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Economics Syllabus

The document provides a comprehensive overview of economics, covering its definition, branches (microeconomics and macroeconomics), and key concepts such as scarcity, opportunity cost, and economic agents. It also discusses production, resource allocation, market structures, market failure, the financial sector, economic management, and international trade. Each section outlines fundamental principles, types of economic systems, and the roles of various economic entities.

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yusufwilliams070
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views

Economics Syllabus

The document provides a comprehensive overview of economics, covering its definition, branches (microeconomics and macroeconomics), and key concepts such as scarcity, opportunity cost, and economic agents. It also discusses production, resource allocation, market structures, market failure, the financial sector, economic management, and international trade. Each section outlines fundamental principles, types of economic systems, and the roles of various economic entities.

Uploaded by

yusufwilliams070
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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SECTION 1: THE NATURE OF ECONOMICS

1. What is Economics? Economics is a social science that studies how


individuals, firms, and societies use scarce resources to satisfy unlimited
wants. It involves making choices due to the scarcity of resources.

2. Branches of Economics

 Microeconomics: Focuses on individual units like consumers, workers,


and businesses. It studies decisions and interactions in markets.

 Macroeconomics: Looks at the economy as a whole, examining


indicators like GDP, unemployment, and inflation.

3. What is an Economy? An economy is a system or mechanism through


which a society organizes the production, distribution, and consumption of
goods and services to satisfy needs and wants.

4. Main Economic Agents

 Households: Consume goods and provide factors of production (like


labor).

 Firms: Produce goods and services.

 Government: Regulates, taxes, and provides public goods and


services.

5. Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity Cost

 Scarcity: Limited resources versus unlimited wants.

 Choice: Because of scarcity, choices must be made.

 Opportunity Cost: The next best alternative foregone when a choice


is made.

6. Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) A curve that shows maximum


possible output combinations of two goods/services an economy can achieve
when all resources are fully used. It demonstrates efficiency, trade-offs, and
opportunity cost.

7. Factors Affecting Decisions of Economic Agents

 Prices

 Income

 Tastes and preferences


 Government policies

 Expectations about the future

SECTION 2: PRODUCTION, ECONOMIC RESOURCES, AND RESOURCE


ALLOCATION

1. Production vs. Productivity

 Production: The process of creating goods and services.

 Productivity: The efficiency of production; output per unit of input.

2. Factors of Production

 Land: Natural resources; reward is rent.

 Labour: Human effort; reward is wages.

 Capital: Man-made tools and machinery; reward is interest.

 Entrepreneurship: Risk-taking and coordination; reward is profit.

3. Economic Sectors

 Primary: Extracts raw materials (e.g., farming).

 Secondary: Manufacturing and industry.

 Tertiary: Services (e.g., retail, healthcare).

4. Short-run vs. Long-run

 Short-run: At least one factor of production is fixed.

 Long-run: All factors are variable.

5. Types of Production Costs

 Fixed Costs: Do not vary with output.

 Variable Costs: Change with output.

 Total Cost = Fixed + Variable

 Average Cost = Total / Quantity

 Marginal Cost: Cost of one more unit.

6. Cost Curves U-shaped curves that show how average and marginal costs
change with output.
7. Goods vs. Services

 Goods: Tangible (e.g., food, clothing).

 Services: Intangible (e.g., education, transport).

8. Resource Allocation The decision on what goods to produce, how to


produce them, and for whom.

9. Economic Systems

 Traditional: Based on customs.

 Command: Government controls resources.

 Free-market: Private individuals make decisions.

 Mixed: Combines public and private sectors.

10. Pros and Cons of Economic Systems

 Efficiency, freedom, equality, government intervention differ in each


system.

11. How Firms Operate Under Market Structures Firms aim to


maximize profit. Their behavior depends on the market structure they
operate in (perfect competition, monopoly, etc.).

12. Economies vs. Diseconomies of Scale

 Economies of Scale: Cost per unit falls as output increases.

 Diseconomies of Scale: Cost per unit rises after a point due to


inefficiencies.
SECTION 3: DEMAND AND SUPPLY

1. What is a Market? A market is any structure that allows buyers and


sellers to exchange goods and services.

2. Market Forces

 Demand: Quantity buyers are willing to buy at various prices.

 Supply: Quantity sellers are willing to offer at various prices.

3. Demand and Supply Relationship

 Law of Demand: As price increases, demand decreases.

 Law of Supply: As price increases, supply increases.

4. Ceteris Paribus Means "all other things being equal" – used when
analyzing the effect of one variable.

5. Market Equilibrium Occurs where demand = supply. Disequilibrium


causes surplus or shortage.

6. Graphical Representation Equilibrium is shown where demand and


supply curves intersect.

7. Non-Price Determinants

 Demand: Income, tastes, population.

 Supply: Cost of production, technology, number of firms.

8. Impact on Equilibrium Shifts in demand/supply curves cause new


equilibrium price and quantity.

9. Elasticities

 Price Elasticity of Demand (PED): Sensitivity to price changes.

 Income Elasticity of Demand (YED): Response to income changes.

 Cross-price Elasticity of Demand (XED): Reaction to price change


of other goods.

10. Calculating Elasticities % change in quantity demanded / % change in


price (or income, or other price).
11. Interpreting Elasticities

 1: Elastic

 <1: Inelastic

 =1: Unitary

12. Factors Affecting Elasticity

 Availability of substitutes

 Necessity vs. luxury

 Time

 Portion of income spent on the good

13. Price Elasticity of Supply (PES) Shows how much quantity supplied
changes with price.

14. Calculating PES % change in quantity supplied / % change in price.

15. Interpreting PES Same as demand: >1 elastic, <1 inelastic.

16. Factors Affecting PES Time, availability of resources, ease of storage.

SECTION 4: MARKET STRUCTURE AND MARKET FAILURE

1. What is Market Structure? The characteristics of a market, including


number of firms, product type, and ease of entry.

2. Types of Market Structures


 Perfect Competition: Many firms, identical products.

 Monopoly: One firm, high control over price.

 Oligopoly: Few firms, may collude.

 Monopolistic Competition: Many firms, differentiated products.

3. Market Structure Graphs Show price, cost, and output behavior of firms
under different structures.

4. Interpretation of Graphs Helps determine output levels, pricing, and


profit/loss areas.

5. What is Market Failure? Occurs when resources are not allocated


efficiently.

6. Causes of Market Failure

 Monopoly power

 Externalities (pollution, education)

 Public goods (national defense)

7. Consequences of Market Failure

 Unemployment

 Inefficiency

 Poverty

 Misallocation of resources

SECTION 5: THE FINANCIAL SECTOR

1. What is the Financial Sector? A system of institutions and markets that


facilitate financial transactions.
2. Role of Financial Sector

 Mobilizes savings

 Provides credit

 Facilitates investment

3. What is Money? A generally accepted medium of exchange. Functions:

 Medium of exchange

 Store of value

 Unit of account

 Standard of deferred payments

4. Demand for Money & Money Supply

 Demand: Transactions, precaution, speculation.

 Supply: Total amount of money (cash and bank deposits).

5. Role of Central Bank

 Controls money supply

 Manages interest rates

 Regulates financial institutions

6. Other Financial Institutions

 Commercial banks

 Credit unions

 Insurance companies

 Stock exchanges

 Informal systems (sou-sou, box)

7. Financial Instruments

 Shares, bonds, treasury bills, certificates of deposit, etc.

SECTION 6: ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT: POLICIES AND GOALS

1. Government’s Role in Economy

 Stabilize prices
 Encourage employment

 Promote economic growth

 Use fiscal and monetary policy

2. Key Economic Concepts

 GDP, GNP, national income

 Fiscal/monetary policy

 Inflation, deflation

 Employment, savings, investment

3. Measures to Correct Problems

 Use of government spending, taxation, interest rates, and borrowing.

4. Circular Flow of Income Shows the movement of money, goods, and


services between households, firms, and government.

5. GDP, GNP, and National Income

 GDP: Value of goods/services produced within a country.

 GNP: GDP + net income from abroad.

 NI: Total income earned by a country's residents.

6. Calculating Economic Indicators Use formulas and data to compute


GDP, GNP, and NI.

7. Nominal vs. Real vs. Potential Output

 Nominal: Measured in current prices.

 Real: Adjusted for inflation.

 Potential: Maximum sustainable output.

8. Growth vs. Development

 Growth: Increase in GDP.

 Development: Improvement in living standards and quality of life.

9. Inflation and Recession

 Inflation: Rise in general prices.


 Recession: Fall in economic activity.

10. Causes and Solutions

 Inflation: Demand-pull, cost-push → solved by reducing demand or


controlling costs.

 Recession: Low demand → solved by increasing government spending


or cutting taxes.

11. Types of Unemployment

 Structural: Skills mismatch

 Frictional: Between jobs

 Seasonal: Based on seasons

 Cyclical: Economic downturns

 Real-wage: Wages too high

12. Trade Unions Organizations that represent workers, negotiate wages,


and improve working conditions.

SECTION 7: INTERNATIONAL TRADE

1. Key Trade Concepts

 Balance of trade, capital account, tariffs, quotas, exchange rates, WTO,


etc.

2. Why Trade? Countries trade to benefit from specialization, efficiency, and


access to goods they cannot produce efficiently.

3. Balance of Payments Records all economic transactions between a


country and the rest of the world. Includes current, capital, and financial
accounts.

4. Calculating Surplus/Deficit Compare total receipts with total payments.

5. Interpreting Results

 Surplus: More money in

 Deficit: More money out

6. Consequences and Remedies

 Deficit → leads to debt, currency issues


 Remedies → devaluation, import controls

7. Exchange Rates

 Fixed: Set by government

 Floating: Set by market

 Managed: Government intervenes

 Affects import/export prices and competitiveness

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