B.d Scarcity and Choice
B.d Scarcity and Choice
By --
Jeffanie M. Omolon-Calamba, LPT
Faculty, CFES
Bohol Island State University- Bilar Campus
Why Economy exists?
An economy exists because of two basic facts:
1. Human wants for goods and services are unlimited.
2. Productive resources with which to produce goods
and services are scarce.
🠶 WHAT to Produce?
🠶 HOW to Produce?
🠶 FOR WHOM to Produce?
The Economic Problem
(Wants and Scarce Means)
“You must cut your coat according to your cloth.”
“You can’t make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear.”
These everyday sayings draw attention to the fact that, in
comparison with all the things we want, our means of satisfying
those wants are quite inadequate!
If a person’s income would be larger, he would probably think of
buying extra things whose list has no end. For, even if these wants
were satisfied, new wants would arise.
The Economic Problem…
‣ unlimited wants
‣ very limited means
🠶 And we can never completely overcome the difficulty.
But what we can do is to make the most of what we have.
In other words, we economize.
The Economic Problem…
Examples : Understanding Economizing
• The spending decisions of a housewife.
‣ ‘Economics’ is derived from a Greek word meaning ‘the
management of a household’. A housewife seeks to obtain the
maximum satisfaction for the family from limited resources.
• How the school-girl schemes to get the most out of his pocket-
money.
• The businessman faces the same problem in running his factory.
‣ Should he produce this good or that, or some of both?
‣ How many of each good?
‣ Should he employ extra labourers or would it be better to install a
machine to do the work?
‣ Would it be more profitable to hire transport or to buy his own
lorry? And so on.
The Economic Problem-Wants
(Opportunity Cost)
UNSATISFIED
WANTS
WANTS WHICH
CAN BE
SATISFIED
FROM
FREE SCARCE
GOODS RESOURCES
Free and Scarce Goods
• Few goods are so plentiful that nobody will give anything for
them. Such goods are free goods.
• Usually goods are scarce – they can be obtained only by going
without something else.
• With such goods we have to economize, and so they are often
referred to as ‘economic goods’.
• However, there is no hard-and-fast dividing line between
economic and non-economic goods.
• Scarcity is relative to demand.
Free and scarce…
We see that economics is really concerned with the problem of
choice-the decisions forced upon us by the smallness of our
resources compared with our wants. And as we choose, so we
have to sacrifice.
If a newspaper boy spends his Christmas tips on a bicycle, then it
is likely that he will have to go without the air rifle that he also
wanted.
In deciding to work over time on a Saturday afternoon, a worker
forgoes leisure time.
When the farmer sows a field with wheat, he accepts that he loses
the barley it could have grown.
Free and scarce…
🠶 Similar is the case with the nation. If extra materials and
capital are required to accelerate the building of houses,
roads and hospitals, then there will be less left for
producing offices, power stations, sport center and so on.
We therefore speak of Opportunity Cost – the cost of
something in terms of alternatives forgone.
🠶 In practice economizing is not so much a complete
rejection of one good in favor of another, but rather
deciding whether to have a little bit more of one and quite
so much of another.
Scarcity and decision makers
Scarcity
Choices
Values or Benefits
Trade-offs
Opportunity Costs
Productive
choice
Allocative Distributive
choices choice
Productive
decision
THANKYOU