Fundamental Economics Concepts
Economics is study of how individuals make choices about how to allocate and distribute scarce resources (scarcity) and how they interact with each other. |
Assume people make rational choices by comparing opportunity costs and choosing greatest net benefit. |
Opportunity cost is what we give up by making an economical choice. |
Trade should make everyone better off. |
Positive economics uses analysis to describe and make predictions under certain contexts. |
Normative economics uses analysis to evaluate merits of different contexts. |
Pareto efficiency is when goods are maximally efficient, and any change will result in a negative outcome for somebody. |
Main branches of economics are microeconomics (individual) and macroeconomics (society). |
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Microeconomics
Interaction of supply and demand is central topic. |
A market is all the buyers and sellers of a particular good or service. |
A perfectly competitive market includes: large number of buyers/sellers, all participants are informed of market price, and highly standardized good/service. |
Equilibrium occurs when no market participant has any reason to alter behavior (where supply and demand meet on the graph). |
Demand curve shows quantity of a good/service that consumers are willing/able to purchase, and has a negative slope. |
Position of demand curve depends on: income, prices of related goods, tastes, expectations, and number of buyers. |
Supply curve shows quantity of a good/service that producers are willing to supply at each price, and has a positive slope. |
Position of supply curve depends on technology used in production, prices of inputs used in production, expectations, and number of sellers. |
Competitive market equilibrium maximizes total surplus (combined benefits) of market participants. |
Elasticity provides an independent measure of responsiveness of supply and demand to price changes. |
Government interventions include: setting price ceilings/price floors, imposing taxes on transactions to raise revenue for essential services. |
Trade makes people better off, generally, and international trade increases total surplus. |
Firms supply goods/services by combining: labor, capital, raw materials, and other inputs, while seeking to maximize profits. |
Perfectly competitive markets aim for firms to make zero economic profits. |
Imperfect markets include: monopoly (single supplier), oligopoly (small number of suppliers), and monopolistic competition (many suppliers of similar but differentiated products). |
Imperfect competition arises because of barriers to entry into the market. |
Imperfect competition causes lower equilibrium quantities and higher equilibrium price, causing total surplus to be lower than it would be in a competitive market. |
Profits from imperfect competition arise from new methods of production, new markets, and/or new goods/services. |
Market failures arise when breakdowns in private property system causes market outcomes to deviate from socially efficient outcome. |
Externalities occur when important economic decisions occur outside of the market. Possible solutions include creating a market for those interactions, and/or government regulation. |
All goods/services can be classified along two dimensions: extent rivalry in consumption, where consumption for one means less for another, and ease of excludability, where who controls the good. There are 4 categories of good/service: private goods, common resources, collective goods, and public goods. |
Governments are distinguished from private organizations through their ability to enforce taxes and their monopoly on legitimate force. |
Pork barrel politics and rent seeking are sources of inefficiency of government programs, as everyone pays for them, but one area gains the benefit. |
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Macroeconomics
Macroeconomics is concerned with: (1) What determines long-run growth, and (2) what are the causes and consequences of short-run fluctuations in economic activity, employment, and inflation. |
Total output of economy is measured using Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which is the market value of all final goods/services produced within a country during a specified period of time. |
In US, output has grown much faster than population since 1900 (40x vs 4x). |
Business cycle is the alternation between recessions (distance between peak and trough) and expansions (distance between trough and peak). |
Labor force is total of all individuals who are either working or fit for work but unemployed. |
Unemployment is categorized into three subtopics: 1)frictional (unemployment by choice), 2) structural (technology shift in industry), or cyclical (due to business cycle). |
Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Gross Domestic Product Deflator are two measures of inflation (prices in economy are all increasing). |
GDP is a measure of production, but at the level of the economy, production = expenditures = income. |
4 categories of expenditures: 1) consumption, 2) investment, 3) government purchases of goods/services, and 4) net exports. |
Labor productivity depends on quantities of physical and human capital, natural resources, technological understanding, and political/legal environment. |
Savings is a term for income not spent on consuming goods/services, while investments is a term for purchase of new capital equipment. |
Financial markets are the institutions through which individuals who have money they want to save can supply these funds to persons or companies who wish to borrow money to invest. |
In a closed market, savings must equal investments. In an open economy, savings must equal investments plus net capital outflows. |
In financial markets, interest rate is adjusted to equate the supply of saving to the demand of saving. |
Money serves the following functions: 1) medium of exchange, 2) unit of account, and 3) a store of value. |
Monetary value is compared using M1 (liquid assets such as cash, checkable deposits, and traveler's checks) and M2 (not very liquid assets such as M1 plus savings/time deposits, certificates of deposits, and money market funds). |
Federal Reserve is central bank of the US, was established in 1913, consists of 12 district banks located throughout the country and the Federal Reserve Board, located in Washington, D.C. |
The Federal Reserve controls the supply of money in the economy and acts as lender of last resort for the banking system. |
Effects of increasing the supply of money: 1) short term effects include credit conditions and influence on the level of economic activity, and 2) long-term effects include changing prices but no real effect on the economy. |
Output gap is used to analyze short-term variations in economic activity, and is calculated by the difference between actual output and potential output. |
Economy's output is determined by its potential output, but is also determined by aggregate demand, as short-term prices influence demand outside of potential output values. |
When potential output and actual output do not align, deviations cause them to equate. Monetary and fiscal policies are used to help the recovery from deviations. |
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Economics of Technology and Innovation
"Great Enrichment" refers to periods of industrialization since the 1800s indicated by advances in material living standards, connectedness through transportation and information networks, and health/safety. |
Primary drivers of industrialization include technology revolutions - mechanization of factories/farms, materials for manufacturing/construction, agricultural productivity, new sources of energy, powered transportation, electronic communications, and better health through sanitation, vaccines, and antibiotics. |
US spends 2.5% GDP on research (largest supplier in the world), contributing to 1% annual growth in total factor productivity, a common way to measure technological progress. Estimates show that for every $1 spent on R&D, $3.60 is made in social value. |
Private companies tend to underinvest, as they are worried competitive companies may benefit from information spillover. Business employ imperfect strategies to mitigate this - secrecy, intellectual property, lead time, and complimentary assets. |
Innovation is also supported by government and non-profit investments in scientific research. |
Institutions are main factor connecting investors with inventions. |
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