Company Name - University of Wisconsin–La Crosse
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ECO 120 - Global
Macroeconomics
TAGGERT J. BROOKS
Module 01
THE STUDY OF ECONOMICS
What is Economics?
Economics is the study of the allocation of scarce resources in an
attempt to satisfy unlimited wants
More generally it is the study of human decision making particularly
as it relates to markets.
A set of tools used for analysis, and a way of thinking.
What is Economics?
Incentives matter.
The law of unintended consequences.
Individual Choice:
The Core of Economics
Individual choice is the decision by an individual of
what to do, which necessarily involves a decision of
what not to do.
Individual Choice:
The Core of Economics
Basic principles behind the individual choices
include:
1.
Resources are scarce.
2.
The real cost of something is what you must give up to get it.
3.
“How much?” is a decision at the margin.
4.
People usually take advantage of opportunities to make themselves
better off.
Scarcity, Choice,
and Opportunity Cost
Human wants are unlimited, but resources are not.
Three basic questions must be answered in order to understand an
economic system:
What gets produced?
How is it produced?
Who gets what is produced?
Scarcity (The Fundamental Problem)
Economic Good (or service) is scarce if there is not enough to satisfy
all wants at a zero price (free). This is often called a good for short.
Free Good there is enough to satisfy all wants at a zero price.
Examples…none?
Economic Bad is something you would pay to have less of.
Resources Are Scarce
A resource is anything that can be used to produce
something else.
Ex.: Land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship
Resources are scarce – the quantity available isn’t
large enough to satisfy all productive uses.
Ex.: Petroleum, lumber, intelligence
Resources
Land
Labor
The physical and mental effort of humans
Capital
Land used in the production of goods and services
Buildings and equipment
Entrepreneurial Ability
Managerial, organizational, and risk-taking skills
Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity
Cost
Production is the process that transforms scarce resources into useful
goods and services.
Resources or factors of production are the inputs into the process of
production; goods and services of value to households are the
outputs of the process of production.
Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity
Cost
Capital refers to the things that are themselves
produced and then used to produce other goods and
services.
The basic resources that are available to a society are
factors of production:
Land
Labor
Capital
Entrepreneurial
ability
Payment for Resources
Rent (for land)
Wages (for labor)
Interest (for capital)
Profit (for entrepreneurial ability)
Markets
A market is a set of arrangements through which buyers and
sellers carry out exchange at mutually agreeable terms
Product Market
A market in which goods and services are exchanged
Resource Market
A market in which resources are exchanged
Economic Actors
Households
Firms
Government
Rest of the World
Opportunity Cost:
The real cost of an item is its opportunity cost: what
you must give up in order to get it.
Opportunity cost is crucial to understanding
individual choice.
Opportunity Cost
Opportunity cost is the best alternative that we forgo,
or give up, when we make a choice or a decision.
All decisions involve trade-offs.
No “Free Lunch”
Opportunity Cost
You won a free ticket to see an Eric Clapton concert (which has
no resale value). Bob Dylan is performing on the same night and
is your next-best alternative activity. Tickets to see Dylan cost $40.
On any given day, you would be willing to pay up to $50 to see
Dylan. Assume there are no other costs of seeing either
performer. Based on this information, what is the opportunity cost
of seeing Eric Clapton?
(a) $0, (b) $10, (c) $40, or (d) $50.
Another Example of Opportunity Cost in
Practice
Recently the TSA has decided to allow small scissors, knifes, etc.
Why?
Marginalism
In weighing the costs and benefits of a decision, it is important to
weigh only the costs and benefits that arise from the decision.
Marginalism
For example, when a firm decides whether to produce
additional output, it considers (should consider) only
the additional (or marginal cost), not the sunk cost.
Sunk costs are costs that cannot be avoided, regardless of what is done
in the future, because they have already been incurred.
Macroeconomics
vs. Microeconomics
Microeconomics focuses on how decisions are
made by individuals and firms and the
consequences of those decisions.
Macroeconomics
vs. Microeconomics
Macroeconomics examines the aggregate behavior
of the economy.
Macroeconomics examines how the actions of all
the individuals and firms in the economy interact to
produce a particular level of economic
performance as a whole.
In macroeconomics, the behavior of the whole macroeconomy is,
indeed, greater than the sum of individual actions and market
outcomes.
Some Sub-Fields within Economics
Micro
Macro
International Trade
International Finance
Industrial Organization
Money and Banking
Labor Economics
Economic Development
Health Economics
Growth Theory
Some Non-standard Economic
Research
Economists have done research into areas not normally
considered economics, by asking questions such as
Why are Americans so obese?
What is more dangerous a gun or a pool?
Why did crime rates fall in the 1990s?
What is the relationship between Religion and Economic
Growth?
Some Non Traditional Economic
Research
Economists have done research into areas not normally
considered economics, by asking questions such as
Matching models
Looking at how employers and employees find matches.
Husband and wives
Speed Dating.
Sexual Partners
Positive Versus Normative
Economic Analysis
A positive economic statement can be proved or
disproved by reference to facts
”The unemployment rate is 4.1%"
A normative economic statement represents a value
judgment, which cannot be proved or disproved
"The government should pay down the debt"
Identify these statements as normative or
positive economic statements
Sales Taxes are inefficient and should be eliminated.
Social security will run out of money in 2042.
Poverty inhibits economic growth.
The Unemployment Rate is 4.5%
When and Why
Economists Disagree
There are two main reasons economists disagree:
•
Which simplifications to make in a model
•
Values