Economics, Unit 2: Rational Decision-Making and Cost-Benefit Analysis
Rational Decision-Making
A process of comparing costs and benefits of various options to determine which are rational and which are rational
Fixed Costs
Costs that you only pay once, or that you multiple times, but each time you pay the same amount.
Variable Costs
Costs that you pay multiple times, but each time you pay a different amount
Rational Decisions
Decisions whose total benefit is greater than or equal to their total cost
Irrational Decisions
Decisions whose total cost is greater than their total benefit
Implicit Costs
Negative feelings that you experience or non-physical things that you give up as result of a decision (giving up a relationship, losing time, feeling sad, etc...)
Rational Decision-Making Cheat Sheet
Rational --> Total Benefit > Total Cost or Total Benefit = Total Cost Irrational --> Total Cost > Total Benefit
Utility
Something intangible that you gain as a result of a decision (personal satisfaction, happiness, love, pride, etc...)
Explicit Costs
Something physical you give up as a result of a decision (money, other valuables)
Monetary Benefits
Something tangible that you gain as a result of a decision (money, a car, a kiss)
Cost-Benefit Analysis
The process of calculating your total cost and total benefit so that you can compare them to determine if you are making a rational decision
Total Benefit
The sum of all benefits, both Monetary Benefits and Utility. Benefits are things you gain as a result of a decision
Total Cost
The sum of all of the costs, including fixed, variable, explicit and implicit costs. Costs are things you give up as a result of a decision.