Fundamental Economic concepts (FECs) Economics- Unit 1: Chapter 1-2
FEC #1- Scarcity and choice
What I need to live:
Food
Water
Air
Shelter
Jesus
Sleep
What I want to have:
A job I love
To be happy with my life
Get married
Have kidsScarcity everything and everywhere is limited
Resources:
Land- anything on the land or in the land that has value; examples: ON: trees, crops, livestock, building; IN: water, oil, gold
Labor- workers and their level of education and experience; examples: teacher with no experience not as good
Capital- any good or service used to produce another good or service; examples: car with all parts (lots of capital)
Entrepreneurial ability (sometimes called managerial ability)- ability to take land, labor, and capital and create a good or service that people want to buy; examples: good management
Goal of all Economics- limited resources with unlimited wants and needs- goal is to stretch out resources to meet as many wants and needs as possible
Forces us to MAKE CHOICES
FEC #2- Rationality
Economics is based on the fact that our choices are rational and, therefore, meet our utility
Utility- your happiness or satisfaction
Rational self-interest– your personal utility (happiness) your rational self-interest is different than anyone else’s bc based on your own personal thought process
How do you know if something is rational?
Cost Benefit Analysis- a way to illustrate a choice or decision
A cost is a con; the benefit is a pro
Weigh the costs and benefits
If the benefits outweigh the costs- the choice is rational
Microeconomics- decision-making by individuals, households, and businesses (examples: pay bills, family vacation)
Macroeconomics- decision-making by governments or countries (how much taxes, should we drill for oil)
FEC #3- Trade-offs and Opportunity Costs
List anything you've ever gotten for free
What makes these things free? No cost
Famous Economics Saying: “There is no such thing as a free lunch.”
Nothing is free.
Costs are more than just money- time and energy; if you give something up it could be a cost (it can be anything)
Trade off- the choice you did not choose (go home to take a nap instead of working out)
Opportunity cost- benefits of the choice you didn’t make; the benefits become costs (go to UTC instead of UTK lose the choice of an SEC school)
Cost Benefit Analysis
Chick Fil A
Costs: chicken minis stop at 10:30, closed on Sundays, limited options
Benefits: not far from home, mostly quick, good fries
trade-off - benefits now become opportunity costs
Boathouse
Costs: pricey, downtown, time, gas, look nicer
Benefits: love the food, see the lake, good atmosphere
Choice
FEC #4- Incentives Matter
All economic theory is based on the fact that incentives influence human behavior in a predictable manner.
Incentive- pushing you to make a choice: any reason you do something
Intrinsic v. Extrinsic- intrinsic=inside; extrinsic= you are being influenced by something outside of your own self-interest
What are some examples of each?
What about incentives that influenced your CBA?
Types of Incentives
Positive incentive- rewards you get, added bonuses, (ex: sign contract and get an added bonus; buy one get one free)
Negative incentive- consequences or punishments
Consumer incentive- buyers and consumers (most effective is sales); modifying consumer behavior to consume more
Producer incentive- produce (business owners)-modify producer behavior so they produce more (moving out to Ooltewah to meet people's needs)
If incentives change, human behavior will change, but it will also work to an equilibrium (balance)
For example: consumers and producers both win when things are on sale: producers get rid of products, and consumers get more product
Problems with Incentives- people learn how to work the system to get its best benefit; not perfect
FEC #1- Scarcity and choice
What I need to live:
Food
Water
Air
Shelter
Jesus
Sleep
What I want to have:
A job I love
To be happy with my life
Get married
Have kidsScarcity everything and everywhere is limited
Resources:
Land- anything on the land or in the land that has value; examples: ON: trees, crops, livestock, building; IN: water, oil, gold
Labor- workers and their level of education and experience; examples: teacher with no experience not as good
Capital- any good or service used to produce another good or service; examples: car with all parts (lots of capital)
Entrepreneurial ability (sometimes called managerial ability)- ability to take land, labor, and capital and create a good or service that people want to buy; examples: good management
Goal of all Economics- limited resources with unlimited wants and needs- goal is to stretch out resources to meet as many wants and needs as possible
Forces us to MAKE CHOICES
FEC #2- Rationality
Economics is based on the fact that our choices are rational and, therefore, meet our utility
Utility- your happiness or satisfaction
Rational self-interest– your personal utility (happiness) your rational self-interest is different than anyone else’s bc based on your own personal thought process
How do you know if something is rational?
Cost Benefit Analysis- a way to illustrate a choice or decision
A cost is a con; the benefit is a pro
Weigh the costs and benefits
If the benefits outweigh the costs- the choice is rational
Microeconomics- decision-making by individuals, households, and businesses (examples: pay bills, family vacation)
Macroeconomics- decision-making by governments or countries (how much taxes, should we drill for oil)
FEC #3- Trade-offs and Opportunity Costs
List anything you've ever gotten for free
What makes these things free? No cost
Famous Economics Saying: “There is no such thing as a free lunch.”
Nothing is free.
Costs are more than just money- time and energy; if you give something up it could be a cost (it can be anything)
Trade off- the choice you did not choose (go home to take a nap instead of working out)
Opportunity cost- benefits of the choice you didn’t make; the benefits become costs (go to UTC instead of UTK lose the choice of an SEC school)
Cost Benefit Analysis
Chick Fil A
Costs: chicken minis stop at 10:30, closed on Sundays, limited options
Benefits: not far from home, mostly quick, good fries
trade-off - benefits now become opportunity costs
Boathouse
Costs: pricey, downtown, time, gas, look nicer
Benefits: love the food, see the lake, good atmosphere
Choice
FEC #4- Incentives Matter
All economic theory is based on the fact that incentives influence human behavior in a predictable manner.
Incentive- pushing you to make a choice: any reason you do something
Intrinsic v. Extrinsic- intrinsic=inside; extrinsic= you are being influenced by something outside of your own self-interest
What are some examples of each?
What about incentives that influenced your CBA?
Types of Incentives
Positive incentive- rewards you get, added bonuses, (ex: sign contract and get an added bonus; buy one get one free)
Negative incentive- consequences or punishments
Consumer incentive- buyers and consumers (most effective is sales); modifying consumer behavior to consume more
Producer incentive- produce (business owners)-modify producer behavior so they produce more (moving out to Ooltewah to meet people's needs)
If incentives change, human behavior will change, but it will also work to an equilibrium (balance)
For example: consumers and producers both win when things are on sale: producers get rid of products, and consumers get more product
Problems with Incentives- people learn how to work the system to get its best benefit; not perfect