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Lecture Principles of economics (Asia Global Edition) - Chapter 1

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Chapter 1 - Thinking like an economist. This chapter to show that the Cost-Benefit Principle, deciding whether to take an action by comparing the cost and benefit of the action, is a useful approach for dealing with the inevitable trade-offs that scarcity creates. After discussing several important decision pitfalls, the chapter concludes by describing the Incentive Principle and introducing the concept of economic naturalism.

Thinking Like an Economist Chapter McGraw­Hill/Irwin 1­1 Copyright © 2015 by McGraw­Hill Education (Asia). All rights reserved Learning Objectives Explain and apply the Scarcity Principle Explain and apply the Cost-Benefit Principle Discuss three important pitfalls that occur when applying the Cost-Benefit Principle inconsistently Explain and apply the Incentive Principle 1­2 The Scarcity Principle 1­3 The Scarcity Principle: Examples 1­4 The Cost-Benefit Principle • • Take an action if and only if the extra benefits are at least as great as the extra costs Costs and benefits are not just money 1­5 Applying the Cost – Benefit Principle • Assume people are rational – • Would you walk to town to save $10 on an item? – – • A rational person has well defined goals and tries to fulfill those goals as best they can Benefits are clear Costs are harder to define Hypothetical auction – – Would you walk to town if someone paid you $9? If you would walk to town for less than $10, you gain from buying the item in town 1­6 Cost – Benefit Principle Examples 1­7 Economic Surplus • The economic surplus of an action is equal to its benefit minus its costs 1­8 Opportunity Cost • Opportunity cost is the value of what must be foregone in order to undertake an activity – • Examples: – – • Consider explicit and implicit costs Give up an hour of babysitting to go to the movies Give up watching TV to walk to town Caution: NOT the combined value of all possible activities – Opportunity cost considers only your best alternative 1­9 Economic Models • Simplifying assumptions – – • Which aspects of the decision are absolutely essential? Which aspects are irrelevant? Abstract representation of key relationships – The Cost-Benefit Principle is a model • • If costs of an action increase, the action is less likely If benefits of an action increase, the action is more likely 1­10 Microeconomics and Macroeconomics § § Microeconomics studies choice and its implications for price and quantity in individual markets § Sugar § Carpets § House cleaning services Microeconomics considers topics such as § Costs of production § Demand for a product § Exchange rates § § Macroeconomics studies the performance of national economies and the policies that governments use to try to improve that performance § Inflation § Unemployment § Growth Macroeconomics considers § Monetary policy § Deficits § Tax policy 1­19 Economics Is Choosing • Focus in this course is on a short list of powerful ideas – – • Explain many economic issues Predict decisions made in a variety of circumstances Core Principles are the foundation for solving economic problems 1­20 Economics Is Everywhere • • There are many things that economics can help to explain Economic Naturalist topics – – – Why is expensive software bundled with PCs? Why can't you buy a car without air-conditioners? Drive-up ATMs with Braille 1­21 Working with Equations, Graphs, and Tables Chapter Appendix 1­22 Definitions • • Equation Variable – – • Dependent variable Independent variable Parameter (constant) – – Slope Intercept 1­23 From Words to an Equation • • Identify the variables Calculate the parameters – – • • Slope Intercept Write the equation Example: Phone bill is $5 per month plus 10 cents per MByte of data used B = + 0.10 D 1­24 From Equation to Graph B = + 0.10 D – Draw and label axes • • – Horizontal is independent variable Vertical is dependent variable To graph, • • • Plot the intercept Plot one other point Connect the points B D 12 C A 10 30 70 D 1­25 From Graph to Equation – Identify variables • • – Identify parameters • • – Independent Dependent Intercept Slope Write the equation B = + 0.2 D 1­26 Changes in the Intercept – An increase in the intercept shifts the curve up • • – Slope is unchanged Caused by an increase in the monthly fee A decrease in the intercept shifts the curve down • Slope is unchanged 1­27 Changes in the Slope – An increase in the slope makes the curve steeper • • – Intercept is unchanged Caused by an increase in the per minute fee A decrease in the slope makes the curve flatter • Intercept is unchanged 1­28 From Table to Graph – – – Data Used (MBytes/month) 10 20 30 40 Bill ($/month) $10.50 $11.00 $11.50 $12.00 Identify variables • Independent • Dependent Label axes Plot points • Connect points 1­29 From Table to Equation – – – Data Used (MBytes/month) 10 20 30 40 Bill ($/month) $10.50 $11.00 $11.50 $12.00 Identify independent and dependent variables Calculate slope • Slope = (11.5 – 10.5) / (30 – 10) = 1/20 = 0.05 Solve for intercept, f, using any point B = f + 0.05 D 12 = f + 0.05 (40) = f + f = 12 – = 10 B = 10 + 0.05 D 1­30 Simultaneous Equations • • Two equations, two unknowns Solving the equations gives the values of the variables where the two equations intersect – • Value of the independent and dependent variables are the same in each equation Example – Two billing plans for phone service • How many Mbytes make the two plans cost the same? 1­31 Simultaneous Equations • • Plan Plan – • B = 10 + 0.04 D B = 20 + 0.02 D Plan has higher per minute price while Plan has a higher monthly fee Find B and D for point A 1­32 Simultaneous Equations – – – Plan B = 10 + 0.04 D Plan B = 20 + 0.02 D Subtract Plan equation from Plan and solve for D – Find B when D = 500 B = 10 + 0.04 D B = 10 + 0.04 (500) B = $30 B = 10 + 0.04 D – B = – 20 – 0.02 D OR = – 10 + 0.02 D B = 20 + 0.02 D D = 500 B = 20 + 0.02 (500) B = $30 1­33 ... points 1 29 From Table to Equation – – – Data Used (MBytes/month) 10 20 30 40 Bill ($/month) $10 .50 $11 .00 $11 .50 $12 .00 Identify independent and dependent variables Calculate slope • Slope = (11 .5... the curve flatter • Intercept is unchanged 1 28 From Table to Graph – – – Data Used (MBytes/month) 10 20 30 40 Bill ($/month) $10 .50 $11 .00 $11 .50 $12 .00 Identify variables • Independent • Dependent... price of gasoline in May 2 010 was higher than in May 2009 • Building a space base on the moon will cost more than the shuttle program 1 17 Incentive Principle 1 18 Microeconomics and Macroeconomics

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