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Chapter 1 Economics and the Economy

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1 Chapter 1 Economics and the Economy
©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

2 The subject area of economics
Every group of people must solve three basic problems of daily living: what goods and services to produce how to produce them for whom to produce them ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

3 An example: Oil price fluctuations
The price of oil tripled in , and doubled again in It rose sharply again in 2008. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

4 ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010
Higher oil prices make the economy produce in a way that uses less oil reduce the demand for oil-related commodities encouraging consumers to purchase substitute commodities make the world economy produce more for OPEC and less for the big oil importers (e.g., Germany and Japan) ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

5 The Distribution of World Population and Income
©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

6 The law of diminishing returns
Each extra worker adds less to output than the previous extra worker added. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

7 The production possibility frontier (1)
This tells us the maximum amount the economy can produce using all available resources. A is impossible. B inefficient. Film output A Food output 14 Production possibility frontier B See Section 1-2 in the main text, and Figure 1-2. 7

8 The opportunity cost  Food output (F) Production possibility frontier
The opportunity cost of a good is the quantity of other goods that must be sacrificed. Begin from point A with 14 units of food and 6 films. Moving from A to B, we gain 8 films but lose 4 units of food. Thus, 4 units of food is the opportunity cost of producing an additional 8 films. F/G = opportunity cost (=1/2) Film output (G) F= 4 G = 8 B A Food output (F) Production possibility frontier 10 14 6 See Section 1-2 in the main text, and Figure 1-2. 8

9 Comparative advantage
An individual has a comparative advantage compared to another in the production of a good if he/she has a lower opportunity cost in producing it. This is different to absolute advantage. An individual has an absolute advantage in producing a good if he/she is more efficient at producing that good compared to someone else. In determining possible benefits from trade it is the concept of comparative advantage that matters not the absolute one. Comparative advantage also applies to countries. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

10 Markets are central to economics
They are the process by which … households’ decisions about consumption of alternative goods firms’ decisions about what and how to produce and workers’ decisions about how much and for whom to work … are all reconciled by the adjustment of prices ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

11 ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010
The command economy Is an alternative to the market economy A government planning office decides: what will be produced, how it will be produced, for whom it will be produced. Detailed instructions are then issued to households, firms and workers. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

12 ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010
The invisible hand The command economy has tended not to perform well. In contrast, Adam Smith in the Wealth of Nations (1776) argued that individuals pursuing their self-interest would be led ‘as by an invisible hand’ to do things that are in the interests of society as a whole. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

13 ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010
A mixed economy In a mixed economy the government and private sector jointly solve economic problems. The government influences decisions through taxation, subsidies, and provision of free services such as defence and the police. It also regulates the extent to which individuals may pursue their own self-interest. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

14 Market orientation China Sweden USA Hungary UK Cuba Command economy
Free market See Section 1-3 in the main text, and Figure 1-3. 14

15 Positive and normative
Positive economics studies objective or scientific explanations of how the economy works. Normative economics offers recommendations based on personal value judgments. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

16 ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010
Microeconomics Microeconomics offers a detailed treatment of individual decisions about particular commodities ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010

17 ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010
Macroeconomics Macroeconomics emphasizes interactions in the economy as a whole. It deliberately simplifies the individual building blocks of the analysis in order to retain a manageable analysis of the complete interaction of the economy. ©McGraw-Hill Companies, 2010


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