Transcript Chapter 1

Welcome to ECON 2301
Principles of
Macroeconomics
Dr. Frank Jacobson
Mr. Stuckey
Week 2 Class 1
Today
• What is $1 Trillion
• Chapter 1
• Chapter 2
Economics is Divided
into Two Branches:
Microeconomics
and Macroeconomics
MicroeconomicsIs the Study of How
Households and firms
Make Decisions and
How They Interact With
One Another in
Markets.
MacroeconomicsIs the Study of the
Economy as a Whole. This
Includes the Factors of
Inflation, Unemployment,
and Economic Growth.
The Goal of
Macroeconomics is to
Explain the Economic
Changes That Affect
Many Households,
Firms and Markets
Simultaneously.
Macroeconomists Address Such
Questions as:
Why Do Prices Rise and Fall?
Why is the Average Income High or Low
in Countries?
Why Does Employment Vary?
What Can the Government Do In Terms
of Income, Inflation and
Unemployment?
The Downside of the World’s Largest
Economy & One of the Highest Standards of
Living
• The federal budget is at a record
high
• The US trade deficit is at a record
high
• The federal government is borrowing
$2 billion dollars a day from
foreigners to finance the budget &
trade deficits
• Social Security & Medicare trust
funds will run out of money well
before most of you reach retirement
age
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-4
The Downside of the World’s Largest
Economy & One of the Highest
Standards of Living
• When you graduate, you may
not be able to get a decent job
• The savings rate in the United
States is close to zero
• The real hourly wage (adjusted
for inflation) of the average
worker is lower today than it
was in 1973
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1-5
Economics Defined
• Economics is the efficient
allocation of the scarce
means of production toward
the satisfaction of human
wants
• The means of production are limited
• Human wants are unlimited
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-3
People Make Choices
Because Resources are
Scare.
Resources Include:
Land, Labor, Capital
(Entrepreneurship)
That Can be Used to
Produce Something Else
Four Economic
Resources
•Land
•Labor
•Capital
•Entrepreneurial
ability
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-5
Land
• Land (a broader meaning than our
normal understanding of the word)
• Includes natural resources such as
timber, oil, coal, iron ore, soil,
water, as well as the ground in
which these resources are found
• Is used for the extraction of
minerals and farming
• Provides the site for factories, office
buildings, shopping centers, homes,
etc.
• Owners of land receive “rent”
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-6
Labor
• Labor
• The work and time for which
one is paid is what economists
call “labor”
• Money received for one’s labor
is called wages and/or salaries
• About two-thirds of the total
resource cost is the cost of
labor
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-7
Capital
• Capital
• Man-made goods used to produce other
goods or services is what economists
call “capital”
• Examples are office buildings, stores, and
factories
• Consists of mainly plant and equipment
• The money owners of “capital” receive
is called “interest”
• Capital is the MOST important of the
four economic resources
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-8
Entrepreneurial Ability
• The entrepreneur
• Sets up a business
• Assembles the needed resources
• Risks his/her own (or borrowed)
money
• Makes a “profit” or incurs a “loss”
• Is central to the American
economy
• 25 million businesses are virtually all
entrepreneurs
• The vast majority work for themselves or have
one or two employees
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-9
The Central Fact of
Economics: SCARCITY
• Scarcity
• Resources are the things society
uses to produce goods and
services
• These resources are scarce (limited)
• The economic problem
• There are never enough resources
to produce all of the goods and
services that people want
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-4
Test For Scarcity
• A Good is Scarce if More
of it Would make
Someone Better Off.
• If the Good were Free,
People Would Want More
than is Available
A Good or Service is
Considered Scarce
When There is Not
Enough To Satisfy
Everyone’s Demand
For The Resource.
When Resources or
Specific Items Become
Scarce----- Allocation
Becomes the Problem.
How To Satisfy
Everyone Who Wants
An Item or Service.
One Way is By Pricing the
Item So That People Will
Pay More For the Item
They Want
By Doing This People
Are Forced To
Prioritize What Items or
Resources They Want
Most.
This Takes Us to The Real
Cost of Any Item or
Resource- Opportunity
Cost.
•Opportunity Cost- is
What You Must Give
Up In Order to Get
That Item or
Resource.
For Any Economy as a
Whole, Income Must Equal
Expenditure. Therefore,
They Are the Same as For
Every Buyer There is a
Seller and What is an
Expenditure For One is
Income For the Other.
Our Economic Problem
Revisited
• Limited resources versus
unlimited wants
• There are NOT enough resources
to produce everything that
everyone wants
• Therefore, CHOICES must BE
MADE!
• Every choice has an “opportunity
cost” associated with it!
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-10
Opportunity Cost: An Important,
Fundamental Concept in Economics
• Because we cannot have
everything we want, we must
make choices
• The thing we give up (our secondbest choice) is called the
opportunity cost of our choice
• This is the foregone value of the next
best alternative
• In the economic world, “both” is
not an admissible answer to a
choice of “which one”
Copyright 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2-11
Our Book
• Introduces The Concept
of Marginal Decision
Where it is Not All or
Nothing. The Decision
Becomes How Much or
Little To Allocate
Between Your Choices.
Incentives
•Incentives- Are
Anything Offered as a
Reward To Make
People Change Their
Behavior or Choices.
Trade
• There Are Always
Advantages to Trade As
It Allows People or
Nations To Do What They
Do Best and Benefit From
More Goods and Services.
Specialization
•Specialization- is
Each Person or
Economy Doing What
They Are Best At
Doing.
Equilibrium
•Equilibrium- is When
No Individual Would
Be Better Off Doing
Something Different.
Efficient
• An Economy is
Efficient if it Takes All
Opportunities to Make
People Better Off
Without Making Other
People Worse Off.
Circular-Flow Diagram
Revenue (=GDP)
Goods and
Markets For Goods
and Services
Spending
(= GDP)
Goods and
Services Sold
Services Bought
Firms
= Flow of Inputs and Outputs
= Flow of Dollars
Factors of
Production
Wages, Rent and
Profit (=GDP)
Households
Land, Labor
And Capital
Markets For Factors
of Production
Income (=GDP)