Essay on SPPTChap001 2

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Introduction:
Thinking Like an
Economist

CHAPTER

1

Economics and Economic Reasoning
In my vacations, I visited the poorest quarters of several cities and walked through one street after another, looking at the faces of the poorest people. Next
I resolved to make as thorough a study as I could of
Political Economy .
— Alfred Marshall

McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Chapter Goals
 Define economics
 Discuss ways in which economists use economic reasoning
 Explain real-world events in terms of:


Economic forces



Social forces



Political forces

 Explain how economic insights are developed and used
 Distinguish among:


Positive economics



Normative economics



The art of economics
1-2

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

What Economics Is
Economics is the study of how human beings coordinate their wants and desires, given the decision-making mechanism, social customs, and political realities of the society
 The three central coordination problems any economy must solve:
1. What, and how much, to produce
2. How to produce it
3. For whom to produce it

1-3

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Scarcity
Scarcity exists because individuals want more than can be produced • Scarcity means the goods available are too few to satisfy individuals’ desires
 The degree of scarcity is constantly changing
 The quantity of goods, services and usable resources depends on technology and human action

1-4

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
 Economic theory is divided into two parts:
• Microeconomics is the study of individual choice, and how that choice is influenced by economic forces • Macroeconomics is the study of the economy as a whole

1-5

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

A Guide to Economic Reasoning
 Steve Levitt’s bestseller, Freakonomics, contains many examples of “thinking like an economist”
• Levitt uses economic reasoning to explain why people become drug dealers
• The potential financial benefit of selling drugs is much higher than the cost of giving up a minimum wage job

1-6

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Marginal Costs and Marginal Benefits
 Using economic reasoning, decisions are often made by comparing marginal costs and marginal benefits


Marginal cost is the additional cost over and above costs already incurred



Marginal benefit is the additional benefit above and beyond what has already accrued

 The economic decision rule:



If the marginal benefits of doing something exceed the marginal costs, do it.
If the marginal costs of doing something exceed the marginal benefits, don’t do it.
MC > MB  Don’t do it!
1-7

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Opportunity Cost
 Opportunity cost is the benefit forgone of the next-best alternative to the activity you have chosen
 Opportunity cost should always be less than the benefit of what you have chosen
 Opportunity cost is the basis of cost/benefit economic reasoning 1-8

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Economic, Social, and Political Forces
 Economic forces are mechanisms that ration scarce goods
 A market force is an economic force that is given relatively free rein by society to work through the market
 The invisible hand is the price mechanism that guides our actions in a market. The invisible hand is an example of a market force.
• If there is a shortage, prices rise
• If there is a surplus, prices fall

1-9

Economics and
Economic Reasoning

11

Using Economic Insights
 Theories tie together economists’ terminology and knowledge about economic institutions
 Theories are too abstract to apply in specific cases and are often embodied in economic models and principles
• An economic model is a framework that places the generalized insights of the theory in a more specific contextual setting
• An economic principle is a commonly held insight stated as a law or general