Principles of Economics: Unit 1 - Foundations
Objectives of Unit 1
- Understand what economics is.
- Learn how economists think.
- Recognize the value of an economist’s perspective.
- Analyze how people make decisions.
- Explore how economies function.
What is Economics?
- Economics is a social science aimed at satisfying needs and wants through allocating scarce resources with alternative uses.
- Focuses on scarcity and choice.
- Provides a framework for analyzing economic and some non-economic problems.
Economist's Perspective
- Five fundamental ideas:
- People respond to incentives.
- Resources are scarce.
- Real values matter.
- Prices reflect scarcity.
- Returns eventually diminish.
1st Foundation: People Respond to Incentives
- Incentives affect behavior; improvements in benefits/costs lead to increased participation.
- Incentives can be financial or non-financial, such as social approval or personal morals.
- Economic rationality refers to predictable group behavior in response to changing incentives.
- Understanding incentives is crucial to grasping economic decision-making.
2nd Foundation: Resources are Scarce
- Unlimited desires vs. limited resources necessitate choices and trade-offs.
- Opportunity cost: The value of the best alternative forgone when making a choice.
- Nothing is truly free; every choice incurs an opportunity cost.
3rd Foundation: Real Values Matter
- Decisions assess benefits/costs in real terms, which consider purchasing power.
- Nominal values, derived from currency, can be misleading due to inflation.
- Real values guide economic behavior more reliably than nominal values.
4th Foundation: Prices Reflect Scarcity
- Prices adjust according to changes in supply and demand; increased scarcity leads to higher prices.
- Price changes serve as a market signal to guide economic adjustments.
- Sometimes prices lag behind changes in market conditions.
5th Foundation: Returns Eventually Diminish
- Each additional unit of input yields decreasing marginal returns when other factors are unchanged.
- Diminishing returns affects decision-making in both consumption and production.
- Economic choices depend on the marginal benefits of efforts.
Pulling it All Together: How an Economy Works
- Interconnected markets respond to supply, demand, and price changes.
- The mechanism of price signals encourages responsive behavior in consumers and producers, illustrating the concept of the "Invisible Hand" of the marketplace, as noted by Adam Smith.