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Ten Principles of Economics
1. Ten Principles of Economics
CHAPTER
1
Ten Principles of
Economics
Microeonomics
N. Gregory
PRINCIPLES OF
Mankiw
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by Ron Cronovich
© 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning, all rights reserved
2. In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions:
What kinds of questions does economics address?What are the principles of how people make
decisions?
What are the principles of how people interact?
What are the principles of how the economy as a
whole works?
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3. Group discussion
As a group, think of any decision you recentlyhad to make regarding some purchase of any
good or service.
Think about the following questions:
With whom did you interact when purchasing
this good/service?
What were the alternative products available to
you?
What factors determined your choice of the
product that you finally bought?
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4. What Economics Is All About
Scarcity: the limited nature of society’sresources
Economics: the study of how society manages
its scarce resources, e.g.
how people decide what to buy,
how much to work, save, and spend
how firms decide how much to produce,
how many workers to hire
how society decides how to divide its resources
between national defense, consumer goods,
protecting the environment, and other needs
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5. What economics studies
Factors of productionL-Land
K-Capital
H: Human
capital
Entreprene
urship
Limited resources
Unlimited desires
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6. Check yourself
Economics deals primarily with the conceptof
A. scarcity.
B. money.
C. poverty.
D. banking.
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7. Check yourself
1.A society allocates its scarce resources to various
jobs. These scarce resources include
A. land.
B. people.
C. machines.
D. All of the above are correct.
What is #4?
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8. Check yourself
The phenomenon of scarcity stems from the fact thatA. most economies’ production methods are not
very good.
B. in most economies, wealthy people consume
disproportionate quantities of goods and
services.
C. governments restrict production of too many
goods and services.
D. resources are limited.
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9. The principles of HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
10. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #1: People Face TradeoffsAll decisions involve tradeoffs. Examples:
Going to a party the night before your midterm
leaves less time for studying.
Having more money to buy stuff requires working
longer hours, which leaves less time for leisure.
Protecting the environment requires resources
that could otherwise be used to produce
consumer goods.
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11. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #1: People Face TradeoffsSociety faces an important tradeoff:
efficiency vs. equality
Efficiency: when society gets the most from its
scarce resources
Equality: when prosperity is distributed uniformly
among society’s members
Tradeoff: To achieve greater equality,
could redistribute income from wealthy to poor.
But this reduces incentive to work and produce,
shrinks the size of the economic “pie.”
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12. Connect the boxes
Achieving the goals withinshort period of time no
matter what
efficiency
Equal distribution of benefits
among all
effectiveness
Equal opportunities
available to all
equality
Getting the maximum benefit
out of the limited resources
equity
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13. Give ONE word that would best capture the notion of
efficiencyeffectiveness
equality
equity
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14.
As a result of a successful attempt by government tocut the economic pie into more equal slices,
a. the pie gets larger, and there will be more pie
overall.
b.the pie gets smaller, and there will be less pie
overall.
c. it increases the reward for working hard,
resulting in people producing more goods and
services.
d.those who earn more income pay less in taxes.
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15. Equality and cheating
1. Consequences of suchhelp to YOU?
2. Your suggestions re.
my actions?
3. What is cheating?
Quizzes and exam
questions purchased
copying and letting
others to copy your work
Paraphrasing answers
From the internet
From ‘friends’
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16. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #2: The Cost of Something IsWhat You Give Up to Get It
Making decisions requires comparing the costs
and benefits of alternative choices.
The opportunity cost of any item is
whatever must be given up to obtain it.
It is the relevant cost for decision making.
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17. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #2: The Cost of Something IsWhat You Give Up to Get It
Examples:
The opportunity cost of…
…going to college for a year is not just the tuition,
books, and fees, but also the foregone wages.
…seeing a movie is not just the price of the ticket,
but the value of the time you spend in the theater.
… getting a good grade with your ‘friend’s help’….
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18. Conclusion
We face tradeoffsLimited resources
Owning any
resource leads to
increase of the
opportunity costs
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19.
1. Suppose that you have received $300 as a birthdaygift. You can spend it today or you can put the money
in a bank account for a year and earn 5 percent
interest. The opportunity cost of spending the money
today, in terms of what you could have after one year,
is
A. $0.
B. $15.
C. $305.
D. $315.
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20.
1. Melody decides to spend three hours workingovertime rather than going to the park with her
friends. She earns $20 per hour for overtime work.
Her opportunity cost of working is
A. the $60 she earns working.
B. the $60 minus the enjoyment she would have
received from going to the park.
C. the enjoyment she would have received had she
gone to the park.
D. nothing, since she would have received less than
$60 worth of enjoyment from going to the park.
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21.
3. Hamid spends an hour studying instead of watching TVwith his friends. The opportunity cost to him of studying is
A. the improvement in his grades from studying for the
hour.
B. the improvement in his grades from studying minus
the enjoyment of watching TV.
C. the enjoyment he would have received if he had
watched TV with his friends.
D. zero. Since Hamid chose to study rather than to
watch TV, the value of studying must have been
greater to him than the value of watching TV.
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22. Economic decision-making
Principle #1: People Face TradeoffsPrinciple #2: The Cost of Something Is
What You Give Up to Get It
Principle #3: Rational People Think at the
Margin.
Principle #4: People Respond to Incentives
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23. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #3: Rational People Think at the MarginRational people
systematically and purposefully do the best they can to
achieve their objectives.
With your groups:
depict an image of what you think a rational and
irrational person would look like (make a picture or use
any symbols)
OR
an example of a rational and irrational decision
5 minutes!
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24. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #3: Rational People Think at the MarginRational people
systematically and purposefully do the best they can
to achieve their objectives.
make decisions by evaluating costs and benefits of
marginal changes – incremental adjustments to an
existing plan.
Rational people ->
Bounded rationality (not all available
is processed)
information
Behavioral economics
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25. Marginal means… (two words)
additionalfuture
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26. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #3: Rational People Think at theMargin.
Examples:
When a student considers whether to go to
college for an additional year, he compares the
fees & foregone wages to the extra income
he could earn with the extra year of education.
When a manager considers whether to increase
output, she compares the cost of the needed
labor and materials to the extra revenue.
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27. Revision
Efficiency and equality in economyOpportunity cost
Rational economic people
Marginal changes
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28. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #4: People Respond to IncentivesIncentive: something that induces a person to
act, i.e. the prospect of a reward or punishment.
Rational people respond to incentives.
Examples:
When gasoline prices rise, consumers buy
more hybrid cars and fewer gasoline consuming
cars.
When cigarette taxes increase,
teen smoking falls.
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29. HOW PEOPLE MAKE DECISIONS
Principle #4: People Respond to Incentiveseconomic
social
moral
E.g.: vaccination and incentives for/against
E.g.: an experiment in Israel’s babies’ day-care
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30. Overview
Principle #1: People Face TradeoffsPrinciple #2: The Cost of Something Is
What You Give Up to Get It
Principle #3: Rational People Think at the
Margin.
Principle #4: People Respond to Incentives
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31. A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 1 Applying the principles
ACTIVE LEARNING 1Applying the principles
You are selling your 1996 Mustang. You have
already spent $1000 on repairs.
At the last minute, the transmission dies. You can
pay $600 to have it repaired, or sell the car “as is.”
In each of the following scenarios, should you have
the transmission repaired? Explain.
A. Blue book value is $6500 if transmission works,
$5700 if it doesn’t
B. Blue book value is $6000 if transmission works,
$5500 if it doesn’t
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32. A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 1 Answers
ACTIVE LEARNING 1Answers
Cost of fixing transmission = $600
A. Blue book value is $6500 if transmission works,
$5700 if it doesn’t
Benefit of fixing the transmission = $800
($6500 – 5700).
It’s worthwhile to have the transmission fixed.
B. Blue book value is $6000 if transmission works,
$5500 if it doesn’t
Benefit of fixing the transmission is only $500.
Paying $600 to fix transmission is not worthwhile.
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33. A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 1 Answers
ACTIVE LEARNING 1Answers
Observations:
The $1000 you previously spent on repairs is
irrelevant. What matters is the cost and benefit
of the marginal repair (the transmission).
The change in incentives from scenario A
to scenario B caused your decision to change.
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34. The principles of HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
35. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #5: Trade Can Make EveryoneBetter Off
Rather than being self-sufficient,
people can specialize in producing one good or
service and exchange it for other goods.
Countries also benefit from trade & specialization:
Get a better price abroad for goods they produce
Buy other goods more cheaply from abroad than
could be produced at home
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36. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #6: Markets Are Usually A GoodWay to Organize Economic Activity
Market: a group of buyers and sellers
(need not be in a single location)
“Organized economic activity” means
determining
what goods to produce
how to produce them
how much of each to produce
who gets them
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37. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #6: Markets Are Usually A GoodWay to Organize Economic Activity
A market economy allocates resources through
the decentralized decisions of many households
and firms as they interact in markets.
Famous insight by Adam Smith in
The Wealth of Nations (1776):
Each of these households and firms
acts as if “led by an invisible hand”
to promote general economic well-being.
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38. The system of communication in economy
L-LandK-Capital
H: Human
capital
Entreprene
urship
?
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39. Examples of spontaneous markets
USSR: market relationships duringthe deficit times
Market relations among prisoners of
war after WorldWar II
Redford. Economic Organization of
POW camp. 1945
40. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #6: Markets Are Usually A GoodWay to Organize Economic Activity
The invisible hand works through the price system:
The interaction of buyers and sellers
determines prices.
Each price reflects the good’s value to buyers
and the cost of producing the good.
Prices guide self-interested households and
firms to make decisions that, in many cases,
maximize society’s economic well-being.
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41. Conclusions from the trade
Why the prices offered by the sellers differ?What is the price that ensures the maximum
number of goods traded?
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42. Conclusion #2
Market efficiencyAdam Smith (XVIII century)
. The Weath of the Nations
Adam Smith: invisible hand
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43. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #7: Governments Can SometimesImprove Market Outcomes
Important role for govt: enforce property rights
(with police, courts)
People are less inclined to work, produce, invest, or
purchase if large risk of their property being stolen.
Discussion: what are the pros and cons of KZT 42500
payments to KZ citizen during the coronavirus
lockdown for the economy of Kazakhstan?
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44. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #7: Governments Can SometimesImprove Market Outcomes
Market failure: when the market fails to allocate
society’s resources efficiently
Causes:
Externalities, when the production or consumption
of a good affects bystanders (e.g. pollution)
Market power, a single buyer or seller has
substantial influence on market price (e.g. monopoly)
In such cases, public policy may promote efficiency.
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45. HOW PEOPLE INTERACT
Principle #7: Governments Can SometimesImprove Market Outcomes
Govt may alter market outcome to promote equity
If the market’s distribution of economic well-being
is not desirable, tax or welfare policies can change
how the economic “pie” is divided.
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46. How people interact? Summary
Principle #5: Trade Can Make EveryoneBetter Off
Principle #6: Markets Are Usually A Good
Way to Organize Economic Activity
Principle #7: Governments Can Sometimes
Improve Market Outcomes
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47. A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 2 Discussion Questions
ACTIVE LEARNING 2Discussion Questions
In each of the following situations, what is the
government’s role? Does the government’s
intervention improve the outcome?
a. Public schools for secondary education
b. Workplace safety regulations
c. Public highways
d. Patent laws, which allow drug companies to
charge high prices for life-saving drugs
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48. The principles of HOW THE ECONOMY AS A WHOLE WORKS
49. HOW THE ECONOMY AS A WHOLE WORKS
Principle #8: A country’s standard of livingdepends on its ability to produce goods &
services.
Huge variation in living standards across
countries and over time:
Average income in rich countries is more than
ten times average income in poor countries.
The U.S. standard of living today is about
eight times larger than 100 years ago.
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50. Question
In our Padlet country, what goods are produced?What determines the total ‘revenue’ of the
sellers?
What determines the number of videos that will
be produced in our ‘Padlet country’?
If the number of videos and points given for each
video is not limited in this course, will the
average grade for the course increase? Will you
be better off in this case?
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51. HOW THE ECONOMY AS A WHOLE WORKS
Principle #8: A country’s standard of livingdepends on its ability to produce goods &
services.
The most important determinant of living standards:
productivity, the amount of goods and services
produced per unit of labor.
Productivity depends on the equipment, skills, and
technology available to workers.
Other factors (e.g., labor unions, competition from
abroad) have far less impact on living standards.
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52. HOW THE ECONOMY AS A WHOLE WORKS
Principle #9: Prices rise when the governmentprints too much money.
Inflation: increases in the general level of prices.
In the long run, inflation is almost always caused by
excessive growth in the quantity of money, which
causes the value of money to fall.
The faster the govt creates money,
the greater the inflation rate.
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53. HOW THE ECONOMY AS A WHOLE WORKS
Principle #10: Society faces a short-runtradeoff between inflation and unemployment
In the short-run (1 – 2 years),
many economic policies push inflation and
unemployment in opposite directions.
Other factors can make this tradeoff more or less
favorable, but the tradeoff is always present.
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54. FYI: How to Read Your Textbook
1. Read before class.You’ll get more out of class.
2. Summarize, don’t highlight.
Highlighting is a passive activity that won’t improve
your comprehension or retention.
Instead, summarize each section in your own
words. Then, compare your summary to the one
at the end of the chapter.
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55. FYI: How to Read Your Textbook
3. Test yourself.Try the “Quick Quiz” that follows each section
before moving on to the next section.
Write your answers down, compare them to the
answers in the back of the book. If your answers
are incorrect, review the section before moving on.
4. Practice, practice, practice.
Work through the end-of-chapter review questions
and problems. They are often good practice for the
exams. And the more you use your new
knowledge, the more solid it will become.
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56. FYI: How to Read Your Textbook
5. Go online.The book comes with excellent web resources,
including practice quizzes, tools to strengthen your
graphing skills, helpful video clips, and other
resources to help you learn the textbook material
more easily and effectively. Visit:
http://academic.cengage.com/economics/mankiw
6. Study in groups.
Get together with a few classmates to review each
chapter, quiz each other, and help each other
understand the material.
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57. FYI: How to Read Your Textbook
7. Teach someone.The best way to learn something is to teach it to
someone else, such as a study partner or friend.
8. Don’t skip the real world examples.
Read the Case Studies and “In The News” boxes in
each chapter. They will help you see how the new
terms, concepts, models, and graphs apply to the
real world. As you read the newspaper or watch the
evening news, see if you can find the connections
with what you’re learning in the textbook.
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58. CHAPTER SUMMARY
The principles of decision making are:People face tradeoffs.
The cost of any action is measured in terms of
foregone opportunities.
Rational people make decisions by comparing
marginal costs and marginal benefits.
People respond to incentives.
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59. CHAPTER SUMMARY
The principles of interactions among people are:Trade can be mutually beneficial.
Markets are usually a good way of coordinating
trade.
Govt can potentially improve market outcomes if
there is a market failure or if the market outcome
is inequitable.
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60. CHAPTER SUMMARY
The principles of the economy as a whole are:Productivity is the ultimate source of living
standards.
Money growth is the ultimate source of inflation.
Society faces a short-run tradeoff between
inflation and unemployment.
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