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Lecture 1
1.
Principles ofEconomics
Dr. Shahab Sharfaei, PhD.
Metropolitan University
2.
Lecture 1What is economics?
3.
I.The Economy and Economic
Systems
4.
Exchanges• In the economy we are faced with many decisions, many involving an
exchange sometimes using money as the medium.
o Households purchase final goods and services for final
consumption and also provide the inputs into production – land,
labour and capital.
o The organizations which buy these factors and use them to
produce goods and services are referred to collectively as firms.
5.
What is an economy?Economic activity is how much buying and selling goes on in the
economy over a period of time.
The economy is all the production and exchange activities that take
place every day. i.e. the real economic system around us – we all are
active participants and creators
6.
What is Economics? Economics vs. the EconomyEconomics is the study of:
the allocation of scarce resources among alternative uses.
• how societies with limited, scarce resources decide what gets
produced, how, and for whom
• how individuals and societies make choices under scarcity and the
implications of those choices
7.
Scarcity vs. Unlimited Wants• Scarcity implies the need for a choice among alternatives – no free
lunch.
• Wants are unlimited while resources for satisfying them are finite.
• A need is something that you have to have.
• A want (desire) is something you would like to have.
8.
When was Economics Created?• Aristotle
8
Adam Smith (1723-1790), An
Inquiry into the Nature and
Causes of the Wealth of Nations,
1776
9.
• Every individual... neither intends to promote the public interest, nor knowshow much he is promoting it... he intends only his own security; and by
directing that industry in such a manner as its produce may be of the greatest
value, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases,
led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his
intention…..By promoting his own interest he frequently promotes that of the
society more effectively that when he really intends to promote it
• Adam Smith, 1776
10.
Excersice• When two individuals trade voluntarily:
• a. one person generally gains at the expense of the other
• b. one person always gains at the expense of the other
• c. both persons generally gain from the exchange
• d. the overall well-being of the two persons remains unchanged.
11.
II.How People Make Decisions
12.
Different scalesThe economy exists at different scales:
o Local
o National e.g., the UK
o International e.g., EU
13.
People Face trade-offsMaking decisions requires trading off one goal against another.
To get one thing, we usually have to give up another thing.
o Food v. clothing
o Leisure time v. work
o Clean environment v. higher incomes
o Efficiency v. equality
o Efficiency is how society gets the most that it can from its scarce resources.
o Equality means the benefits of those resources are distributed fairly among the
members of society.
14.
Opportunity Cost•Decisions require comparing costs and benefits of alternatives.
o Whether to go to university or to work?
o Whether to study or go out on a date?
o Whether to go to class or sleep in?
•The opportunity cost of an item is what you give up to obtain that
item. It is a ratio expressed as the sacrifice in one good in terms of the
gain in the other.
15.
Excersice• All of the following can be considered a student's opportunity cost of going to
university, except:
• a. textbooks
• b. room and board (that cost the student about the same as they were paying
before entering university)
• c. The student's time, which can no longer be devoted to earning a salary.
• d. tuition and fees
16.
Thinking at the Margino Marginal changes are small, incremental adjustments to an existing plan
of action.
o Economic agents: an individual, firm or organization that has an impact in
some way on an economy.
o Being rational is the assumption that decision-makers can make consistent
choices between alternatives.
People make decisions by comparing costs and benefits at the margin.
17.
The Assumption of RationalityEconomists assume that people are rational.
Rationality = try to fulfill their goals as best they can with available resources and
information.
Humans are rational and narrowly self- interested actors who have the ability to
make judgments about their subjectively defined goals.
A rational approach
= compare benefits vs. costs
Using these rational assessments, a rational person attempts to maximize
utility as a consumer and economic profit as a producer.
18.
People Respond to IncentivesAssuming rational people make rational decisions, then….
o Marginal changes in costs or benefits motivate people to respond.
o The decision to choose one alternative over another occurs when that
alternative’s marginal benefits exceed its marginal costs!
o Public policies can create incentives or disincentives that alter behaviour.
o Sometimes policymakers fail to understand how policies alter incentives
and behaviour.
19.
Excersice• A plane from Paris to Geneva is about to take off, but it still has a few seats
empty. If the average cost per seat is €500, what price should the airline
charge passengers in standby to fill in those remaining seats? (Consider that
quantitative decisions are made at the margin.)
• a. Any price that will cover the additional cost of an additional passenger to
the airline
• b. Exactly €500
• c. At least €1,000
• d. Slightly more than €500.
20.
Excersice• Describe an important trade-off you’ve recently faced.
• Give an example of some action that has both a monetary and
nonmonetary opportunity cost.
21.
III. How People Interact22.
Trade Can Make Everyone Better Offo People gain from their ability to trade with one another.
o Competition leads to gains from trade.
o Trade allows people to specialize in what they do best.
o However, sometimes this leads to people losing their jobs as production
moves overseas. They need alternative skills and the area needs to attract new
investment, which does not always happen.
23.
Markets Can Be a Good Way to Organize EconomicActivity
Pure market economy has no government intervention.
o It allocates resources through the decentralized decisions of many
firms and households as they interact in markets for goods and
services.
Market prices reflect both the value of a product to consumers and the cost
of the resources used to produce it.
o Therefore, decisions to buy or produce goods and services are made
based on the cost to society of providing them.
24.
• Is Amazon good for the economy? Explain the pros and cons in terms of howMarkets Organize Economic Activity
• How about Uber?
25.
26.
Planned Economic Systemso A planned economic system is when economic activity organized by
central planners who decide the answers to the fundamental economic
questions.
o Most countries that once had centrally planned economies have
abandoned this system and are developing more market-based
economies.
27.
Governments Can Sometimes Improve Market OutcomesMarkets do not always lead to efficient or equitable outcomes.
o property rights
28.
IV. How the Economy as a Whole Works29.
An Economy’s Standard of Living is Related to ItsAbility to Produce Goods and Services
•Economic growth - the increase in the amount of goods and services in
an economy over a period of time.
•Gross domestic product per head - the market value of all final goods
and services produced within a country in a given period of time divided
by the population of a country to give a per capita figure.
30.
An Economy’s Standard of Living is Related to ItsAbility to Produce Goods and Services
o Standard of living - a measure of welfare based on the amount of goods
and services a person’s income can buy.
o Most variations in living standards are explained by differences in
countries’ productivities.
o Productivity is the amount of goods and services produced from each
hour of a worker’s time.
31.
A Country’s Standard of Living Depends on Its Ability toProduce Goods and Services
• How is technology related to the standard of living and the ability to produce?
32.
Excersice• Economics trains you to do which of the following?
• a. Think in terms of alternatives
• b. Evaluate the cost of individual and social choices
• c. Examine and understand how certain events and issues are related
• d. All of these answers are true
33.
Excersice• Living standards in Europe have risen tremendously over the years, mainly
due to:
• a. trade protection from competition from counties with low wages, such as
China.
• b. increases in the productivity of labour over time
• c. successive increases in the minimum wage
• d. the efforts of labour unions
34.
Summary1) When individuals make decisions, they face trade-offs among alternative
goals.
2) The cost of any action is measured in terms of foregone opportunities.
3) People often make decisions by comparing marginal costs and marginal
benefits.
4) People change their behaviour in response to the incentives they face.
35.
Summary5) Trade can be mutually beneficial.
6) Markets are usually a good way of coordinating trade among people.
7) Government can potentially improve market outcomes if there is some
market failure or if the market outcome is inequitable.
8) Productivity is the ultimate source of living standards.
36.
Relevant Literature• Mankiw, N. “Principles of Economics“: chapter 1 („Ten
Principles of Economics“).