|
|
Thinking Like an Economist
Highlighted Sections
The Circular Flow Diagram
Production Possibilities Frontiers
Micro vs. Macro Economics
Positive vs. Normative Economic Issues
The Circular Flow Diagram - (Back
to top)
The circular flow diagram (figure 2-1 from your text is
recreated at right) depicts a simplified view of how the
pieces of the economy fit together. Highlights include:
- Notice that goods & services and resources flow
around the economy in one direction, while money flows
around the economy in the opposite direction. This is
because money is normally exchanged for goods &
services, or for resources.
- Recall that factors of production in the economy are
generally lumped into three broad categories: labor,
land, and capital. The respective names for the prices of
labor, land, and capital are wages, rent and profit.
- Households (people), in the circular flow, own all
the labor, land and capital. In markets for factors of
production, households sell the services of labor, land
and capital to firms in exchange for wages, rent and
profits.
*Many students will observe that
economists assume all labor, land and capital is owned by
people, yet many firms in the economy own land and
capital. This apparent incongruency can be cleared up by
noting that all firms are ultimately owned by people, so
any land and capital owned by firms is actually owned by
the owners of these firms.
- In markets for goods & services, households spend
their income on products that are produced by firms. The
money spent on goods & services is called spending
(by households) and income (by firms), but spending and
income are the same number.
*Suppose you go to McDonalds and spend
$3.99 on a Big Mac Extra Value Meal. You have made an
expenditure of $3.99 but, at the same time, McDonalds
just made $3.99 in income. Think of expenditures and
income as two sides of the same coin.
- Households (people) have two functions in the
economy. First, they sell their labor, land and capital
to firms in order to make income, and second, they spend
their income on the goods & services that firms
produce.
- Firms have two functions in the economy. First, they
purchase the services of labor, land and capital, and
second, they use labor, land and capital to produce goods
& services, which they sell to households.
- In economics, technology is represented by a firm's
ability to transform labor, land and capital into goods
& services. When firms can produce MORE goods &
services than before, while using the SAME amount of
labor, land and capital, economists say technology has
improved.
Production Possibilities Frontiers -
(Back to top)
Java Powered!
The production possibilities frontier is a simple model
relating resources and technology to the amount of total
output the economy can produce. In the figure at right,
assume that the economy produces only two goods - cars and
computers. The PPF is the dark blue curve and it defines the
maximum combinations (or bundles) of cars and computers the
economy can produce. The light-blue shaded area under the
PPF represents bundles of goods the economy can also
produce. However, all bundles in the shaded area are less
than the economy's maximum output. Producing under the PPF
(like at point B) indicates that the economy is not
producing efficiently (recall the definition of efficiency
from the previous chapter). Points outside the PPF (like D)
are not attainable given our current endowment of resources
and technology. However, the economy is said to "grow" when
the PPF shifts out over time. You can see how the PPF moves
in the figure at right by moving the slider to the right or
left.
Q: How can we get the PPF to shift out over time,
allowing the economy to produce more in the future than
today?
A: Since we are constrained by our endowment of
resources (land, labor and capital) and by our technology,
we need an increase in our resource supplies or our
available productive technology.
Q: What is the likelihood that the real economy is
ever actually producing ON the PPF?
A: The answer is that we will never experience 0%
unemployment of land, labor AND capital, so we aren't likely
to ever be ON the PPF.
Q: Why does the PPF have a negative slope?
A: The PPF has a negative slope because of the
concept of scarcity. Since resources (land, labor and
capital) are scarcely provided to the economy and the
economy uses resources to produce goods and services, there
will be a tradeoff any time more of one good is desired. For
example, suppose we want to increase our production of cars.
If we are already producing efficiently (getting the most
out of the resources we have), the only way to increase our
output of cars is to take some resources AWAY FROM the
production of computers. This, however, will decrease our
output of computers - hence a tradeoff between cars and
computers.
Micro vs Macro Economics - (Back
to top)
The difference between microeconomics and macroeconomics
lies primarily in the scope of topics that they
investigate.
Microeconomics is a study of the decisions made by
individual agents or actors in the economy. Questions that
are studied in a micro course include:
- How much of various goods will a consumer choose to
consume given his or her income and the prices of the
goods?
- How much output should a firm choose to produce in
order to maximize its profits?
- How much labor and capital should a firm choose to
hire in order to produce efficiently?
- How much time will a person spend working and how
much time will they spend in leisure activities?
Macroeconomics, on the other hand, deals with issues that
affect the economy as a whole (or in the aggregate). Some
questions from a typical macro course include:
- What are the real effects of the US national debt on
the US economy?
- How will the monetary policy chosen by the Federal
Reserve affect interest rates and investment within the
economy?
- Will a recession in Germany (a major trading partner
with the US), affect our economic growth?
- What would a balanced budget amendment do to
policymakers' ability to control the US economy?
- Can we implement policies that will reduce both
unemployment and inflation in the long-run?
Positive vs. Normative Economics -
(Back to top)
In economics, there are positive and normative statements
or issues. The difference between the two is that positive
statements are descriptive, while normative statements
involve some type of value judgement.
Positive statements would include the following:
- GDP in the US economy was about 7 trillion dollars
last year
- The New York City rent control laws have created a
shortage of housing in the city
- Dave's car is red
Note that these statements can all be verified as true or
false by examining relevant data. This is important, because
if you found out that Dave's car was blue, you would have
falsified the last statement. Positive statements are
descriptive, but not necessarily true.
Normative statements cannot be falsified by simply examining
relevant data because they involve a value judgement. Here
are a few normative statements:
- NAFTA (the North American Free Trade Agreement) is
bad for the US economy because it has caused some of our
jobs to move to Mexico
- Higher interest rates would be good for the US
economy in the next 6 months
- The US government should be required to balance its
budget every year
All of these statements involve value judgements. For
example, a person who made the second statement is probably
of the opinion that the economy is growing too fast, so
higher interest rates (which have the effect of slowing down
the economy) would be good for the economy. People who
disagree probably don't share this opinion but cannot also
falsify the second statement.
(Back to top)
|