Lecture 1. What is Economics?
Download
Report
Transcript Lecture 1. What is Economics?
Lecture 1. What is Economics?
• Economics, Scarcity and Choices
• Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
• Positive Economics and Normative
Economics
• Why study Economics
• The method of Economics
Economics, Scarcity, and
Choice
• A good definition of economics
– Study of choice under conditions of
scarcity
• Scarcity
– Situation in which the amount of
something available is insufficient to
satisfy the desire for it (Human beings
have unlimited wants and needs in
general)
Scarcity and Individual Choice
• Two basic limitations for individuals
– Scarce time
– Scarce spending power
• Limitations force each of us to make choices
• The scarcity of resources—and the choices it
forces us to make—is the source of all of the
problems studied in economics
• Examples: Dating & Getting A in this class
Microeconomics
• Study of behavior of individual households,
firms, and governments
• Choices they make
• Interaction in specific markets
• Focuses on individual parts of an economy,
rather than the whole
• Examples:
How many management trainee jobs will open up for college
graduates?
How would U.S. phone companies be affected by a tax on imported
cell phones?
Macroeconomics
• Study of the economy as a whole
• Focuses on big picture and ignores fine
details
• Examples:
Instead of focusing on the production of carrots, it looks at GDP.
Instead of focusing on the employment of management trainees, it
considers total employment (or unemployment rate) in the economy.
Instead of asking why credit card loans carry high interest rate than
home mortgage loans, it asks what makes interest rates in general
rise or fall.
Why Economists Disagree
• Two economists asked whether the States should
eliminate all government-imposed barriers to trading with
the rest of the world. The first economist says, ‘Yes.’ but
the other says, ‘No’.
– The two economists may disagree about what will happen if
trade barriers were eliminated. In this case, the disagreement is
positive.
– Both economists might agree that opening up international trade
would benefit most Americans, but harm some of them.
• The first economist might put more emphasis on benefits to the
overall economy
• The second economist might put more emphasis on preventing
harm to a particular group.
In this case, the disagreement is normative.
Positive Economics
• Study of how economy works
• Accuracy of positive statements can be
tested and quantified.
• Examples: An decrease in the personal
income tax will increase the growth rate of
the economy.
Normative Economics
• Use Value Judgment to study what should
be
• Normative statements cannot be proved or
disproved by the facts alone
• Example: The goal of any country’s
economic policy should be to increase the
well-being of its poorest, most vulnerable
citizens.
The Methods of Economics
• Model. What is a model?
– A Model is an Abstract representation of
reality.
– A Model should be as simple as possible to
accomplish its purpose.
– A model should contain the right amount of
details.
Drive from Ames to Chicago
Drive from Chicago O’Hare International Airport to
Hilton Tower Chicago
Assumptions and Conclusions
• Simplifying assumptions
• Way of making a model simpler without affecting
any of its important conclusions
• Example: When we study the behavior of
consumers, we assume that there are only two
goods to choose from.
• Critical assumptions
• Affect conclusions of a model in important ways
• Example: When we study the behavior of business
firms, we assume that firms try to earn the highest
possible profit.
Why Study Economics
•
•
•
•
To Understand the World Better
To Achieve Social Change
To Help prepare for Other Careers
To become an Economist
– Median annual wage and salary earnings of
economists were $72,780 in May 2004.
Check out
http://stats.bls.gov/oco/ocos055.htm
How to Study Economics
• Economics must be studied actively, not
passively
• What does active studying mean?
– Closing the book periodically and reproducing what
you have learned
– Reading with a pencil in your hand and a blank sheet
of paper in front of you
– Listing the steps in each logical argument
– Retracing the cause-and-effect steps in each model
– Drawing the graphs that represent the model
– Thinking about the basic principles of economics and
how they relate to what you are learning
Appendix: Tables and Graphs
Table A.1 Advertising and Sales at Len & Harry’s
Advertising
($1,000s per Month)
2
3
6
7
11
12
Sales
($1,000s per Month)
46
49
58
61
73
76
Appendix: Tables and Graphs
Sales
($1,000 per 76
73
Month
E
61
58
D
C
49
46
40
B
A
1
2
F
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12
Advertising
($1,000 per Month)
Measuring the Slope of a Curve
Sales
($1,000 per
Month
1. The slope of this
curve at point B . . .
54
53
C
49
46
43
H
40
4. sales increase from 43
to 49 units (ΔY= 6). So
the curve's slope at
point B is = 6/3 = 2.
D
2. is the slope of the
straight line tangent to
the curve at point B.
B
A
3. Along the tangent line,
when advertising
increases from 0 to 3
units (ΔX = 3)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Advertising
($1,000 per Month)
Straight Lines with Different
Slopes and Vertical Intercepts
(a)
Y
b>0
a
b=0
b<0
0
X
Straight Lines with Different
Slopes and Vertical Intercepts
(b)
Y
a>0
a=0
0
X
a<0
Shifts in the Graph of Advertising
and Sales
Sales
($1,000 per
Month
July
64
C'
June
58
C
September
C''
6
Advertising
($1,000 per Month)
Shifts of Curved Lines and Straight
Lines
(a)
Y
An increase in Z causes an
increase in Y at any value of X
C'
C
X