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
Cant always get what you want
Vocab for this lesson
Goods
Services
Factors of Production
Entrepreneurship
Capital
Productivity
Opportunity Cost
Production Possibilities Frontier
What do we remember?
Definition of economics
About resources?
Scarcity is everywhere
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
Shortage—lack of something that is
desired
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)
How are goods produced?
Economists look at inputs and
outputs
Inputs---Factors of production
• Go into the process (land, labor, capital)
Outputs
• Goods and services produced
Some look at entrepreneurship
Willingness to take risks involved in
starting a business
Land Resources
More than just physical property
Really is “gifts of nature”
Air
Soil
Water
Solar energy
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Perpetual, Renewable, Non Renewable
Labor Resources
Labor
The time and effort people devote to
producing goods and services in
exchange for wages
Physical and mental
Human capital
Knowledge and skill that people gain
Impossible to overstate importance
• Nigeria vs. Japan
Capital Resources
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
• 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
Ratio of board feet produced per hour
How do you raise productivity?
Making choices
What do we give up when making a
choice?
Economists assume people seek to make
themselves better off
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
Musician, or…
College degree
Thinking at the margin
Seldom all or nothing
Law of diminishing marginal utility
How to measure what we
gain and lose in choices?
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
• Using resources to produce maximum