ECON2105 Chap. 1
ECON2105
What is economics?
We want more than what we want, but because of scarcity we must make decisions.
Our decisions re dependent on the incentives.
An incentive is a reward than encourages an action or a penalty that discourages an action.
What do we study in economics: PEOPLE
Core Principles of ECON:
Cost-Benefit Principle
· Keep doing something until the marginal cost = marginal benefit
· Only do something if the benefit is as large or larger than the cost
· Compare intangible benefits to monetary cost by using willingness to pay
· Convert each cost and each benefit into its monetary equivalent
· Cost of buying and maintaining a car for work vs. Benefit of not spending money on an uber
Opportunity Cost Principle
· Opportunity Cost is your next best alternative
· All choices require a trade-off
· Time is scarce, to come to class you must give up another activity (sleep, gym, etc)
· Not all out of pocket costs are real opportunity costs
· Ask “or what” to find the next best alternative
· Sunk cost: cost in the past, cant be reversed
· PPF – Production Possibilities Frontier: illustrates trade-offs between 2 choices
Marginal Cost Principle
· What are the costs and benefits of doing one more of something
· Keep on doing more as long as the marginal benefit is larger than the marginal cost.
· Should I buy one more? à Is MB > MC? à yes? Keep going! No? stop!
Interdependence Principle
· The choice you makes depends on your own choices, people/firms in a market, markets, and time
· When any of those markets change, your best choice might change “what else?”
· Your choices: If you take an econ class, you wont be able to take other classes at the same time.
· Others’ choices: If another student takes the last spot, you’ll have to pick a different class.
· Other markets. If you believe the skills you learn in ECON have become more valuable, you’ll choose different classes.
· Future choices: Your decision to study Econ today changes the classes you meet the prerequisites for.
ECON2105
What is economics?
We want more than what we want, but because of scarcity we must make decisions.
Our decisions re dependent on the incentives.
An incentive is a reward than encourages an action or a penalty that discourages an action.
What do we study in economics: PEOPLE
Core Principles of ECON:
Cost-Benefit Principle
· Keep doing something until the marginal cost = marginal benefit
· Only do something if the benefit is as large or larger than the cost
· Compare intangible benefits to monetary cost by using willingness to pay
· Convert each cost and each benefit into its monetary equivalent
· Cost of buying and maintaining a car for work vs. Benefit of not spending money on an uber
Opportunity Cost Principle
· Opportunity Cost is your next best alternative
· All choices require a trade-off
· Time is scarce, to come to class you must give up another activity (sleep, gym, etc)
· Not all out of pocket costs are real opportunity costs
· Ask “or what” to find the next best alternative
· Sunk cost: cost in the past, cant be reversed
· PPF – Production Possibilities Frontier: illustrates trade-offs between 2 choices
Marginal Cost Principle
· What are the costs and benefits of doing one more of something
· Keep on doing more as long as the marginal benefit is larger than the marginal cost.
· Should I buy one more? à Is MB > MC? à yes? Keep going! No? stop!
Interdependence Principle
· The choice you makes depends on your own choices, people/firms in a market, markets, and time
· When any of those markets change, your best choice might change “what else?”
· Your choices: If you take an econ class, you wont be able to take other classes at the same time.
· Others’ choices: If another student takes the last spot, you’ll have to pick a different class.
· Other markets. If you believe the skills you learn in ECON have become more valuable, you’ll choose different classes.
· Future choices: Your decision to study Econ today changes the classes you meet the prerequisites for.