Scarcity, Production Possibilities, Trade. Key Concepts (all elaborated on in lecture) 1. Absolute and comparative advantage 2. Economic systems a. Distinguishing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A. What Is a Market? There is no higher authority that directs the behavior of these economic agents; rather, it is the invisible hand of the marketplace.
Advertisements

Economic Systems SSEF4.
CASE FAIR OSTER Prepared by: Fernando Quijano & Shelly Tefft.
Unit One Marketing Principles
C H A P T E R 2: The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair 1 of.
Economic Systems - By Rahul JAIN.
2 1. Reviewing the Basics 2. Production Possibilities Frontier 3. The Economic Problem 4. Comparative Advantage.
Chapter (1) The Central Concepts of Economics
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 6/eKarl Case, Ray Fair 2 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano The Economic.
Lecture 3: Production, Growth, and Trade  Define production possibility frontier  Define production efficiency  Choosing Production Mixes  An introduction.
© 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Principles of Economics 8e by Case and Fair Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano 2 Chapter The Economic Problem:
2 CHAPTER The Economic Problem
PowerPoint Lectures for Principles of Microeconomics, 9e
Copyright 2002, Pearson Education Canada1 The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice Chapter 2.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 6/eKarl Case, Ray Fair What is Production? Production is the process by which resources.
PART I Introduction to Economics © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Prepared by: Fernando Quijano & Shelly Tefft CASE FAIR OSTER.
Economic Issues 101 D.W. Hedrick.
2 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair The Economic.
2 The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice CHAPTER OUTLINE:
© 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Economics 9e by Case, Fair and Oster 2 PART I INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS Asst.
The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice
Economic Systems Section 2.2 Scarcity of economic resources forces every country to develop an economic system that determines how resources will be used.
2 The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice C H A P T E R O U T L I N E Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity Cost Scarcity and Choice in a One-Person.
Economic Goals and Three Fundamental Questions 1. How do societies choose goals for their economic system? 2. What are the 6 goals of a free market system?
Principles of Economics
Chapter One The Central Idea. 1 | 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Economics and Scarcity Economics is the study of how people.
Asst. Prof. Dr. Serdar AYAN
CHAPTER 2 The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Economics 9e by Case, Fair.
#1 What is Production? Production is the process by which resources are transformed into useful forms. Resources, or inputs, refer to anything provided.
Economics Economics is the study of how people choose to allocate scarce resources to produce goods and services and how they choose to distribute those.
Scarcity, Trade-offs, and Comparative Advantage. Scarcity and Trade-offs Households, firms and governments continually face decisions about how best to.
Economic Issues and Concepts Chapter 1
Chapter 1 The Central Idea TheCentralIdea. Tiger Woods Economics major at Stanford in 1996 before he chose to become a golf professional Sportsman of.
What is Economics.  Main Idea: Scarce resources affect everyone and economists simplify the world to help us understand it.
© SOUTH-WESTERNCONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS: LESSON 2.11 CHAPTER 2 Economic Systems and Economic Tools Economic Questions and Economic Systems Production.
2 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair The Economic.
Chapter 2: The Economic Problem: Scarcity And Choice.
Review. Supply and Demand The law of demand holds that other things equal, as the price of a good or service rises, its quantity demanded falls.
1 The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice Chapter 2.
Bell Ringer Activity Which economic system does the United States have? (Command, Market, or Mixed) Why do you think that?
CHAPTER 2 The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Economics 9e by Case, Fair.
Copyright ©2001, South-Western College Publishing Contemporary Economics: An Applications Approach By Robert J. Carbaugh 1st Edition Chapter 1: Scarcity.
CH2 : The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice Asst. Prof. Dr. Serdar AYAN.
The economic problem: scarcity and choice Three basic questions in economics: Resources Producers Households Natural resources Labor Capital Allocation.
Scarcity and Choice Opportunity Cost. Opportunity cost is that which we give up or forgo, when we make a decision or a choice.
1 of 32 CASE  FAIR  OSTER PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N PEARSON Prepared by: Fernando Quijano w/Shelly Tefft.
Read to Learn Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to make decisions about using their resources. Contrast the way a.
International Trade. Trade allows nations to specialize in some products and then trade them for goods and services that are more expensive to produce.
Publisher’s PowerPoint Edited for ECON1000 F & H Prof. Sam Lanfranco.
2 Chapter The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice.
The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice. What is Production? Production is the process by which resources are transformed into useful forms.Production.
Basic Economics.
C H A P T E R 2: The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair 1 of.
Economics. Economic Basics Vocabulary: Economics: Study of how people meet their wants and needs Scarcity: Having a limited quantity of resources to meet.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 2: The Market System and the Circular Flow Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Economic Systems and Tools Economic Questions and Economic Systems Production Possibilities Frontier Comparative Advantage and Specialization.
SCARCITY. absolute advantage capital command economy comparative advantage consumer goods consumer sovereignty economic growth economic problem Investment.
CH2 :The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice
CASE  FAIR  OSTER MACROECONOMICS PRINCIPLES OF
The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice
Read to Learn Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to make decisions about using their resources. Contrast the way a.
Basic Economic Concepts
Principles of Economics
Economic Issues and Concepts Chapter 1
The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice
CASE  FAIR  OSTER ECONOMICS PRINCIPLES OF
Click here to advance to the next slide.
The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice
The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice
Why does a country have to develop an economic system?
Presentation transcript:

Scarcity, Production Possibilities, Trade

Key Concepts (all elaborated on in lecture) 1. Absolute and comparative advantage 2. Economic systems a. Distinguishing characteristics 1. Who owns resources? 2. Who makes economic decisions? b. Command vs. Laissez-faire systems (& price incentives) 3. Production 4. Production decisions a. What to produce? b. For whom to produce (consumer sovereignty)? c. How to produce?

Key Concepts (cont’d) 5. Production possibilities a. Production possibility curve (or frontier) b. Marginal rate of (product) transformation c. Gains from specialization and trade d. Inefficiency e. Capital (& investment) vs. consumer goods and economic growth 6.Scarcity

Objectives Upon completion of this chapter, you should understand and be able to answer these key questions: 1. What are the 3 basic economic questions that every society must answer? 2. What do economists mean by scarcity and how is scarcity related to choice? 3. What are the opportunity costs of the choices you make? 4. How does a production possibility frontier (ppf) illustrate opportunity cost, specialization of resources, inefficiency, and economic growth? 5. What are the differences between command economies, free market economies, and mixed economies in terms of the ways they address the 3 basic economic questions? 6. Why do we observe specialization in production and trade.

Production decisions: Suppose Joe is a grain farmer who operates a farm between Ames and Story City. What ‘production’ decisions must Joe make that other business firms (and countries as well) also have to make?

Basic production decisions: WHAT? HOW? FOR WHOM?

Scarcity Resources are insufficient (i.e. limited, constraining) to meet all goals or wants.

The Production Possibility Frontier The production possibility frontier (ppf) is a graph that shows all of the combinations of goods and services that can be produced if all of society’s resources are used efficiently.

PPF Example #1 Assume 10 workers in the U.S. can produce 60 (max) units of pharmaceutical products or 30 (max) units of electronic products per day. Draw the PPF for these workers for a day.

PPF Example #2 Assume 30 workers in Korea can produce 30 (max) units of pharmaceutical products or 60 (max) units of electronic products per day. Draw the PPF for these workers for a day.

Absolute Advantage A producer has an absolute advantage over another in the production of a good or service if it can produce that product using fewer resources.

Absolute Advantage for U.S. or Korea? Labor Resources (time) Required to Produce 1 Pharm.1 Electronic U.S.1/6 day*1/3 day* Korea1 day1/2 day *  absolute advantage

Comparative Advantage A producer has a comparative advantage in the production of a good or service over another if it can produce that product at a lower opportunity cost.

PPF Opportunity Cost Given by slope of PPF for U.S. and Korea (called MRT = marginal rate of transformation) U.S.Korea

Comparative Advantage for U.S. or Korea? Opportunity Cost of Producing 1 P1 E U.S.1/2 E*2P Korea2E1/2 P* *  comparative advantage

Willingness to Trade Assume U.S. and Korea agree to: 1. Have U.S. specialize in producing P 2. Have Korea specialize in producing E 3. Trade at rate of 1P for 1E

Gains from each specializing and trading (1P for 1E) Without TradeWith Trade Max PMax EMax PMax E U.S Korea3060 Q.Can you draw PPFs for each country?

Increasing Opportunity Cost What are the implications for the shape of a PPF if the opportunity cost is ‘increasing’?

Assume a PPF w/Y on vertical axis, X on horizontal axis. Slope = ΔY / ΔX Opport. Cost of 1 more X = numerator of slope with ΔX = +1 Opport. Cost of 1 more Y = denominator of slope with ΔY = +1

Opportunity Cost in Production =rate at which one should be willing to trade with another

Other PPF Topics 1. Inefficiency 2. Consumer vs capital goods and economic growth

Economic Systems =alternative arrangements by which societies resolve production questions Distinguishing characteristics: 1. Who owns/controls resources? a. Gov’t b. Individuals 2. How is economic activity planned/coordinated? a. Gov’t (centralized) b. Markets (decentralized, laissez-faire, free enterprise)

100% Central Planning 100% Gov’t Owns Resources U.S. Capitalism UK Japan Communism Sweden 0 Socialism

The Coordinating Role (signals) of Market Prices Hi prices  producers & inputs  buy less producers & goods  sell more consumers & inputs  sell more consumers & goods  buy less Lo prices  send opposite signals

Consumer Sovereignty Consumers ultimately dictate what will be produced (or not produced) by choosing what to purchase (and what not to purchase). They ‘vote’ with their pocket books.

Why Government Intervention in Markets? Since markets are not perfect, governments intervene and often play a major role in the economy. Some of the goals of government are to: 1. Minimize market inefficiencies 2. Provide public goods 3. Redistribute income 4. Stabilize the macroeconomy: a. Promote low levels of unemployment b. Promote low levels of inflation

1. Tariffs (= duties, taxes) 2. Quotas (= specific quantity limit) 3. Embargo (= complete ban) 4. Others (e.g. inspection requirements) Barriers to Trade (Specialization)

1. Protect ‘infant’ industry 2. Protect national security 3. Protect human health 4. Protect domestic producers against ‘unfair’ trade practices of other countries 5. Protect domestic price support programs Arguments for Trade Barriers