ECON Principles of Economics

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Principles of Economics

Nicholas Gregory Mankiw, born in 1958, is an American economist and professor of Economics at
Harvard University.

Mankiw has stood out as a well-known writer, whose best-selling and intermediate-level textbooks
of economics, “Principles of Economics” and “Macroeconomics”, 2006, have sold over a million
copies and been translated into seventy different languages. Mankiw has written articles in a regular
basis at both academic journals and newspapers, such as “The American Economic Review”, “The
New York Post” or “The Wall Street Post”. He is also a usual participant in many academic and policy
debates.

Gregory Mankiw in his Principles of Economics outlines Ten Principles of Economics:

How People Make Decisions

1. People face trade-offs

 “There is no such thing as a free lunch (TINSTAAFL).” To get one thing that we like, we
usually have to give up another thing that we like. Making decisions requires trading one
goal for another.
 Examples include how students spend their time, how a family decides to spend its income,
how the government spends revenue, and how regulations may protect the environment
at a cost to firm owners.
 A special example of a trade-off is the trade-off between efficiency and equality.
 Definition of efficiency: the property of society getting the maximum benefits from its
scarce resources.
 Definition of equity: the property of distributing economic prosperity fairly among the
members of society.
 For example, tax paid by wealthy people and then distributed to poor may improve
equality but lower the incentive for hard work and therefore reduce the level of
output produced by our resources.
 This implies that the cost of this increased equality is a reduction in the efficient use of
our resources.
 Another Example is “guns and butter”: The more we spend on national defense(guns) to
protect our borders, the less we can spend on consumer goods (butter) to raise our
standard of living at home.
 Recognizing that trade-offs exist does not indicate what decisions should or will be made.

2. The cost of something is what you give up to get it

 Because people face tradeoffs, making decisions requires comparing the costs and benefits
of alternative courses of action.
 The 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
 This is called opportunity cost of resource
 Definition of opportunity cost: whatever must be given up in order to obtain some item
next best alternative forgone
 When making any decision, decision makers should consider the opportunity costs of each
possible.

3. Rational people think at the margin

 Economists generally assume that people are rational.


 Definition of rational: systematically and purposefully doing the best you can to
achieve your objectives.
 Consumers want to purchase the bundle of goods and services that allow them the
greatest level of satisfaction given their incomes and the prices they face.
 Firms want to produce the level of output that maximizes the profits.
 Many decisions in life involve incremental decisions: Should I remain in school this
semester? Should I take another course this semester? Should I study an additional hour
for tomorrow’s exam?
 Rational people often make decisions by comparing marginal benefits and marginal costs.
 If the additional satisfaction obtained by an addition in the units of a commodity is equal to
the price a consumer is willing to pay for that commodity, he achieves maximum
satisfaction, which is the main goal of every rational consumer.
 Example: Suppose that flying a 200-seat plane across the country costs the airline
$1,000,000, which means that the average cost of each seat is $5000. Suppose that
the plane is minutes away from departure and a passenger is willing to pay $3000 for a
seat. Should the airline sell the seat for $3000? In this case, the marginal cost of an
additional passenger is very small.
 Another example: Why is water so cheap while diamonds are expensive? Because
water is plentiful, the marginal benefit of an additional cup is small. Because diamonds
are rare, the marginal benefit of an extra diamond is high.

4. People respond to incentives

 Incentive is something that induces a person to act [by offering rewards to people who
change their behavior].
 Because rational people make decisions by comparing costs and benefits, they respond to
incentives.
 Incentives may possess a negative or a positive intention. It may be in a positive or a
negative way.
For example, by offering a raise in the salary of whosoever works harder can induce people to work
hard which is a positive incentive. Whereas putting a tax on a good, say fuel, can induce people to
consume it less which is a negative incentive.

How People Interact

5. Trade can make everyone better off

 Trade is not like a sports competition, where one side gains and the other side loses.
 Consider trade that takes place inside your home. Your family is likely to be involved in
trade with other families on a daily basis. Most families do not build their own homes,
make their own clothes, or grow their own food.
 Countries benefit from trading with one another as well.
 Trade allows for specialization in products that benefits countries (or families)
 For example, it was widely believed for centuries that in international trade one country's
gain from an exchange must be the other country's loss.
6. Markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity

Many countries that once had centrally planned economies have abandoned this system and are
trying to develop market economies.

 Definition of market economy: an economy that allocates resources through the


decentralized decisions of many firms and households as they interact in markets for goods
and services.
 Market prices reflect both the value of a product to consumers and the cost of the
resources used to produce it.
 Centrally planned economies have failed because they did not allow the market to work.
 Adam Smith and the Invisible Hand
Adam Smith’s 1776 work suggested that although individuals are motivated by self-
interest, an invisible hand guides this self-interest into promoting society’s economic well-
being.

Markets are where the buyers and sellers can meet to get goods and exchange items.

7. Government can sometimes improve market outcomes

There are two broad reasons for the government to interfere with the economy: the promotion of
efficiency and equality.

 Government policy can be most useful when there is market failure.


 Definition of market failure: a situation in which a market left on its own fails to
allocate resources efficiently.
 Examples of Market Failure
 Definition of externality: the impact of one person’s actions on the well-being of a
bystander. (Ex.: Pollution)
 Definition of market power: the ability of a single economic actor (or small group of
actors) to have a substantial influence on market prices.
 Because a market economy rewards people for their ability to produce things that
other people are willing to pay for, there will be an unequal distribution of economic
prosperity.
 Note that the principle states that the government can improve market outcomes. This is
not saying that the government always does improve market outcomes.

How the Economy as a Whole Works

8. A country's standard of living depends on its ability to produce goods and services

 Differences in the standard of living from one country to another are quite large.
 Changes in living standards over time are also quite large.
 The explanation for differences in living standards lies in differences in productivity.
 Definition of productivity: the quantity of goods and services produced from each hour of a
worker’s time.
 High productivity implies a high standard of living.
 Thus, policymakers must understand the impact of any policy on our ability to produce
goods and services.
 To boost living standards the policy makers need to raise productivity by ensuring that
workers are well educated, have the tools needed to produce goods and services, and have
access to the best available technology.
 Per capita income of nation

9. Prices rise when the government prints too much money

 Definition of inflation: sustained increase in the overall level of prices in the economy.
 When the government creates a large amount of money, the value of money falls.
 Examples: Germany after World War I (in the early 1920s), the United States in the 1970s
and Zimbabwe in the 2000s.

10. Society faces a short-run trade off between inflation and unemployment
 Most economists believe that the short-run effect of a monetary injection (injecting/adding
money into the economy) is lower unemployment and higher prices.
 An increase in the amount of money in the economy stimulates spending and
increases the demand of goods and services in the economy.
 Higher demand may over time cause firms to raise their prices but in the meantime, it
also encourages them to increase the quantity of goods and services they produce and
to hire more workers to produce those goods and services. More hiring means lower
unemployment.
 Some economists question whether this relationship still exists.
 The short-run trade-off between inflation and unemployment plays a key role in analysis of
the business cycle.
 Definition of business cycle: fluctuations in economic activity, such as employment and
production.
 Policymakers can exploit this trade-off by using various policy instruments, but the extent
and desirability of these interventions is a subject of continuing debate.

Reference:

1. https://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/10_Principles_of_Economics
2. https://baripedia.org/wiki/Principles_of_economics
3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zF1jfovFsmI

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