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ECON 2313: Fall Semester, 2008. Economics is the study of how individuals and societies allocate scarce resources among competing alternative ends.

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Presentation on theme: "ECON 2313: Fall Semester, 2008. Economics is the study of how individuals and societies allocate scarce resources among competing alternative ends."— Presentation transcript:

1 ECON 2313: Fall Semester, 2008

2 Economics is the study of how individuals and societies allocate scarce resources among competing alternative ends

3 Available resources are insufficient to satisfy wants. We cannot produce enough goods and services to satisfy everyone—we don’t have the resources!

4 What to produce? Because resources are scarce, growing more corn means growing less wheat, building more SUV’s means building fewer military vehicles, and building more prisons means we have to sacrifice something else— like new schools.

5 Congress made supplemental appropriations for the Iraq effort of $110 billion June 2003 and March 2004. We should ask the question: what could we have for $110 billion?

6 628 Boeing 7E7 Aircraft Construct three (3) 700 mile bullet trains (includes the cost of inner-city land acquisition). 4,075 “high quality” educational facilities to accommodate 1,000 students. Write a $379 check to every U.S. citizen. Fund 1,000 universities the size of Arkansas State for one year.

7 Economics Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary. eco  nom ic 1. archaic: of or relating to a household or its management. eco = oikos, meaning “house” or “household” nom = nemein, meaning “to manage” ic = ic, mean “of” or “relating to” The geneology of economics

8 The production of goods and services is impossible without economic resources or factors of production

9 Land or natural resources

10 Labor or “human resources”

11 Capital or “manmade instruments of production”

12 Human Capital Human capital is the knowledge and skill people obtain from education, on-the- job training, and work experience.

13 Entrepreneurship Entrepreneurship is the willingness and ability to combine land, labor and capital into productive enterprises. Entrepreneurs identify profitable business opportunities and mobilize and coordinate resources to take advantage. Sam Walton, Michael Dell, Martha Stewart, and Bill Gates are examples of highly successful entrepreneurs.

14 Income received by owners of economic resources Rent: Income paid for the use of land. Wages (and salaries): income paid for the services of labor. Interest: income paid for the use of capital. Profit (or loss): Income earned by an entrepreneur for running a business.

15 15 Goods and Services Good: see, feel, touch Service: intangible Scarce good/service – The amount people desire exceeds the amount available at a zero price Choice – Give up some goods and services

16 16 Goods and Bads Bads – We want none of them; not even at a zero price Free goods and services “There is no such thing as a free lunch” – Involve a cost to someone

17 17 Economic Decision Makers Households – Consumers Demand goods and services – Resource owners Supply resources Firms, Governments, Rest of the World – Demand resources – Produce goods and services

18 18 Markets Bring together buyers and sellers Determine price and quantity Product markets – Goods and services Resource markets – Resources

19 19 A Simple Circular-Flow Model Flow of – Resources – Products – Income – Revenue Among economic decision makers Interaction – Households – Firms

20 20 Exhibit 1 The simple circular-flow model for households and firms Households - Supply resources to resource market; earn income - Demand goods and services from product market; spend income Firms - Demand resources to produce goods and services; payment for resources - Supply goods and services to product market; earn revenue

21 Economists assume that economic decision-makers are rational and engage in “maximizing” behavior

22 22 Choice Requires Time and Information Time and information – scarce; valuable Rational decision makers – Willing to pay for information Improve choices – Acquire information: Additional benefit expected exceeds the additional cost

23 23 Economic Analysis Is Marginal Analysis Expected marginal benefit Expected marginal cost Marginal – Incremental, additional, extra Rational decision maker: – Change the status quo if expected marginal benefit exceeds expected marginal cost

24 24 Microeconomics and Macroeconomics Microeconomics – Individual economic choices – Markets coordinate the choices of economic decision makers – Individual pieces of the puzzle Macroeconomics – Performance of the economy as a whole – Big picture

25 Economics deals with questions of “what is” and “what ought to be.” The former set of questions belong to positive economics; the latter to normative economics

26 Positive economics attempts set forth scientific statements --that is, statements subject to verification or falsification For instance: “ If they raise tuition again at ASU, enrollment will decline.” The recent rise in interest rates is likely to depress housing construction. Total employment in the U.S. fell in the year 2002.

27 It’s unfair to ask a person to live on $6.55 an hour.

28 I shouldn’t have the government telling me how much I should pay for fast food cooks or any other type of labor service.

29 Who is right? It is a normative issue.

30 30 The Scientific Method: Step by Step 1. Identify the Question and Define Relevant Variables 2. Specify Assumptions or 3. Formulate a hypothesis 4. Test the hypothesis Reject the hypothesis Use the hypothesis until a better one shows up Modify Approach

31 An economic model is a simplified substitute for economic reality. What is an Economic Model?

32 This map of Arkansas is a good example of a “model”

33 Ceteris Paribus “All other things being equal” or “All other factors held constant.” Simplification in model building is achieved by the ceteris paribus assumption. It allows us to reason about the relationship between two variables without the intrusion of other variables.

34 Association-is-causation fallacy Fallacy of composition Ignoring secondary effects

35 Correlation versus Causation Correlation is the tendency for the values of two variable to move in a predictable and related way. For example, beer consumption tends to rise when unemployment rises—that is, these variables are correlated. Does it follow that beer consumption causes unemployment?

36 Researchers at the Aabo Akademi found that Finns who speak the language of their Nordic neighbors were up to 25 percent less likely to fall ill than those who do not. My rooster died—the sun won’t come up tomorrow. Crimes rates tend to be higher in cities with more police per capita.

37 To commit the fallacy of composition is to suppose that what is true in the individual case also holds true for the group. Example: “The best way to leave a burning theater is to run for the exit.”

38 The imposition of a luxury tax in 1990 (for items priced $100,000 or more was blamed for destroying jobs in the yacht-building industry.


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