Transcript Economics

Economics
Resources,
Opportunity Cost,
and the PPF
Introduction
Today we will be talking about how
scarcity requires individuals,
businesses, and governments to
make economic decisions that
involve tradeoffs.
 Rolling Stones
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Cant always get what you want
Vocab for this lesson
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Goods
Services
Factors of Production
Entrepreneurship
Capital
Productivity
Opportunity Cost
Production Possibilities Frontier
What do we remember?
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Definition of economics
About resources?
Scarcity is everywhere
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Goods—physical objects produced for sale
Services—Activities done for us by others
Scarce because of the resources needed
• Land
• Labor
• Capital
Scarcity is forever,
Shortages Temporary
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Shortage—lack of something that is
desired
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Less of a good or service available than
people want at the current price
Causes
Trends in fashion
 Musical acts
 Wars and natural disasters (Katrina)
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How are goods produced?
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Economists look at inputs and
outputs
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Inputs---Factors of production
• Go into the process (land, labor, capital)
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Outputs
• Goods and services produced
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Some look at entrepreneurship
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Willingness to take risks involved in
starting a business
Land Resources
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More than just physical property
Really is “gifts of nature”
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Air
Soil
Water
Solar energy
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Perpetual, Renewable, Non Renewable
Labor Resources
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Labor
The time and effort people devote to
producing goods and services in
exchange for wages
 Physical and mental
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Human capital
Knowledge and skill that people gain
 Impossible to overstate importance
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• Nigeria vs. Japan
Capital Resources
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Tools, machines, and buildings used
in the production of other goods and
services
Money is financial capital
 Pizza delivery car is capital good
 Since Industrial Revolution capital has
been replacing labor
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• Good or bad?
Put it all together…
Three resource types are scarce
 Use them efficiently, increase
productivity
 Productivity = output/input (any
individual input)
 Example: Lumber mill productivity
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Ratio of board feet produced per hour
How do you raise productivity?
Making choices
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What do we give up when making a
choice?
Economists assume people seek to make
themselves better off
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Maximize the utility of their decisions
Utility is satisfaction or pleasure one
gains from consuming a product or
service
Example: Which college to attend
Never easy---never have total information
Opportunity Cost
The best thing we give up to get
what we want
 Example: Mick Jagger
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Musician, or…
 College degree
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Thinking at the margin
Seldom all or nothing
 Law of diminishing marginal utility
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How to measure what we
gain and lose in choices?
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The Production Possibilities Frontier
Economic model
 Line graph
 Shows how economy can use its
resources to produce two goods
 Helps identify tradeoffs and opportunity
costs
 Shows economic efficiency
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• Using resources to produce maximum