Inbound 5117552937865489854
Inbound 5117552937865489854
Inbound 5117552937865489854
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
Lesson 1
BASIC ECONOMIC CONCEPTS
OBJECTIVES:
1. To define economics.
2. To discuss the importance of economics.
3. To discuss why we study economics.
4. To identify the fundamental economic activities and factors of production.
5. To compare the divisions of economics.
B. Basic Terms
Needs – basic requirements for survival like food, water, and shelter. In recent years, we
have seen a shift of certain items from wants to needs like telephone services, motor
vehicles, and education.
Moslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Wants – the various desires of man that must be satisfied with goods and services. Wants
are defined as something that a person would like to possess; either immediately or at later
time. Wants are not as important as needs, because a person can live without wants.
Goods versus
Goods – things (tangible or intangible) that are produced, sold, bought, and utilized which
satisfy a person’s needs and wants.
BASIC MICROECONOMICS
Services – the efforts rendered by someone for a price such as haircuts, doctor’s visits, legal
consulting, etc. which also satisfy human needs and wants. Non-physical, intangible parts of
the economy, as opposed to goods which we can touch or handle.
Consumer Goods – goods that are intended for final use by the consumer like milk, soft
drinks, and food.
Capital Goods – goods that are used in the creation or production of other goods like
buildings, machinery, and equipment.
Essential or Necessity Goods – goods that are used to satisfy the basic needs of man such as
food, clothing, shelter, and medicine.
Luxury Goods – goods that man may do without but are used to contribute to his comfort
and well-being, such as chocolates, perfumes, and expensive cars.
Durable Goods – goods that last more than 3 years when used on a regular basis.
Non-durable Goods – goods that last less than 3 years when used on a regular basis.
E. Opportunity Cost
The concept of opportunity cost is one of the core ideas in the economic way of thinking and
is vital to understanding individual choice. If an individual chooses something, he gives up
the other thing.
This is the opportunity cost of a decision. Boyes (2008) defined opportunity cost as the
highest-valued alternative that must be forgone when a choice is made.
For example, a student chooses to review his lessons in Economics today. This means he
gives up doing other activities—he chooses not to watch a series, do household chores, or
surf the internet. If reviewing lessons in Economics is his best alternative to a full day of
other activities, then the opportunity cost of doing activities like watching a series or surfing
the internet is the value of reviewing his Economics lessons. It’s the cost of the lost
opportunity.
F. Marginal Analysis
Choices are not instantly made. Rational people always decide by carefully analyzing the
benefits they would get and the cost they would incur from their decisions. To put it another
way, they compare their marginal benefits and marginal costs. Marginal cost is the extra cost
of using one more unit of a good or service. In comparison, a marginal benefit is an
additional satisfaction derived from consuming one more unit of a good or service. The study
of weighing the benefits and costs usually for decision making is called cost-benefit or
marginal analysis.
G. Incentives
Scarcity requires everyone to choose and one thing that drives one person to make a
decision involves incentives. In the most general terms, incentive is a benefit or reward that
encourages someone to behave in certain ways. Salary increase and bonuses paid to
workers, recognition awards for students, price discounts given to customers, and tax
deductions to businesses are all forms of incentives.
Krugman (2008) points out that people usually respond to incentives, exploiting
opportunities to make themselves better off.
I. Economics: Defined
Etymologically, the word economics comes from the ancient Greek word ‘oikonomia’—
which literally means the management of a family or a household. A household has inadequate
resources, and managing these resources will require certain decision-making skills.
There are numerous definitions of economics. Different economists have advanced more or
less the meaning of the term. Some of the commonly used specific and general definitions are as
follows:
1. Wealth definition. Adam Smith, a Scottish economist, regarded as the father of
economics, laid out in his magnum opus, “Wealth of Nations,” the definition of economics
BASIC MICROECONOMICS
focused on wealth creation. Smith defined economics as an inquiry into the nature and causes of
the wealth of the nation.
2. Welfare definition. This definition of Economics was explained in the influential book of
Alfred Marshall, “Principles of Economics,” which focused on welfare and human activities
instead of wealth accumulation. To Marshall, economics is the study of mankind in the ordinary
business
of life; it examines that part of individual and social action which is most closely connected
with the attainment and with the use of material required for well-being.
3. Scarcity definition. This definition is credited to Lionel Robbins, a British Economist, and
emphasized scarcity, which is central in the definition of economics. According to his book, “An
Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science,” economics is the science which
studies human behavior as a relationship between ends and scarce means which have
alternative uses. His famous definition was the most accepted definition of economics and still
generally used today.
4. Growth-Oriented Definition. The definition was credited to Paul Samuelson, called by the
New York Times as the "foremost academic economist of the 20th century". According to him,
“economics is a study of how people and society choose, with or without the use of money to
employ scarce productive resources which could have alternative uses, to produce various
commodities over time and distribute them for consumption now and in the future among
various persons and groups of society.”
The meaning of the word economics has developed over time. Today, many books and other
reference materials define economics in similar ways—a science that deals with the allocation of
limited resources to satisfy unlimited human wants. Mankiw (2010) defined economics as a
science that studies how society manages its scarce resources. Krugman (2008) defined
economics as the study of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.
L. Factors of Production
1. Land – includes all the natural resources, including mineral deposits, water, air, trees,
poultry, livestock, and all other forms of these raw materials used in production of goods
and services.
2. Labor – any form of human effort like physical or mental, which is exerted in the production
of goods and services.
3. Capital – refers to the machinery, tools, equipment, and structures used in the production of
goods and services.
4. Entrepreneurship – the ability of an individual to provide the right kind of good or service at
the right place and time, to the right people at the right price.
Entrepreneur – the person who puts together or organizes the other factors of
production (land, labor, capital) to create goods and services which can satisfy the
needs and wants of man. He is innovative and a risk taker.
M. Divisions of Economics
Economists develop economic principles and models at two levels. These two levels are the
branches of Economics: Microeconomics and Macroeconomics. Microeconomics is concerned
with the behavior and decision-making of the individual players in the economy, such as the
consumers, businesses, and the government. Microeconomics studies the prices, markets,
buying decisions of consumers, selling decisions of firms, costs of production, profit
maximization, market failure, etc. On the contrary, macroeconomics is focused on the overall
structure and performance of the national or global economy. It is concerned with the analysis
of aggregates. Macroeconomics studies the determination of national income, price level,
employment, economic growth, money, economic policies, international trade, among others.
The comparison of topics of interest for microeconomics and macroeconomics is depicted in
Table 1.1.