Economics: Unit 1
Jan.
5, 2016
Macroeconomics
|
Microeconomics
|
The study of the economy as a
whole
“looking at the big picture”
Ex. Inflation, international
trade, wages
|
The study of the individual or specific units of the
economy
“looking at it individually”
Ex. Supply & demand, market structures, business
organizations
|
Positive Economics
|
Normative Economics
|
It attempts to describe the
world as is
-very descriptive
-tends to thrive on the “what
is”
-collects and presents facts
|
An attempt to prescribe how the world should be
“ought to be”
“should be”
-opinion base
|
Needs
|
Wants
|
Basic requirements for survival
·
water
·
food
·
shelter
·
clothing
|
Desires of citizens
·
cellphones
·
cars
·
tablets
|
Goods
|
Services
|
Tangible commodities
1.
Capital Goods: items used in the creation of other goods
2.
Consumer Goods: goods that are intended for final use by the consumer
|
Work that is performed for someone
|
Scarcity
|
Shortage
|
The most fundamental economic
problem that all societies face
-how to satisfy unlimited wants
with limited resources
|
Quantity demanded is greater than quantity supply
|
Factors of Production
|
|
§ Resources to produce goods & services
1.
Land (natural resources)
2.
Labor (work force)
3.
Capital (human capital/physical
capital)
4.
Entrepreneurship
(innovative/risk taker)
|
|
Jan.
6. 2016
Human Capital
|
Physical Capital
|
Knowledge, skills, abilities
& talent that are gained through education & work experience
|
Composed of tools, machines & robots
|
Tradeoffs- alternatives
that we give up when we choose one course of action over another
Opportunity
cost- next best alternative, settling for what wasn’t
your first choice
Production Possibilities Graph (PPG)- shows alternative ways to use an economy’s resources AKA (PPC-Curve) (PPF-Frontier)
4 Assumptions of a PPG
- Two Goods
- Fixed Resources (land, labor, capital &
entrepreneurship)
- Fixed Technology
- Full Employment of Resources
Efficiency: using resources in such a way as to maximize the production of
goods & services
Allocative Efficiency: products being produced are the ones most desired by society
Productive Efficiency: products are being produced in the least costly way & this
means any point on (PPC)
Underutilization: using fewer resources than an economy is capable of using

v A -inside the curve
What’s happening? You are
unattainable but inefficient: underutilization
v B & C -on the curve
What’s happening? You are
attainable & efficient: it is producing
v D -outside of the curve
What’s happening? Unattainable
Jan.
7, 2016
What causes the PPC/PPG to
shift?
1. Technological Changes
2. Economic Growth
3. Change in Resources
4. Change in Labor Force
5. Natural Disasters, War, Famine
6. More education & training (human capital)
∆ (delta sign) -change
Jan.
11, 2016
Jan.
14, 2016
Elasticity of Demand
-It is a measure of how
consumers react to a ∆ in price
1. Elastic Demand
-
demand that is very sensitive to a change
in price
*always greater than 1*
a)
Product is NOT a necessity
b)
There are available substitutes
2. Inelastic Demand
-
Demand that is NOT sensitive to change
in price
*always less than 1*
a)
Product is a necessity
b)
Few or no substitutes
c)
People will buy no matter what
3. Unitary Demand
*ALWAYS equal to 1*
|
Examples
of Elastic
|
Examples
of Inelastic
|
|
·
Soda
·
Steaks
·
Candy
·
Fur Coats
|
·
Gas
·
Salt
·
Milk
·
Insulin
·
Medicine
·
Toothpaste
|
Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
1. Quantity
(New quantity – Old quantity)
Old quantity
2. Price
(New price – Old Price)
Old Price
3. PED
Percentage ∆ in Quantity demanded
Percentage ∆ in Price
Total Revenue- the total amount of
money a firm receives from selling goods & services P×Q= TR (price × quantity=total
revenue)
Fixed Cost- a cost that does not
change no matter how much is produced Ex. Rent, mortgage, insurance, salary
Variable Cost- a cost that rises and
falls depending upon how much is produced Ex. Electricity
Marginal Cost- the
cost of producing one more unit of a good
Jan.
17, 2016
Equilibrium
-is the point at
which the supply curve and the demand curve intersect. At this point, all
resources are being efficiently used.
Excess demand
-occurs when the
quantity demanded is greater than the quantity supplied. This will result
in shortages, where consumers cannot get the quantities of
items that they desire.
Price ceiling
-
creates a shortage.
-
occurs when the government puts a legal
limit on how high the price of a product can be.
In order for a price
ceiling to be effective, it must be set below equilibrium.
For example, the
government sets a price ceiling on flu shots and shots are sold for less than
what they are worth; therefore creating a shortage of flu shots. Ex: Rent
control (New York & San Francisco)
Excess supply
-occurs when the
quantity supplied is greater than he quantity demanded. This will result
in a surplus, where producers have inventories they cannot get rid
of.
Price floor
-
is the lowest legal price a commodity
can be sold at.
-
creates a surplus.
-
are used by the government to prevent
prices from being too low. The most common price floor is the minimum wage.
Business
Cycles
Peak: the
highest point of the real GDP
- greatest amount of spending & lowest amount of
unemployment
- in this phase inflation becomes a problem
Expansion: “recovery phase”
- real GDP is increasing due to an inflation of spending
& a decrease in unemployment
Contraction: real GDP declines for 6 months due to a reduction in
spending & increasing unemployment
Trough: lowest
point of real GDP
- least amount of spending & highest unemployment
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