Basic Economic Ideas-Min
Basic Economic Ideas-Min
Basic Economic Ideas-Min
CONTENTS
The fundamental economic problem
Factors of production
Positive and Normative statement
Production possibility curves
Movement in PPC curve
Shift in PPC curve
Money
Characteristics of money and barter
The fundamental economic problem
Scarcity: The excess of human wants over what can actually be produced to fulfil these wants
Choice
Choice underpins the concept that resources are scarce so choices have to be made by consumers,
firms, and governments.
Sacrifice
Choice involves sacrifice. The more food you choose to buy, the less money you will have to spend on
other goods.
Opportunity cost
In other words, the production or consumption of one thing involves the sacrifice of alternatives. This
sacrifice of alternatives in the production (or consumption) of a good is known as its opportunity cost.
Opportunity cost is the cost expressed in terms of the best alternative that is forgone.
The central economic problem is that of scarcity. Given that there is a limited supply of factors of production, it is
impossible to provide everybody with everything they want. Potential demands exceed potential supplies.
Factors of production are the inputs into the production of goods and services. The four factors of production are:
Land
Examples: Surface of the earth, lakes, rivers, forests or the area of land that makes up a farm or factory.
Labour
Capital
Capital consists of all those inputs that have each had to be produced in the first place.
Capital goods help land and labour produce more units of output – they improve the output from land and labour.
The reward to capital is the rate of return that is earned. These three factors are organised into units of production by
firms.
Entrepreneur
Enterprise:
Positive statement
It may be right or wrong, but its accuracy can be tested by appealing to the facts.
Examples
‘Unemployment is rising’,
Normative statement
It is a statement about what ought or ought not to be, about whether something is good or bad,
desirable or undesirable.
Examples
P o s i t i ve
ic n o r m an d
Economm statemaetive
proble nts
Basic
economic
PPCs ideas
M on
ey
Production possibility curves
Production possibility curve
A production possibility curve is a curve showing all the possible combinations of two goods that an
economy can produce within a specified time period with all its resources fully and efficiently employed.
There is no guarantee that resources will be fully employed, or that they will be used in the most
efficient way possible. The nation may thus be producing at a point inside the curve: for example, point
v.
By using its resources to the full, the nation could move out onto the curve: to point x or y. It could thus
produce more clothing and more food.
A movement in the production possibility curve is caused by the decision to change the composition of
goods produced.
For example, this could happen as a result of government directives in a command economy for example
or through changes in demand for alternative goods in a market economy.
Consider an example where the free market decides to produce more clothing instead of food because it
has become more profitable
The fact that to produce more of one good involves producing less of the other is illustrated by the
downward sloping nature of the PPC curve.
For example, the country could move from point x to point y in the figure below, in doing so, it would be
producing an extra 2 million units of clothing, but 3 million units less of food. Thus the opportunity cost
of the 2 million extra units of clothing would be 3 million units of food forgone.
A production possibility curve illustrates the microeconomic issues of choice and opportunity cost.
Shift in PPC curve
Shift in the production possibility curve
There will be a shift in the production possibility curve when economies can gain or lose
resources; the quality of resources and the state of technical knowledge can also change.
The figures below show the outcomes of changes in the quantity and quality of resources and
changes in technology.
FIGURE 1
FIGURE 2
The production possibilities could have declined. This could be because in some way
the resources available to the economy have declined. Perhaps some of the economy's natural
resources have become exhausted or the working population is falling. In this case, the
production possibility curve would shift inwards from ppc1 to ppc2.
too Lazy to Study .com
MAKE A MINDMAP
t
Movemen
Shift
PPC curves
Money
Money
A simple definition of money is that it is anything that is regularly used to buy goods and services.
Money is generally cash in the form of coins and notes but the definition also includes bank
deposits, cheques, debit cards and credit cards.
Near money
This is a term that is used to denote non-cash assets that can be quickly and easily turned into cash.
Such assets include foreign currencies, savings accounts, bonds and certificates of deposits.
Functions of money
A medium of exchange:
Money is the ‘medium’, or form, that buyers use for purchases; sellers are willing to accept this
medium in exchange for these purchases.
A unit of account:
Money is a unit of account, as it measures the market value of different goods and services. It is
for more efficient for trading purposes to express the price of goods and services in dollars
People often want to agree today the price of some future payment. For example, workers and
managers will want to agree the wage rate for the coming year.
A store of value:
Money is a store of value as it can be stored and used at a later date in the future. This means that
money must be able to hold its purchasing power over time.
To be acceptable from a day to day practical standpoint, money must be portable and durable.
Acceptability
Money is widely recognised and accepted as a medium of payment for goods and services.
Divisibility
As money is a measure of the value of goods and services, it must be divisible cattle and livestock do not make
'useful' money as they are not truly divisible
Scarcity
In the absence of money, people have to use a barter system in order to trade goods and services. Bartering is
the act of swapping items in exchange for other items through a process of bargaining and negotiation.
For example, someone might trade five sacks of rice for one cow, or four chickens for a sheep.
The person with chickens must find a trader who wants chickens in exchange for their sheep. As two people
engaged in a trade must both want what the other person is offering, bartering is highly inefficient.
Divisibility
Portability
Compare the portability of a sheep or fish with that of paper money (banknotes).
eristics
Charactbharter
Money and