Chapter 1
What are four ways to think like an economist?
1. all choices entail opportunity costs 2. decisions are made at the margin 3. incentives matter 4. trade creates value
What is economics?
Economics is the study of how people allocate their limited resources to satisfy their nearly unlimited wants. Because of the limited nature of society's resources, even the most abundant resources are not always plentiful enough everywhere to meet the wants and needs of every person. Economics is not a dismal science.
Markets
bring buyers and sellers together to exchange goods and services
Incentives
factors that motivate a person to act or exert effort
Specialization
occurs when someone focuses his or her skills to become an expert in a particular area
Economic thinking
requires a purposeful evaluation of the available opportunities to make the best decision possible
Marginal thinking
requires decision-makers to evaluate whether the benefit of one more unit of something is greater than its cost
Economists
study how decisions are made
Opportunity cost
the highest-valued alternative that must be sacrificed in order to get something else
Scarcity
the limited nature of society's resources, given society's unlimited wants and needs
Comparative advantage
the situation in which an individual, business, or country can produce at a lower opportunity cost than a competitor can
Economics
the study of how people allocate their limited resources to satisfy their nearly unlimited wants
Microeconomics
the study of the individual units that make up the economy
Macroeconomics
the study of the overall aspects and workings of an economy (inflation, growth, employment, interest rates, and the productivity of the economy as a whole)
Trade
the voluntary exchange of goods and services between two or more parties