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1 Chapter 1 Introducing the Economic Way of Thinking Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Chapter 1 Introducing the Economic Way of Thinking Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Chapter 1 Introducing the Economic Way of Thinking Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing

2 2 What is the economic problem? Providing for people’s wants and needs in a world of scarcity * Return to previous slide while in slide show mode

3 3 What is meant by scarcity? The condition in which wants are forever greater than the available supply of time, goods, and resources

4 4 What does scarcity force us to do? It forces us to make choices

5 5 What are resources? The basic categories of inputs used to produce goods and services

6 6 What are the three categories of resources? Land Labor Capital

7 7 What is a land resource? A shorthand expression for any natural resource provided by nature

8 8 What is labor? The mental and physical capacity of workers to produce goods and services

9 9 What is entrepreneurship? The creative ability of individuals to seek profits by combining resources to produce innovative products.

10 10 What is capital? The physical plants, machinery, and equipment used to produce other goods

11 11 What is financial capital? The money used to purchase capital

12 12 Land Labor Capital Entrepreneurship organizes resources to produce goods and services Entrepreneurship organizes resources to produce goods and services

13 13 What is economics? The study of how society chooses to allocate its scarce resources to the production of goods and services in order to satisfy unlimited wants

14 14 What is macroeconomics? The branch of economics that studies decision- making for the economy as a whole

15 15 What is microeconomics? The branch of economics that studies decision- making by a single individual, household, firm, industry, or level of government

16 16 What is the scientific method? Problem identification Model development Testing a theory

17 17 What is the purpose of an economic model? To forecast or predict the results of various changes in variables

18 18 Identify the problem Develop a model based on simplified assumptions Collect data and test the model

19 19 What assumption is always made when testing a model? ceteris paribus

20 20 What is ceteris paribus? A Latin phrase that means that while certain variables can change, “all other things remain unchanged”

21 21 What is the difference between association and causation? We cannot always assume that when one event follows another, the first caused the second

22 22 What is positive economics? An analysis limited to statements that are verifiable

23 23 What is normative economics? An analysis based on value judgement

24 24 Key Concepts

25 25 What is the economic problem? What is meant by scarcity? What are resources? What are the three categories of resources? What is entrepreneurship? What is economics? What is macroeconomics? What is microeconomics?

26 26 What is the scientific method? What assumption is always made when testing a model?What assumption is always made when testing a model? What is ceteris paribus? What is the purpose of model building?What is the purpose of model building? What is positive economics? What is normative economics?

27 27 Summary

28 28 Scarcity is the fundamental economic problem that human wants exceed the availability to time, goods, and resources. Individuals and society therefore can never have everything they desire.

29 29 Resources are factors of production classified as land, labor, and capital. Entrepreneurship is a special type of labor. An entrepreneur combines resources to produce innovative products.

30 30 Economics is the study of how individuals and society choose to allocate scarce resources in order to satisfy unlimited wants. Faced with unlimited wants and scarce resources, we must make choices among alternatives.

31 31 Unlimited wants Scarcity Society Chooses Resources

32 32 Macroeconomics applies an economy wide perspective that focuses on such issues as inflation, unemployment, and the growth rate of the economy.

33 33 Microeconomics examines individual decision-making units within an economy. Microeconomics studies such topics as a consumer’s response to changes in the price of coffee and the reasons for changes in the market price of personal computers.

34 34 Models are simplified descriptions of reality used to understand and predict economic events. An economic model can be stated verbally or in a table, graph, or equation. If the evidence is not consistent with the model, the model is rejected.

35 35 Identify the problem Develop a model based on assumptions Collect data and test the model

36 36 Ceteris paribus holds “all other factors unchanged” that might affect a particular relationship. If this assumption is violated, a model cannot be tested. Another reasoning pitfall is to think association means causation.

37 37 Positive economics uses testable statements. Often a positive argument is expressed as an “if-the” statement. Normative economics is based on value judgments or opinions and uses words such as good, bad, ought to, and ought not to.

38 38 Chapter 1 Quiz ©2002 South-Western College Publishing

39 39 1. Scarcity exists a. when people consume beyond their needs. b. only in rich nations. c. in all countries in the world. d. only in poor nations. C. No matter what economic system a country has, it is always faced with the problem of scarcity.

40 40 2. Which of the following would eliminate scarcity as an economic problem? a. Moderation of people’s competitive instincts. b. Discovery of large new energy reserves. c. Resumption of steady productivity growth. d. None of the above. e. All of the above. D. Because it is impossible to provide everyone with everything they want, we will always have scarcity.

41 41 3. Which of the following is not a resource? a. Land. b. Labor. c. Money. d. Capital. C. Money is not a resource because it has no intrinsic value. Money that is used to make an investment is called financial capital.

42 42 4. Economics is the study of a. how to make money. b. how to operate a business. c. people making choices because of the problem of scarcity. d. none of the above. C. Economics is the study of how people must decide among alternatives to meet their wants and needs in this world of scarcity.

43 43 5. Microeconomics approaches the study of economics from the viewpoint of a. individuals or specific markets. b. the operation of the Federal Reserve. c. economy wide effects d. the national economy. A. Microeconomics is the study of the decision- making process for individuals, business owners, and government.

44 44 6. A review of the performance of the U.S. economy during the 1990’s is primarily the concern of a. macroeconomics. b. microeconomics. c. both macroeconomics and microeconomics. d. neither macroeconomics nor microeconomics. A. Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole.

45 45 7. An economic theory claims that a rise I gasoline prices will cause gasoline purchases to fall, ceteris paribus. The phrase “ceteris paribus” means that a. other relevant factors like consumer incomes must be held constant. b. the gasoline prices must first be adjusted for inflation. c. the theory is widely accepted, but cannot be accurately tested. d. consumers need for gasoline remains the same regardless of price. A. Anytime price changes we always make the assumption that nothing else changes.

46 46 8. An economist notices that sunspot activity is high just prior to recessions and concludes that sunspots cause recessions. The economist has a. confused association with and causation. b. misunderstood the ceteris paribus assumption. c. Used normative economics to answer a positive question. d. built an untestable model. A. Just because one action follows another, does not mean that the first caused the second.

47 47 9. Which of the following is a statement of positive economics? a. The income tax system collects a lower percentage of the incomes of the poor. b. A reduction in the tax rates of the rich makes the tax system more fair. c. Taxes ought to be raised to finance health care. d. All of the above are primarily statements of positive economics. A. Positive economic statements are testable by facts and explain the world as it is without making value judgements.

48 48 10. Which of the following is a statement of positive economics? a. An unemployment rate of greater than 8 percent is good because prices will fall. b. An unemployment rate of 7% is a serious problem. c. If the overall unemployment rate is 7%, black unemployment rates will average 15%. d. Unemployment is a more severe problem than inflation. C. Other answers are based on a value judgement between black and white unemployment rates.

49 49 11. Which of the following is a statement of normative economics? a. A minimum wage is good because it raises wages for the working poor. b. The minimum wage is supported by unions. c. The minimum wage reduces jobs for unskilled workers. d. The minimum wage encourages firms to substitute capital for labor A. Even though the minimum wage reduces jobs for some working poor, it is a value judgement that the minimum wage is beneficial overall.

50 50 12. Select the normative statement that completes the following sentence: If the minimum wage is raised rapidly, then a. inflation increases. b. workers will gain their rightful share of total income. c. profits will fall. d. unemployment will rise. B. To say that workers have right to a certain part of total income entails a value judgement.

51 51 END


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