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2 Thinking Like an Economist. Economics trains you to.... – Think in terms of __________. – Evaluate the cost of individual and social _______. – Examine.

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Presentation on theme: "2 Thinking Like an Economist. Economics trains you to.... – Think in terms of __________. – Evaluate the cost of individual and social _______. – Examine."— Presentation transcript:

1 2 Thinking Like an Economist

2 Economics trains you to.... – Think in terms of __________. – Evaluate the cost of individual and social _______. – Examine and understand how certain events and issues are related.

3 THE ECONOMIST AS A SCIENTIST The economic way of thinking... – Involves thinking ________ and ___________. – Makes use of the scientific method.

4 The Scientific Method: Observation, Theory, and More Observation Uses __________ models to help explain how a complex, real world operates. Develops theories, collects, and analyzes data to evaluate the theories.

5 The Role of Assumptions Economists make ___________ in order to make the world easier to understand. The art in scientific thinking is deciding which assumptions to make. Economists use different assumptions to answer different questions.

6 Economic Models Economists use __________ to _________ reality in order to improve our understanding of the world Two of the most basic economic models include: – The Circular Flow Diagram – The Production Possibilities Frontier

7 Our First Model: The Circular-Flow Diagram The _______________-______________ ________________ is a visual model of the economy that shows how dollars flow through markets among households and firms.

8 Figure 1 The Circular Flow Copyright © 2004 South-Western Spending Goods and services bought Revenue Goods and services sold Labor, land, and capital Income = Flow of inputs and outputs = Flow of dollars Factors of production Wages, rent, and profit FIRMS Produce and sell goods and services Hire and use factors of production Buy and consume goods and services Own and sell factors of production HOUSEHOLDS Households sell Firms buy MARKETS FOR FACTORS OF PRODUCTION Firms sell Households buy MARKETS FOR GOODS AND SERVICES

9 Our First Model: The Circular-Flow Diagram _____________ – Produce and sell goods and services – Hire and use factors of production _____________ – Buy and consume goods and services – Own and sell factors of production

10 Our First Model: The Circular-Flow Diagram Markets for Goods and Services – Firms _________ – Households ___________ Markets for Factors of Production – Households _________ – Firms _________

11 Our First Model: The Circular-Flow Diagram Factors of Production – Inputs used to produce goods and services – ________, ______, and _________

12 Our Second Model: The Production Possibilities Frontier The ______________ _______________ ______________ is a graph that shows the combinations of output that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology.

13 Figure 2 The Production Possibilities Frontier Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning Production possibilities frontier A B C Quantity of Cars Produced 2,200 600 0 700 2,000 3,000 1,000 Quantity of Computers Produced

14 Our Second Model: The Production Possibilities Frontier Concepts Illustrated by the Production Possibilities Frontier – ___________ – Tradeoffs – ____________ Cost – Economic Growth

15 Figure 3 A Shift in the Production Possibilities Frontier Copyright © 2004 South-Western E Quantity of Cars Produced 2,000 700 2,100 750 0 4,000 3,000 1,000 Quantity of Computers Produced A

16 Microeconomics and Macroeconomics ___________________ focuses on the individual ____________ of the economy. – How households and firms make decisions and how they interact in specific markets ___________________ looks at the economy as a ____________. – Economy-wide phenomena, including inflation, unemployment, and economic growth

17 THE ECONOMIST AS POLICY ADVISOR When economists are trying to ________ the world, they are scientists. When economists are trying to change the world, they are _____________ __________.

18 POSITIVE VERSUS NORMATIVE ANALYSIS __________statements are statements that attempt to _________ the world as it is. – Called descriptive analysis __________ statements are statements about how the world _______ _____. – Called prescriptive analysis

19 Economists in Washington... serve as advisers in the ______________ process of the three branches of government: – Legislative – Executive – Judicial

20 WHY ECONOMISTS DISAGREE They may disagree about the validity of alternative ___________ theories about how the world works. They may have different _______ and, therefore, different normative views about what policy should try to accomplish.


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