Chapter One “The Economic Way of Thinking”
- Why Economics is important?
- Affects daily livesprovides with logical, effective decision-making process; helps maximize our resources
- Helps us make more informed decisionsneed to think about setting priorities, weighing options, we do this subconsciously to a certain extent
- More effective citizensby voting we decide to certain extent the future/type of economic policieshow we want the government to allocate its resources
- A Science of Choices
- economics as a science helps us analyze , explain and predict behavior
- Basic Economic ProblemScarcitythe condition that occurs because people’s wants and needs are unlimited, and the resources needed to produce goods and services to meet these wants and needs are limited
- unlimited wants and needs
- limited resources
- allocationprocess of choosing which needs will be satisfied and how much of our resources we will use to satisfy them
- DEFINITIONTHE SOCIAL SCIENCE THAT DEALS WITH OF HOW SOCIETY ALLOCATES SCARCE RESOURCES AMONG ITS ULIMITED WANTS AND NEEDS BY EXAMINING THE ALTERNATIVES AND CONSIDERING THE OPPORTUNITY COSTS FOR EACH ALTERNATIVE
- Costs and Benefitseconomists consider the opportunity costs and benefits of making each decision
- Opportunity Costthe value of any alternative that you must give up when you make a choice (what are the opportunity costs of coming to school today?) Do T-Shirt vs. Movie thing; budget constraint involved here which is the mix of goods that can be purchased given a limited amount of income
- Opportunity Benefitwhat is gained by making a particular choice; (example of decision to move)
- Individual and Social Choicesindividual choices refer to decisions made to fulfill one’s own needs versus social choices which are made to satisfy needs of society as a whole; corresponds with micro and macroeconomics respectively
- Microeconomicsbranch of economics that examines the choices and interaction of individuals concerning one product, firm, or one industry (how individual producers and consumers respond to changes in market)
- Macroeconomicsthe branch of economics that examines the behavior of the whole economy at onceunit of analysis not individual but economy as a whole (Bush talking mostly about macroeconomic decisions last night)
- THREE BASIC ECONOMIC CHOICESsome societies/governments make more social versus individual economic decisions (which kinds of governments/societies do what?)
- What will be produced with limited resourceshard decisions to make after and when you provide the basics; once you have food, shelter, clothing, what is next? Education? National Defense? Etc.
- How will the goods and services be producedneed to account for the resources that are most readily available then go for either labor or capital (machines; equipment) intensive resources
- For whom will the goods and services be producedwho gets what is decided by consumers and the price system in the market; how individuals choose to spend their income varies according to their personal preferences as well as their income levels; in market economy this is mostly an individual level decision? Or is it?
- The Importance of Economic Theory
- Theorysimplified description of reality; why is theory important even if it is sometimes incorrect? Or can’t predict outcomes 100% of the time? (modelsimplified form of reality which shows the relationship between different factors)
- Economic Theory Simplifies Realityroadmap analogy, gives you general features with which to navigate, not super detailed; have to carefully select theory and apply it to the problem (if problem doesn’t fit the theory then, the results are not going to be productive) so you have to carefully define the problem
- Economic theory is relevant b/c can help you make better informed choices; take 5 minutes and write down what you did yesterday; what were the opportunity costs of those choices you made? How did those choices affect what was produced? How it was produced? And for whom?
- Insurance how it works, cost of insurance distributes cost of replacing item that is damaged/stolen among many people; those who are not risk averse, might not want insurance or opt for lower levels of coverage?
- Carliability (losses to others); collision (losses to owners car); medical pays bills for policy holder and family
- Lifeterm versus whole
- Housebuyers/renters; personal liability coverage
- Healthgroup and individual
- Incomedisability; income
Chapter 2 Making Personal Decisions
- Individual Decisions and Social Choicesecon as science of choices made by either individuals or society; need to make informed decisions
- Economic Questions and the Market Economy
- economic questionsdecisions a society must make on what, how and for whom to produce goods and services
- market/capitalistic economyeconomic questions answered primarily by individuals
- make economic decisions based on economic incentives-the increase in our personal satisfaction that may result from some economic activity
- psychic incomethe nonmenetary reward we get from taking some action (Name some examples?)
- we make decisions based on economic and psychic incentives
- What to produce decided by consumers “voting” with dollars; if there is an increased demand for something, it will get produced, if there is little or no demand for a good then it will become less profitable to produce and therefore production declines or is eliminated altogether
- How to produce decided by individual choice; your incentive in the marketplace is personal gain; you want to maximize your income (or utility)
- For whom to produce-individual choice; anyone who has enough money can buy any product
- Individual Choice, Self-Interest, and the Invisible Hand
- in market economy individuals directly benefit from their decisions; the more info you have the better decisions you can make and the more likely that your utility can be maximized
- Economic Profit-the difference between the money you obtain from selling a product and the cost of producing that product
- Adam Smith1723; 1776 Wealth of Nations; argued that market operates by an invisible hand; idea that self interested based choices produces the greatest good for society; consumers wants to minimize costs; producer wants to maximize profits when someone decides to buy something the transaction (if in free market) benefits both;
- Invisible handthe incentive that guides individuals to choose in the best interest of society by pursuing their own self interest
- Costs and Benefits of social choicemost believe that individual choice is better to social choice in economic matters because the product of a social choice benefits some members of society at the expense of ALL (example would be parks; public schools; Camp David etc)
- Individual Incentives and Social Choicesocial choice can reduce incentive of direct self interest and can lead to inefficient behavior on the part of individuals
- Focus on Individual DecisionsProblem solving steps
- Define the problem
- Problems usually arise because of scarcity or the need to allocate
- Be objective (ruling out aspects of a problem that seem important only b/c of strong emotions or feelings about them)
- Focus on the issue
- List the Alternatives
- limit your alternatives
- be realistic
- List the criteria used to evaluate your alternatives (decide and then rank order them)
- Evaluate the alternatives
- decision matrixa table showing comparisons of alternative decisions
- strength of preferencesUtilitythe satisfaction one receives from the consumption, use, or ownership of a good or service
- utilthe unit of measurement for utility
- Choose the best alternative
- Individual Choice and Opportunity Costevery time you make a decisions you must pay an opportunity cost
- Applying to realitystudents have 5,000 at their disposal; use 5 steps of decision making process to decide how to use it; students need to prepare a decision matrix