Chapter One
Chapter One
Chapter One
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS
•Thus, economics is the study of how human beings make choices to use
scarce resources as they seek to satisfy their unlimited wants.
•In the recent past, many new branches of the subject have
developed, including development economics, industrial
economics, transport economics, welfare economics,
environmental economics, and so on.
•The theory may agree or disagree with the real world and we
should check the validity of the theory to facts by moving from
general to particular.
•Major steps in the deductive approach include:
1. Problem identification
2. Specification of the assumptions
3. Formulating hypotheses
4. Testing the validity of the hypotheses
1.4 Scarcity, choice, opportunity cost and
production possibilities frontier
• Scarcity
•The fundamental economic problem that any human society faces
is the problem of scarcity.
•Scarcity refers to the fact that all economic resources that a society
needs to produce goods and services are finite or limited in supply.
•Thus, the term scarcity reflects the imbalance between our wants
and the means to satisfy those wants.
The following are examples of scarce resources.
Ø All types of human resources: manual, intellectual, skilled and
specialized labour;
Ø Most natural resources like land (especially, fertile land),
minerals, clean water, forests and wild - animals;
Ø All types of capital resources ( like machines, intermediate
goods, infrastructure ); and
Ø All types of entrepreneurial resources.
Economic resources
•Economic resources are usually classified into four categories.
Land: refers to the natural resources or all the free gifts of nature usable
in the production of goods and services. The reward for the services of land is
known as rent.
Capital: refers to all the manufactured inputs that can be used to produce
other goods and services. Example: equipment, machinery, transport and
communication facilities, etc. The reward for the services of capital is called
interest.
•These are:
– Capitalist economy
– Command economy
– Mixed economy
Capitalist economy
•Capitalism is the oldest formal economic system in
the world. It became widespread in the middle of the
19th century.
v New types of consumer goods: Varieties of new consumer goods are developed
and produced at large scale.
v High rate of capital formation: The right to private property helps in capital
formation.
Disadvantages of Capitalistic Economy
v Inequality of income: Capitalism promotes economic
inequalities and creates social imbalance.
i) Household: A household can be one person or more who live under one
roof and make joint financial decisions. Households make two decisions.
a) Selling of their resources, and
b) Buying of goods and services.
The circular-flow diagram is a visual model of the economy that shows how
money (Birr), economic resources and goods and services flows through
markets among the decision making units. For simplicity, let‘s first see a two
sector model where we have only households and business firms. In this case,
therefore, we see the flow of goods and services from producers to households
and a flow of resources from households to business firms.
Markets
• In the following diagram, the clock – wise direction shows the flow of
economic resources and final goods and services.
• The anti – clock wise direction indicates the flow of birr (in the form of
revenue, income and spending on consumption). Firms, by selling goods
and services to households, receive money in the form of revenue which is
consumption expenditure for households in the product market.
• As shown in figure 1.5 below, the only difference of the three sector
model from the two sector model is that it involves government
participation in the market.
• On the other hand, the government also needs resources required for
the provision of the services. This resource is purchased from the factor
market by making payments to the resource owners (households).
Cont’d
• The service provided by the government goes to the households and
business firms.