IB ECON Chapter 1 Notes (Basics of Econ)
IB ECON Chapter 1 Notes (Basics of Econ)
IB ECON Chapter 1 Notes (Basics of Econ)
Scarcity
Anything with a price is relatively scarce; means it is scarce in
relation to demand
Price is used to ration the goods and services available
Anything with a price, which is being rationed, is an economic
good
scarcity has a different meaning in an economic context than
the real world
Choice
Opportunity Cost
Next best alternative foregone when an economic decision is
made
Basically, what you give up to have something else; not
expressed in monetary units
Salt water and air arent limited in supply and dont have an
opportunity cost when consumed; we dont need to give
something up for it; so, they are free goods
The Basic Economic Problem
Choices are expressed in 3 questions and represent basic
economic problem:
o What should be produced and how much of it?
o How should something be produced?
o Who should things be produced for? Go to people who can
afford or in some fair manner?
System used to allocate resources needs to answer these
questions
Two theoretical allocation systems
o Free market system
o Planned economy
In reality, economies are mixed, so they are a combination of
both
Government interference is debatable
Land
Everything that grows on the land or is found under it (sea) and
everything that is found under the sea
Includes all natural resources
Such as: gold, coal, oil, gas, wheat, rice, pineapples
Some resources are renewable (pineapples) some arent (oil)
Labour
Human factor
Physical and mental contribution of the existing workforce to
production
Capital
Factor of production that comes from investment in physical and
human capital
Physical capital- stock of manufactured resources (factories,
roads, tools)
Human capital- value of workforce
Investing in human capital through education or improved health
care may contribute to economic growth
Infrastructure (social overhead capital) are large scale projects
and facilities (railway, bus, airports, nuclear plants)
Infrastructure comes from government investment and
improving it may lead to better economic growth and
development
Management (entrepreneurship)
Organising and risk taking factor
Profit is never guaranteed and investment loss may occur, that is
the risk taking part
Production Possibilities Curves/Frontiers
Used to show concepts of scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost
Shows max combinations of goods ans service that can be produced
by an economy in a time period, if everything is being used fully and
efficiently and state of tech. is fixed aka potential output
PPC always show the most efficient, so thats theoretic; countries
are always working inside their PPC
Movement that closer towards the PPC is called actual growth
A point outside the PPC is only attainable if the PPC itself grows; so
you can have an increase in potential ouput (PPC moves) and you can
have potential growth (from one point to another point in increase)
Potential output increase can only happen from the improvement in
quantity or quality of factors of production; if there is an increase in
theoretical output, doesnt mean there will be in actual output
Fall in quantity or quality would result in fall of PPC or inward shift,
could come from natural disasters or war
Utility
Measure of usefulness and pleasure; given an idea of how much
usefulness or pleasure a consumer receives when they consume a product
2 basic ways- total utility and marginal utility
Total utility
total satisfaction gained from consuming a certain quantity of a
product
Marginal utility
Extra utility gained from consuming one more unit of a product
Usually as consumption increases, marginal unity decreases.
Planned Economies:
o Decisions for what to produce, how, and who for and made
by government
o All resources are collectively owned
o Government handles all production, wages, and set prices;
decisions are made by government
o Number of decisions, data to be analyzed, and factors to
be allocated to huge making it difficult; forecasting future
events makes it even more difficult
Economic Growth
National income is value of all goods and services produced in an
economy in a given time period (commonly one year)
Can be measured by adding up all activity
In order not to overstate the value, any increase in prices is
ignored and the national income after ignoring is called real
national income; real maens having allowed for the effects of
inflation
If there is increase in real national income then there is growth;
but if pop. grows the same percentage then income per head
wont grow
To be accurate, increase is measured in real national income per
capital (per head); measure of the increase in economic activity
known as economic growth
Doesnt tell the actual welfare of the country
Economic growth aka growth in GDP= increase in actual output
Economic Development
Measure of welfare, a measure of wellbeing
Includes education indicators, health indicators, and social
indicators
The Human Development Index (HDI) is commonly is one of the
most commonly used development measures (includes real
national income per head, literacy rate for adults, average
schooling years, and life expectancy)
HDI is calculated and is between 0 and 1, the closer to one, the
more developed
Sustainable Development
The World Commission on Environment and Development was
formed in 1983 by UN and in 1987 they published Our Common
Failure
The opinion was that if environmental degradation continues,
then we can keep up the growth
Sustainable development means the development that meets the
needs of the present without compromising the ability for the
future generations to meet their own needs