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Revision Sheets - Unit 1

1. Economics is the study of how scarce resources are allocated to satisfy unlimited human wants. It focuses on factors of production like land, labor, capital and enterprise and how these are combined efficiently. Economics can be studied from a micro or macro level. Micro looks at individual agents while macro looks at the overall economy. There is a concept of opportunity cost which measures the cost of a decision in terms of the best alternative forgone. Scarcity means resources are finite relative to unlimited wants. Positive economics aims to objectively describe economic systems, while normative economics expresses value judgments about what is desirable.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
32 views

Revision Sheets - Unit 1

1. Economics is the study of how scarce resources are allocated to satisfy unlimited human wants. It focuses on factors of production like land, labor, capital and enterprise and how these are combined efficiently. Economics can be studied from a micro or macro level. Micro looks at individual agents while macro looks at the overall economy. There is a concept of opportunity cost which measures the cost of a decision in terms of the best alternative forgone. Scarcity means resources are finite relative to unlimited wants. Positive economics aims to objectively describe economic systems, while normative economics expresses value judgments about what is desirable.

Uploaded by

Suzanne
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1.1. What is economics?

© Suzanne Drouet

The problem of choice & resource allocation


q Economics q Factors of production q Opportunity cost
Land Labour = Costs of an economic decision measured in
OIKO + NOMOS = natural capital = human capital
home rule, law terms of the best alternative choice forgone
= nat. resources used in = human res. required in
= the management of a household the prod. process the prod. process
= there is no free lunch
Ex. water, oil, coal Ex. physical & intel.
⟶ a social science rent wages / salaries
↳ the study of people in society and how they q Free goods
interact w/ each other Enterprise Capital
↳ the study of how resources are allocated to = skills, creativity & = physical capital = Products w/ a natural abundance of supply
risk-taking abiliy to manage = manufactured prod. ⟶ unlimited supply & no demand
satisfy the unlimited needs & wants of individual, the other FOP ex. machinery, tools, infra.
gov. and firms in an economy ⟶ opportunity cost = 0
profit interest

q Micro. vs macroeconomics q Scarcity The basic economic questions


→ Both focus on the allocation of scarce resources
in an efficient way = Refers to the finite resources of an economy What / How much
relative to the unlimited needs and wants of How to produce?
MICRO: concerned w/ the behaviour of individuals individuals For whom
and firms in distinct mkts.
⟹ needs: essential G/S → Gov. intervention
⟹ wants: human desires, not necessary
MACRO: operation of the economy as a whole Economic system
⟹ goods ⟺ services
↳ often more controversial than mico
= tangible = intangible FREE MARKET MIXED PLANNED
Ex. causes of business fluctuations, LR eco. growth,
= produced = provided = Minimal Combination of (socialist /
unemployment, inflation, income / wealth dist. intervention both systems communist)
products OR economic goods = Market = Gov. allocates
mechanism scarce
intervention in case
Ø Link to sustainability: renewable resources resources
of mkt failure
(can regenerate / replenish)
Ø Scarcity is relative
1.1. What is economics? © Suzanne Drouet
q The productive possibility curve (PPC) q Features
⟶ Slopes downward from left to right
E = the diagrammatic representation of the = more from Good A ⟶ less from Good B
A maximum combination of 2 products that an ⟶ Concave to the origin
C economy can produce = there is an increasing cost of oppty
= the productive capacity of the economy

D To be on the curve, two conditions: q Assumptions


⟶ Full employment: all FOP are utilised ≫ Fixed production possibilites
B ⟶ Efficiency: all resources are put to their best ≫ Scarcity of resources
use, no wastage

Why it is concave? q What the PPC illustrates


Constant cost of
Increasing cost of oppty ⟶ Opportunity cost
A opportunity
= gradient of the tangent ⟶ Scarcity
= perfect indifference
B = marginal rate of ⟶ Choice
transformation ⟶ Level of employment of resources
⟶ Efficiency
C ⟶ Actual growth vs. growth in prod. possibilities
outward / moving towards the PPC
inward shift

q The economic methodology q Positive economics q Normative economics


= objective econ. analysis = Opinions, beliefs and statements of “what
= processes, practices & principles of economics = the study of economics that is provable should be”
= includes the models, theories & assumptions ∟ factual statements (“what is”) = Express a value judgement about what is
underlying the discipline ∟ relies on reasoning, logic, empirical evidence desirable for the economy.
= concerned with ∟ uses hypotheses (educated guesses) Value judgement: beliefs about what is right or
how economy functions ∟ relies on models (repeatedly tested) wrong, influenced by morals/ethics/cult. values.
how it could function ∟ formulates theories (generalisations to
⟹ Each society has to choose between
how it should function explain situations)
equity & equality
∟ uses the ceteris paribus assumption (all fairness in the dist. regards everyone
other things being equal) of resources as being equal
q Classical economics q Communism ⟹ News systems needed
= Competition, free int’l trade “The history of all hitherto societies is the
= The mkt self-regulates to allocate resources history of class struggles.” q Behavioural economics
efficiently. = Conflict between workers / property owners Critique of classical economics: the rational
leading to workers overthrowing bosses consumer does not exist.
Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (1776) & creating a classless & egalitarian system
millions of choices ⟺ neither intelligent
⟶ laissez-faire approach
& decisions nor logical
⟶ no gov. intervention
Karl Marx, Das Kapital (1867)
⟶ the invisible hand
= against private K, alienates exploited workers
Richard Thaler (Nobel 2017), Nudge (2008)
= metaphor describing how people acting in their ⟶ understand how actual cons. make decisions
= unequal dist. of power: owners accumulate K,
self-int. end up serving the common good ⟶ to help cons. make better choices & help gov.
profits only for capitalists
= equilibrium is naturally reached design policies that encourage better choices
= capitalism ignores the needs of the masses
⟶ Nudge: influence cons.
≫ David Riccardo: theory of comparative advantage Communism to make choices voluntarily
≫ J.B. Say: supply creates its own demand = coll. ownership of means of prod. that are better for them
≫ Alfred Marshall: utility theory = collective planning
BUT: did not achieve econ. efficiency BUT: individual rights? How does the gov. know?

q Keynesianism q Neoliberalism q Circular economy


John Maynard Keynes, Friedrich Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (1944) Critique of the linear econ.: Take, make, waste
A general theory of money, ⟶ gov. control of the economy = totalitarianism = overexploitation & degradation of natural res.
interest & employment (1936) ⟶ gov. never produced the results expected
⟶ demand-side theory: demand (not supply) ⟶ cause of mkt inefficiencies: money supply Circular economy
determines the overall level of nat. income ⟶ prosperity is driven by creativity, ⟶ long-lasting production
⟶ prices & wages take time to adjust entrepreneurship & innovation ⟶ materials come from reusing
⟶ advocated for denationalising or recycling old products
⟹ in time of recessions: gov. should correct mkt money (cryptomoney) ⟶ maintenance > manufacture
inefficiencies by using fiscal & monetary policies to ⟶ ownership stays w/ producer
spur growth & unemployment Monetarism (Milton Friedman, Chicago School)
= gov. as stabiliser of the economy, manages the
Kate Raworth, The doughnut economy (2017)
= money supply is the main determinant of national ⟶ Issue: narrow view of econ. growth
level of total demand input = inequalities, destruction of the living
⟶ For the privatization of many functions that had ⟶ Goal: meet the human rights of every person
Critique of classical economics: free market leads been assumed by the gov. = deregulation within the means of the planet
to underproduction / consumption of certain G/S

© Suzanne Drouet 1.2. How do economists approach the world?


2.1. Demand HL Income
Higher real income (RI) = ability
Number of Substitutes
= Products that are in
consumers
© Suzanne Drouet to buy more products
NORMAL GOODS: Products with
More consumers = more
competitive demand because
they can be used in place of each
demand
higher demand when RI increa- other
DEMAND: Quantity of a good / service that = higher prices
ses (necessities + luxuries)
customers are both willing and able to buy at a Ex. Housing market
INFERIOR GOODS: Demand for
given price, per period of time. these fall when RI increases + weather
(negative income elasticity) + demographics

LAW OF DEMAND: The quantity demand for a good


/ service falls as its price rises, ceteris paribus. Non-price determinants of demand
MARKET: A place where transactions take place Expectations of Complements Tastes &
between buyers & sellers. = Products that are jointly
future prices demanded
preferences
When inflation: better to buy --> Linked to fashion
now --> Information / health
UTILITY: Level of consumer satisfaction from the
--> Brands loyalty
consumption of a product.

Assumptions underlying the law of Movements along the demand Shift of the demand curve
demand: curve = caused by a change in any non-px factor
INCOME EFFECT: as the price of a product falls, the = caused by px changes only that affects demand
real income of consumers increases. Price Price
Lower price = More products ($) ($)

SUBSTITUTION EFFECT: as the price of a product Contraction


falls, more customers are able to buy it. P2 (Decrease in Q D) Decrease in D
Agents substitute high price products with lower Expansion
(shift to the left)
P1 P1
price products. (Increase in Q D) Increase in D

(shift to the right)


P3
LAW OF DIMINISHING MARGINAL UTILITY (DMU):
as agents consume more of a good, the marginal Quantity Quantity
utility declines. Q2 Q1 Q3 (units) Q2 Q1 Q3 (units)

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