Economics
Basic Concepts
      Chapter 1
Musharrat Shabnam Shuchi
    Assistant Professor
  Department of Economics
           What is Economics?
• Economics is the study of how society manages its
  scarce resources.
• Economists study how people make decisions: how
  much they work, what they buy, how much they save,
  and how they invest their savings.
• Economists also study how people interact with one
  another.
• Finally, economists analyze the forces and trends that
  affect the economy as a whole, including the growth
  in average income, the fraction of the population that
  cannot find work, and the rate at which prices are
  rising.
10 Principles of Economics
How People Make Decisions
1: People Face Trade-offs
2: The Cost of Something Is What You Give Up to Get It
3: Rational People Think at the Margin
4: People Respond to Incentives
How People Interact
5: Trade Can Make Everyone Better Off
6: Markets Are Usually a Good Way to Organize Economic
Activity
7: Governments Can Sometimes Improve Market Outcomes
How the Economy as a Whole Works
8: A Country’s Standard of Living Depends on Its Ability to
Produce Goods and Services
9: Prices Rise When the Government Prints Too Much Money
10: Society Faces a Short-Run Trade-off between Inflation and
Unemployment
  Ten Principles of Economics
• Scarcity means that society has limited
  resources and therefore cannot produce
  all the goods and services people wish to
  have.
• The study of economics has many facets,
  but it is unified by several central ideas
  which are listed under the Ten Principles
  of Economics.
 Principle 1: People Face Trade-offs
• “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch.”
• One classic trade-off is between “guns and
  butter.” The more a society spends on
  national defense (guns) to protect its
  shores from foreign aggressors, the less it
  can spend on consumer goods (butter) to
  raise the standard of living at home.
• To get something that we like, we usually
  have to give up something else that we
  also like. Making decisions requires
  trading off one goal against another.
Principle 1: People Face Trade-offs
• The society faces a trade-off between
  efficiency and equality.
• Efficiency means that society is getting
  the maximum benefits from its scarce
  resources.
• Equality means that those benefits are
  distributed uniformly among society’s
  members.
 Principle 2: The Cost of Something Is What You
                 Give Up to Get It
• Because people face trade-offs, making
  decisions requires comparing the costs and
  benefits of alternative courses of action.
• The opportunity cost of an item is what you
  give up to get that item. It is the cost of letting
  go the next best alternative.
• When making any decision, decision makers
  should be aware of the opportunity costs that
  accompany each possible action.
• When you spend a year listening to lectures,
  reading textbooks, and writing papers, you
  cannot spend that time working at a job.
 Principle 3: Rational People Think
            at the Margin
• Rational people are the people who
  systematically and purposefully do the
  best they can to achieve their objectives,
  given the available opportunities.
• Marginal change a small incremental
  adjustment to a plan of action.
• Keep in mind that margin means “edge,”
  so marginal changes are adjustments
  around the edges of what you are doing.
  Rational people often make decisions by
  comparing marginal benefits and marginal
 Principle 3: Rational People Think
            at the Margin
• When exams roll around, your decision is
  not between blowing them off and studying
  24 hours a day but whether to spend an
  extra hour reviewing your notes instead of
  watching TV.
• Why is water so cheap, while diamonds
  are so expensive?
• A rational decision maker takes an
  action if and only if the marginal benefit
  of the action exceeds the marginal cost.
   Principle 4: People Respond to
              Incentives
• An incentive is something (such as the
  prospect of a punishment or reward) that
  induces a person to act. Because rational
  people make decisions by comparing costs
  and benefits, they respond to incentives.
• Incentives are key to analyzing how markets
  work. For example, when the price of an
  apple rises, people decide to eat fewer
  apples. At the same time, apple orchards
  decide to hire more workers and harvest
  more apples. In other words, a higher price in
  a market provides an incentive for buyers to
  consume less and an incentive for sellers to
  produce more.
    Principle 5: Trade Can Make
        Everyone Better Off
• Trade between two countries can make
  each country better off.
• Trade allows countries to specialize in
  what they do best and to enjoy a greater
  variety of goods and services.
  Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
    Way to Organize Economic Activity
• Market economy an economy that allocates
  resources through the decentralized decisions of
  many firms and households as they interact in
  markets for goods and services.
• The success of market economies is puzzling. In a
  market economy, no one is looking out for the
  economic well-being of society as a whole. Free
  markets contain many buyers and sellers of
  numerous goods and services, and all of them are
  interested primarily in their own well-being. Yet
  despite decentralized decision making and self-
  interested decision makers, market economies
  have proven remarkably successful in organizing
  economic activity to promote overall economic
  well-being.
  Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
    Way to Organize Economic Activity
• In his 1776 book An Inquiry into the
  Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
  Nations, economist Adam Smith made the
  most famous observation in all of
  economics: Households and firms
  interacting in markets act as if they are
  guided by an
 “invisible hand” that leads them to
  desirable market outcomes.
  Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
    Way to Organize Economic Activity
• In any market, buyers look at the price when
  determining how much to demand, and
  sellers look at the price when deciding how
  much to supply. As a result of the decisions
  that buyers and sellers make, market prices
  reflect both the value of a good to society and
  the cost to society of making the good.
• Smith’s great insight was that prices adjust
  to guide these individual buyers and sellers
  to reach outcomes that, in many cases,
  maximize the well-being of society as a
  Principle 6: Markets Are Usually a Good
    Way to Organize Economic Activity
• Smith’s insight has an important corollary:
  When a government prevents prices from
  adjusting naturally to supply and demand,
  it impedes the invisible hand’s ability to
  coordinate the decisions of the
  households and firms that make up an
  economy.
    Principle 7: Governments Can
 Sometimes Improve Market Outcomes
• If the invisible hand of the market is so
  great, why do we need government?
• One reason we need government is that
  the invisible hand can work its magic only
  if the government enforces the rules and
  maintains the institutions that are key to a
  market economy. Most important, market
  economies need institutions to enforce
  property rights so individuals can own and
  control scarce resources.
 Principle 7: Governments Can Sometimes
         Improve Market Outcomes
• Property rights-the ability of an individual to
  own and exercise control over scarce
  resources.
• Market failure- a situation in which a market
  left on its own fails to allocate resources
  efficiently.
• Externality- the impact of one person’s
  actions on the well-being of a bystander. Ex-
  Pollution.
 Principle 8: A Country’s Standard of Living
 Depends on Its Ability to Produce Goods
                and Services
• Productivity is the quantity of goods and
  services produced from each unit of labor
  input.
• Almost all variation in living standards is
  attributable to differences in countries’
  productivity. In nations where workers can
  produce a large quantity of goods and
  services per hour, most people enjoy a high
  standard of living; in nations where workers
  are less productive, most people endure a
  more meager existence..
     Principle 9: Prices Rise When the
    Government Prints Too Much Money
• Inflation- an increase in the overall level
  of prices in the economy.
• What causes inflation? In almost all cases
  of large or persistent inflation, the culprit is
  growth in the quantity of money. When a
  government creates large quantities of the
  nation’s money, the value of the money
  falls.
Principle 10: Society Faces a Short-Run Trade-off
      between Inflation and Unemployment
• Although a higher level of prices is, in the
  long run, the primary effect of increasing
  the quantity of money, the short-run story
  is more complex and controversial.
• This line of reasoning leads to one final
  economy-wide trade-off: a short-run trade-
  off between inflation and unemployment.
Principle 10: Society Faces a Short-Run Trade-off
      between Inflation and Unemployment
• Business cycle—the irregular and largely
  unpredictable fluctuations in economic
  activity, as measured by the production of
  goods and services or the number of
  people employed.