Title: David Begg, Foundations of Economics, Third Edition
1Topic/Chapter 1What is economics for business?
Business EconomicsFor School of Management
StudentsSpring Semester 2008
- David Begg, Foundations of Economics, Third
Edition - McGraw-Hill, 2006
- Power Point presentation by Peter Smith
- Adapted for the Third Edition by Lester C Hunt,
UniS.
2Topic/Chapter 1What is Economics for Business?
- Will cover
- 1.1 What economists study
- 1.2 How business economists think
- 1.3 How markets work
3Topic 1.1 What economists studyLearning outcomes
- By the end of this section, you should
understand - That economics is the study of scarcity
- How opportunity cost reflects scarcity
- How society rations scarce goods and services
- Pros and cons of relying on the market
- Positive and normative economics
- Microeconomics and macroeconomics
4What is Economics?
- ECONOMICS addresses problems of RESOURCE
ALLOCATION - It is the study of how society decides
- What to produce
- How to produce
- and for whom to produce
- (i.e. how to share it)
-
5SCARCITY means that CHOICES have to be made
- A scarce resource
- one for which demand at a zero price would exceed
available supply - Opportunity cost
- for the economist, the true cost of a choice is
- the quantity of other goods that must be
sacrificed to obtain another unit of a good
6Resource Allocation
- Resource allocation is handled in different ways
in different societies e.g. - Command economy
- the State decides what, for whom and how to
produce - Free market
- the State does not interfere, the market
allocates resources - Mixed economy
- the government and private sector interact
7The Role of Markets
- Markets
- bring together
- households decisions about consumption of
alternative goods - firms decisions about what and how to produce
- workers decisions about how much and for whom to
work - and reconcile them by the adjustment of prices
8Market Orientation
Sweden
USA
China
Hungary
UK
Cuba
Free market economy
Command economy
9Normative and Positive Economics
- Positive economics deals with objective
explanation - e.g. if a tax is imposed on a good its price will
tend to rise - Normative economics offers prescriptions based on
value judgements - e.g. a tax SHOULD be imposed on tobacco to
discourage smoking
10Micro and Macro
- Microeconomics
- offers a detailed treatment of individual
economic decisions about particular commodities - Macroeconomics
- emphasizes the interactions in the economy as a
whole
11Topic 1.2 How business economists thinkLearning
outcomes
- By the end of this section, you should
understand - Why theories deliberately simplify reality
- Nominal and real variables
- How to build a simple theoretical model
- How to interpret scatter diagrams
- How other things equal lets key influences be
ignored but not forgotten
12Models and Data
- Model (Theories)
- a framework based on simplifying assumptions
- helps to organize our economic thinking
- Data
- pieces of evidence about the real world
- the economists link with the real world
- time series
- cross section
13Data
- Unemployment by Country, 2005
- UK House prices
- (Average price of a new house)
14Data Real or Nominal
- Many economic variables are measured in money
terms - Nominal values
- measured in current prices
- Real values
- adjusted for price changes compared with a base
year - measured in constant prices
15Data Index numbers
- Often data is converted to an index number
format - An index number expresses data relative to a
given base value - For example, the UK Consumer Price Index (CPI) is
used to measure the basket of goods bought by a
typical household. - The rate of change of the CPI is a measure of UK
inflation.
16Economic Models
- To organize our thinking we need a simplified
picture of reality - focusing on key elements
- e.g. Quantity of tube journeys demanded
f(Prices, income, preferences)
17Scatter Diagrams
Diagrams help economists to explore
relationships between economic variables e.g. the
relationship between tube fares and tube revenues
18other things equal
- other things equal is a device for looking at
the relation between two variables, but
remembering other variables also matter. - In other words all the other variables are held
(or are assumed to be) constant - Thus allowing the economist to focus on the
relationship between the two variables of
interest. - also known by its Latin name
- Ceteris paribus
19This can be illustrated with the tube fare and
revenue example (figure 1.3)
20Topic 1.3 How markets work Learning outcomes
- By the end of this section, you should
understand - Demand and supply
- Equilibrium in a market
- How markets resolve what, how and for whom
things are produced - Price controls
21Some Key Terms
- Market
- an institution which brings buyers and sellers
together to trade goods or services - Demand
- the quantity of a good buyers wish to purchase at
each conceivable price - Supply
- the quantity of a good sellers wish to sell at
each conceivable price - Equilibrium price
- price at which quantity supplied quantity
demanded and the market clears
22Market Adjustment 1
- Price is below the equilibrium price
- With a low price quantity demanded is high but
quantity supplied is low. - There is a shortage or excess demand.
- Sellers run out of stock and charge higher prices
so that prices rise until the equilibrium price
is reached. - Excess demand is eliminated with the market
clearing at the point where supply equals demand.
23Market Adjustment 2
- Price is above the equilibrium price
- With a high price quantity supplied is high but
quantity demanded is low. - Sellers have unsold stock so there is excess
supply. - Sellers have to cut prices to clear their stock
so that prices fall until the equilibrium price
is reached. - Excess supply is eliminated with the market
clearing at the point where supply equals demand.
24Market Adjustment 3
- By behaving in this way, prices help resolve the
basic questions of economics - What, how and for whom goods are produced.
25Price controls
- A price control is a government regulation to fix
the price - Price controls may be floor prices (minimum
prices) - These aim to raise the price for suppliers
- For example the national minimum wage is a floor
price for labour. - Price controls may be ceiling prices (maximum
prices) - These aim to reduce the price for consumers
- For example price ceilings set by governments for
food due to shortages in war time.