of consumption i) Unemployment: Persistence in minority teenage unemployment j) Deficits and Debt: Having future generations pay for today’s servi

27 The Economic Way of Thinking
Choices and Tradeoffs The economic way of thinking places scarcity and its implication, choice, at center stage. You can think about every choice as a tradeoff—an exchange—giving up one thing to get something else. The classic tradeoff is “guns versus butter.” “Guns” and “butter” stand for any two objects of value. Begin by encouraging the students to use the economic way of thinking to reflect on their own lives. Why are you here in college? Ask the students why they are pursuing a university degree. Most of them will say that they want a good paying job. Tell them about jobs such as postal workers, long haul truck drivers or grocery clerks that require relatively little training and offer up to $30,000 a year plus benefits. Ask the students to calculate the opportunity cost of being in school. Most students are shaken when they realize that the opportunity cost of a college degree approaches $150,000 to $200,000. Don’t leave them hanging here though. Mention that a college education does yield a high rate of return and suggest that they study Reading Between the Lines (pp. 46–47) when they get through Chapter 2.

28 (give up the highest value alternative)
SCARCITY (give up the highest value alternative) CHOICES TRADEOFF OPPORTUNITY COST 28

29 The Economic Way of Thinking
Opportunity Cost Thinking about a choice as a tradeoff emphasizes cost as an opportunity forgone. The highest-valued alternative that we give up to get something is the opportunity cost of the activity chosen.

30 The Economic Way of Thinking
Choosing at the Margin People make choices at the margin, which means that they evaluate the consequences of making incremental changes in the use of their resources. The benefit from pursuing an incremental increase in an activity is its marginal benefit. The opportunity cost of pursuing an incremental increase in an activity is its marginal cost.

31 Marginal Benefit vs Marginal Cost
Marginal Benefit: the benefit arises from an increase in activity i.e- Study three nights in a week GPA is 3.0 Study 4 nights in a week GPA is 3.5 Marginal Benefit = =0.5 Marginal cost: The cost of an increase in activity Marginal cost: cost of additional night not watching TV DECISION: MB> MC STUDY MB< MC DON’T STUDY

32 Marginal Benefits vs. Marginal Costs
MB >MC Incentive to continue activity MB < MC Incentive to discontinue activity

33 Economics: A Social Science
Economics is a social science. Economists distinguish between two types of statement: What is—positive statements What ought to be—normative statements A positive statement can be tested by checking it against facts A normative statement cannot be tested.

34 3. ECONOMIC METHODOLOGY - Observation of facts
Relying on scientific method to view at things. Consisting of the following elements: - Observation of facts - Hypothesis formulation - Testing - Acceptance/rejection: Modification - Continued testing against facts 34

35 Accumulation of favorable results =THEORY
3. ECONOMIC METHODOLOGY Continued testing against facts Accumulation of favorable results =THEORY Accepted theory = LAW/PRINCIPLES Combination of law & principles = MODELS (Simplified version of relationships) All these enable us to understand, explain & predict economic outcomes 35

36 3. ECONOMIC METHODOLOGY Theoretical economics
- Develop models of behavior of economic agents - Relevant and useful information - Establishing cause-effect  testing  discovering theories & principles  use in analytical economics 36

37

38 3. ECONOMIC METHODOLOGY Terminology
- Hypothesis – Needs initial testing - Theories – Tested, need more testing - Law/principle – accepted theory, provided strong predictive accuracy - Model – Combines principles into simplified representation of reality 38

39 3. ECONOMIC METHODOLOGY Generalizations
- Theories, laws & principles are generalizations to economic behavior - Imprecise due to economic diversity - Economic principles are expressed as the tendencies of average economic agents 39

40 3. ECONOMIC METHODOLOGY Other-things-equal assumption
- Ceteris paribus - Enable generalizations - All variables, except the one under analysis, are held constant 40

41 There are several obstacles that can affect economic analysis.
Obstacles and Pitfalls in Economics There are several obstacles that can affect economic analysis. • Confusion can result when too many things change and so it might not be possible to understand what caused what. So in their models economists change one factor at a time to isolate its effects using the ceteris paribus assumption. Ceteris paribus is a Latin phrase that means “other things being equal.”

42 Economists cannot easily do experiments and most economic behavior has many simultaneous causes.
To isolate the effect of interest, economists use the logical device called ceteris Paribus or “other things being equal. Economists try to isolate cause-and-effect relationship by changing only one variable at a time, holding all other relevant factors unchanged.

43 • The fallacy of composition is the (false) statement that what is true for the parts is also true for the whole, or what is true for the whole is also true for the parts. For example, one person can walk through the door into the class, so the entire 30-person class can simultaneously walk through the door. • The post hoc fallacy (from the Latin phrase, post hoc, ergo propter hoc, which means “after this, therefore because of this”) is the error of reasoning that a first event causes a second event because the first event occurred before the second. For instance, claiming that you are delivering an economics lecture because the room first filled with students is a post hoc fallacy.

44 Agreement and Disagreement Among Economists
Economists tend to agree on positive statements, though they might disagree on normative statements. Economists are often accused of contradicting each other. In contrast to the popular image, economists find much common ground on a wide range of issues. (Page X lists twelve different economic propositions that at least 70 percent of all economists polled will agree upon.)

45 THE END


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