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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

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

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