Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics
- Microeconomics - the study of how households and firms make decisions and how they interact in the market
- ex: supply and demand, market structure
- Macroeconomics - the study of major components of the economy
- ex: inflation. wage laws, international trade
Positive economics - claims that attempts to describe the world as is
ex: minimum wage laws causes unemployment
Normative economics - claims that attempt to prescribe how the world should be
ex: the government should raise the minimum wage
Want - a desire
Need - the basic requirements for survival
Scarcity - the most fundamental economic problem facing all societies
~ how to satisfy unlimited wants with limited resources
Shortage - quantity demand > quantity supplied
Goods vs Services
- Goods - tangible commodities ( 2 types )
- capital - items used in the creation of other goods
- ex: machines, trucks
- consumer - goods that are intended for final use
- ex: burgers
- Services - can't be touched or felt; work performed for someone
The 4 types of production
- land - natural resources
- labor - work exerted
- capital
- human - knowledge acquired skills
- physical - machinery
- entrepreneurship - risk taking
Production Possibility
Opportunity cost - the most desirable alternative
Guns or Butter tradeoff - things aren't produced at equal levels
Production possibility graph - shows an alternative way to use resources
Increasing opportunity cost - the opportunity cost of producing an additional unit of a product increases as more of that product is produced
If the graph is concave (bowed out), then 4 assumptions can be made
- fixed technology
- fixed resources
- full employment efficiency and productive efficiency
- -
~efficiently allocate resources and full employment of resources
Allocative efficiency - combination of the most desired by society or those in charge of economic decisions
Hey Philippe! Your notes are very thorough and I like how you added the graphs to show examples about Supply and Demand. I noticed that under your "Production Possibility" section you forgot to finish the "4 assumptions can be made" part. Also, you should probably update your notes and add in the total revenue, fixed costs, etc. All the equations and maybe the chart for an example.
ReplyDeleteJust kidding. My webpage didn't fully load... so I didn't see the total revenue, fixed costs and whatever. But yeah, good notes and examples!
ReplyDelete