Lecture 1 - Introduction To Economics and Economic Systems
Lecture 1 - Introduction To Economics and Economic Systems
Household Society
• The management of society’s resources is important because resources are
scarce.
• Scarcity means that society has limited resources and therefore cannot produce
all the goods and services people wish to have.
• Just as each member of a household cannot get everything she wants, each
individual in a society cannot attain the highest standard of living to which she
might aspire.
ECONOMICS
• Economics is the study of how individuals and societies choose to use the scarce
resources that nature and previous generations have provided.
• The choices that people make, when added up, translate into societal choices.
• Economists study how people make decisions: how much they
work, what they buy, how much they save, and how they invest
their savings.
• The opportunity cost of an item is what you give up to get that item. It is the best
alternative that we forgo when we make a choice or a decision.
• It is also the additional satisfaction or utility that a consumer receives when the
additional good or service is purchased.
• A rational decision maker takes an action if and only if the marginal benefit of the
action exceeds the marginal cost.
Principle 4: People Respond to
Incentives
• Incentive is something (such as the prospect of a punishment or reward) that induces a
person to act.
• Because rational people make decisions by comparing costs and benefits, they respond to
incentives.
• Incentives are key to analyzing how markets work. A higher price in a market provides an
incentive for buyers to consume less and an incentive for sellers to produce more.
• The influence of prices on the behavior of consumers and producers is crucial to how a
market economy allocates scarce resources.
Principle 5: Trade Can Make Everyone
Better Off
• Trade allows each person to specialize in the activities she does best, whether it is
farming, sewing, or home building.
• By trading with others, people can buy a greater variety of goods and services at
lower cost.
Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
Way to Organize Economic Activity
• Market economy - an economy that allocates resources through the decentralized decisions
of many firms and households as they interact in markets for goods and services.
• In a market economy, no one is looking out for the economic well-being of society as a whole.
• Free markets contain many buyers and sellers of numerous goods and services, and all of
them are interested primarily in their own well-being.
• Yet despite decentralized decision making and self-interested decision makers, market
economies have proven remarkably successful in organizing economic activity to promote
overall economic well-being.
Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
Way to Organize Economic Activity
• In his 1776 book An Inquiry into the Nature and
Causes of the Wealth of Nations, economist Adam
Smith made the most famous observation in all of
economics:
Households and firms interacting in markets act
as if they are guided by an “invisible hand” that leads
them to desirable market outcomes.
Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
Way to Organize Economic Activity
• Prices are the instrument with which the invisible hand directs economic activity.
• In any market, buyers look at the price when determining how much to demand, and
sellers look at the price when deciding how much to supply.
• As a result of the decisions that buyers and sellers make, market prices reflect both
the value of a good to society and the cost to society of making the good.
• Smith’s great insight: prices adjust to guide these individual buyers and sellers to
reach outcomes that, in many cases, maximize the well-being of society as a whole.
Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
Way to Organize Economic Activity
• When a government prevents prices from adjusting naturally to supply and
demand, it impedes the invisible hand’s ability to coordinate the decisions of the
households and firms that make up an economy.
• This corollary explains why taxes adversely affect the allocation of resources:
They distort prices and thus the decisions of households and firms. It also explains
the great harm caused by policies that directly control prices, such as rent control.
Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
Way to Organize Economic Activity
• In communist countries, prices were not determined in the
marketplace but were dictated by central planners.
• Property right is the ability of an individual to own and exercise control over
scarce resources.
• There are two broad rationales for a government to intervene in the economy and
change the allocation of resources that people would choose on their own: to
promote efficiency or to promote equality. That is, most policies aim either to
enlarge the economic pie or to change how the pie is divided.
Principle 7: Governments Can Sometimes
Improve Market Outcomes
• Market failure refers to a situation in which the market on its own fails to
produce an efficient allocation of resources.
• Possible Causes of Market Failure:
1. Externality - the impact of one person’s actions on the well-being of
a bystander.
EFFICIENCY • Example: Pollution. When the production of a good pollutes the air
and creates health problems for those who live near the factories,
the market left to its own devices may fail to take this cost into
account.
Principle 7: Governments Can Sometimes
Improve Market Outcomes
• Possible Causes of Market Failure:
2. Market power - refers to the ability of a single person or firm (or a
small group) to unduly influence market prices.
• Example: If everyone in town needs water but there is only one
well, the owner of the well is not subject to the rigorous competition
EFFICIENCY with which the invisible hand normally keeps self-interest in check;
she may take advantage of this opportunity by restricting the output
of water so she can charge a higher price.
Principle 7: Governments Can Sometimes
Improve Market Outcomes
• Market economy rewards people according to their ability to
produce things that other people are willing to pay for.
• As you study economics, you will become a better judge of when a government
policy is justifiable because it promotes efficiency or equality and when it is not.
Principle 8: A Country’s Standard of Living
Depends on Its Ability to Produce Goods and
Services
• Almost all variation in living standards is attributable to differences in countries’
productivity.
• Productivity - the amount of goods and services produced by each unit of labor input.
• In nations where workers can produce a large quantity of goods and services per hour,
most people enjoy a high standard of living; in nations where workers are less productive,
most people endure a more meager existence.
• The growth rate of a nation’s productivity determines the growth rate of its average
income.
Principle 8: A Country’s Standard of Living
Depends on Its Ability to Produce Goods and
Services
• The relationship between productivity and living standards also has profound
implications for public policy.
• When thinking about how any policy will affect living standards, the key question is
how it will affect our ability to produce goods and services.
• Because high inflation imposes various costs on society, keeping inflation at a low
level is a goal of economic policymakers around the world.
Principle 10: Society Faces a Short-Run Trade-
off between Inflation and Unemployment
• Although a higher level of prices is, in the long run, the primary effect of increasing
the quantity of money, the short-run story is more complex and controversial.
Increasing the amount of money in the economy stimulates the overall level of
spending and thus the demand for goods and services.
Principle 10: Society Faces a Short-Run Trade-
off between Inflation and Unemployment
• Although a higher level of prices is, in the long run, the primary effect of increasing
the quantity of money, the short-run story is more complex and controversial.
Higher demand may over time cause firms to raise their prices, but in the
meantime, it also encourages them to hire more workers and produce a larger
quantity of goods and services.
It deals with the functioning of individual markets and industries and with the
behavior of individual decision-making units: business firms and households.
FIELD OF ECONOMICS
• Macroeconomics
• It is the study of economy-wide phenomena including inflation, unemployment,
and economic growth.