Chapter 1
market
A market is a group of buyers and sellers of a good or service and the institution of arrangement by which they come together to trade
Allocative efficiency
A state of the economy in which production is in accordance with consumer preferences; in particular, every good or service is produced up to the point where the last unit provides a marginal benefit to society equal to the marginal cost of producing it.
Which of the following is a normative statement?
A. A tax cut should be better for stimulating the economy than a cut in the interest rate. B. All these interest rate cuts should have helped the economy. C. The Fed should not have cut the interest rate so frequently.
Mixed economy
An economy in which most economic decisions result from the interaction of buyers and sellers in markets but in which the government plays a significant role in the allocation of resources.
Market economy
An economy in which the decisions of households and firms interacting in markets allocate economic resources.
Centrally planned economy
An economy in which the government decides how economic resources will be allocated.
Normative Analysis
Concerned with "What ought to be"
Positive Analysis
Concerned with "what is" Measures the cost and benefits of different coerces of action
Who receives goods and services depends largely on
How income is distributed
Which of the following covers the study of topics such as inflation or unemployment?
Macroeconomics
Rationality assumption
The assumption that people do not intentionally make decisions that would leave them worse off.
Opportunity Cost
The highest valued alternative that must be up to engage in an activity.
Which of the following is part of an economic model?
assumptions
Consumers, firms, and the government face the problem of scarcity
by trading off one good or service for another. Each choice made comes with an opportunity cost measured by the value of the best alternative given up.
Equity
is harder to define than efficiency, but it usually involves a fair distribution of economic benefits. For some people, equity involves a more equal distribution of economic benefits than would result from an emphasis on efficiency alone.
Economics is a social science because
it applies the scientific method to the study of the interactions among individuals. Because economics is based on studying the actions of individuals, it is a social science. As a social science, economics considers human behavior—particularly decision-making behavior—in every context, not just in the context of business.
In the United States, who receives the goods and services produced depends
largely on how income is distributed. Individuals with the highest income have the ability to buy the most goods and services.
Economists use the word marginal to mean an extra or additional benefit or cost of a decision. An optimal decision occurs when
marginal benefit equals marginal cost.
Macroeconomics is
the study of the economy as a whole, including topics such as inflation, unemployment, and economic growth.
Trade-offs force society to make choices, particularly when answering the following three fundamental questions:
One, what goods and services will be produced? Two, how will the goods and services be produced? Three, who will receive the goods and services produced?
Scarcity
One of the basic facts of life is that people must make choices as they try to attain their goals. This unavoidable fact comes from a reality an economists calls...
Economists emphasize that consumers and firms consistently respond to economic incentives
When a consumer or a firm responds to economic incentives, they choose more over less. If everything else is equal, consumers and firms choose the option that provides the most money. So, ceteris paribus, (everything else equal) people choose the option that returns the highest net monetary benefits.
When Dr. Goldfinger decides on the companies in which he will invest, a ________ issue is being addressed.
microeconomic
Economics is about
positive analysis, which measures the costs and benefits of different courses of action.
Economic models make behavioral assumptions about the motives of consumers and firms.
Economists assume that consumers will buy the goods and services that will maximize their well-being or their satisfaction. Similarly, economists assume that firms act to maximize their profits. These assumptions are simplifications because they do not describe the motives of every consumer and every firm.
Economists use the word marginal to mean an extra or additional benefit or cost of a decision.
Economists reason that the optimal decision is to continue any activity up to the point where the marginal benefit equals the marginal cost—in symbols, where MB = MC. Marginal analysis involves comparing marginal benefits and marginal costs.
Firms choose how to produce the goods and services they sell. In many cases, firms face a trade-off between using more workers or using more machines. For example,
Many times in the past several decades, firms may have chosen between a production method in the United States that uses fewer workers and more machines and a production method in China that uses more workers and fewer machines.
What is always usually Normative
Politics
Economic Models are
Simplified versions of reality designed to analyze "what is" to explain human decision making in any context.
Which of the following is a positive statement?
The FED has cut the key interest rate several times this year.
The common element of the nation's answers to those three key economic questions
The common element of the nation's answers to those three key economic questions has been a centralized authority (such as a king or queen, a dictator, or a central government) assuming responsibility for addressing them.
When the federal government crafts environmental policies that make it less expensive for firms to follow green initiatives
The economic policies are consistent with economic incentives
Microeconomics
The study of how households and firms make choices, how they interact in markets, and how the government attempts to influence their choices
Three fundamental questions of economics concern
The three fundamental questions of economics concern the problem of how to allocate society's scarce resources: what and how many items will be produced, how scarce resources will be organized in the production of the items, and who will be able to obtain the items produced.
A hypothesis in an economic model is
a statement that may be either correct or incorrect about an economic variable. An economic variable is something measurable that can have different values. An economic hypothesis is usually about a causal relationship. Before accepting a hypothesis, we must test it.
bounded rationality
the hypothesis that people are nearly, but not fully, rational, so that they cannot examine every possible choice available to them but instead use simple rules of thumb to sort among the alternatives that happen to occur to them.
Economics
the study of the choices people make to attain their goals, given their scarce resources.