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Economics Basics for Students

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views3 pages

Economics Basics for Students

Uploaded by

shankarmhtraders
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Basic Concepts of Economics- Unit Guidelines

1.1: Scarcity
● Economics: the study of scarcity and choice with unlimited wants and limited resources
● Economic choice: involves the personal choice of choosing one thing over another
● Scarcity: unlimited wants but limited resources (ex. time = limited supply)
● Free goods: goods with no-cost/unlimited supply (ex. sunlight)
● Positive statement: factual statement
● Normative statement: opinionated statement

1.2: Resource Allocation and Economic Systems


● Economy: a system that coordinates choice about the production with choices about
consumption and distributes goods and services to the people who want them.
● Market Economy: the production and consumption results of decentralized decisions made
by many firms and individuals.
● Command Economy: industries = publicly-owned and the central authority is making
producer and consumer decisions.
● Property Rights: establish ownership and grant individuals the right to trade goods and
services with each other.
● Resource: anything that can be used to produce something else ○ Factors of production
(acronym to remember = CELL):
■ Capital (anything used to make anything else)
■ Entrepreneurship (creating something of value from the prior
3) ■ Land (natural resources)
● Raw materials used to produce finished goods ■ Labor (workers)
● Human effort/work
● Opportunity Cost: the next best alternative given up when making a choice
○ Implicit costs - forgone benefits of any single transaction
■ ex. time and effort an owner puts into maintaining a company, rather than
expanding it
○ Explicit costs - expenses that are paid with cash or equivalent
■ ex. wages to workers, electricity bill

★ Microeconomics: individuals/firms making decisions and how these


interact ○ ex. college vs job, car industry, etc
★ Macroeconomics: overall ups and downs of the economy (aggregates)
○ ex. employment, inflation, etc

1.3: Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)


● Trade-off: giving up something for something else
● PPC: illustrates trade-offs an economy that compares only two goods faces
○ Show the opportunity cost of producing more of one good
○ Illustrate economic growth or contraction

Increasing oppt. Constant oppt. Cost


Cost PPC PPC


● Efficiency: The point at which there are no missed opportunities; cannot make someone better
off without making someone else worse off
● Productive efficiency: lowest cost possible on PPC
● Allocative efficiency: The economy allocates resources so that consumers are as well off as
possible/producing what is demanded.
● Increasing Opportunity Costs: concave PPC
● Economic Growth: allows sustained rise in aggregate output/expansion of PPC outwards
○ Causes:
■ Increase/Development of technology
■ Increase in resources

1.4: Comparative Advantage and Trade


● Trade: people divide work and each provides goods in return for other goods
● Comparative Advantage: a situation in which an individual, business, or country can
produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than another producer
○ Can’t have a comparative advantage in both goods
● Absolute Advantage: a situation in which an individual, business, or country can produce
more of a good or service than any other producer with the same quantity of resources.
1.5: Cost-Benefit Analysis
● Terms of Trade: the rate at which goods can be exchanged
○ Mutually beneficial between opportunity costs of the 2
individuals ○ Capital goods: goods that make consumer goods
■ more capital goods = more growth in future
○ Consumer goods: goods that are consumed (final goods)

1.6: Marginal Analysis and Consumer Choice


● Marginal decisions: trade-off of doing a little more or a little less
○ Marginal benefit: benefit of producing one more unit
○ Marginal cost: cost of producing one more unit
○ Marginal analysis: the study of the additional benefits vs the additional cost of an
activity

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