The Economic Problem
The Economic Problem
The Economic Problem
What is Economics?
Economics is the study of how human beings strive to satisfy unlimited human wants
using limited resources.
Economics is the study of how society uses its scarce resources.
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E.g. if a person has £5 to either buy a pen or a book , if he chooses to buy a pen with the
amount of money that he has, the opportunity cost of buying a pen is a book. If he
chooses to buy a book with the amount of money that he has, the opportunity cost of
buying a book will be a pen.
Non-renewable resources: Are those resources whose supply cannot be restored after use.
Using these resources leads to their exhaustion. For example, after mining gold and
exhausting the mine, it will be impossible to restore the supply of gold in that mine.
Renewable resources: Are those resources whose supply can be restored and if they are not,
creating of goods and services is reduced and it may stop altogether. Examples are wood,
fuel, hydroelectric power, solar energy, and soda ash.
Economic agents: Refers to households, firms and the government that operate in the
economy.
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Figure: The basic economic problem
To overcome the basic economic problem, important decisions have to be made.
1. What to produce?
Because it is impossible to produce all the goods that people want, a country must decide which
goods will be produced. For example, should resources be used to provide more libraries, build
more schools, employ more teachers, make more cars, or train more doctors?
2. How to produce?
Goods can be produced using a variety of different production methods. The four factors of
production can be organized in different ways to produce the same goods.
3. For whom to produce?
Once goods have been produced, there has to be a method of distribution. This means that goods
have to be shared in some way between members of the population. For example, should
everyone get exactly the same quantities or should some receive more than others?
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