Economics Notes: When Unlimited Wants Meet Limited Resources, It Is Known As Scarcity
Economics Notes: When Unlimited Wants Meet Limited Resources, It Is Known As Scarcity
Economics Notes: When Unlimited Wants Meet Limited Resources, It Is Known As Scarcity
UNLIMITED WANTS
Human beings, in order to survive need a lot of things. Some of these things are very important for
our existence. For example, food, clothing, water, shelter and air. These things can be classified
as Needs. Apart from this there are things which are needed by us but they are not important for our
survival and we can live without them also. For example, going on an expensive holiday, owning a 57
inches Plasma TV. These are known as Wants. This list is never ending and is continuously
increasing.
LIMITED RESOURCES
On the other hand, we have limited resources to produce these goods and services we want. There are
not enough car factories to provide cars to everybody on earth. Everything on this planet has some
limits except for our Wants.
When unlimited wants meet limited resources, it is known as Scarcity.
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
Resources available on earth to make goods and services to satisfy our needs and want are limited.
These resources are also known as factor of production. These can be categorised as
LAND
All natural resources provided by nature such as fields, forests, oil, gas, metals and other mineral
resources
LABOUR
CAPITAL
ENTERPRISE
The skill and risk taking ability of the person who brings together all the other factors of production
together to produce goods and services. Usually the owner or founder of a business.
Business activity combines the factors of production to produce goods and services to satisfy our
needs and wants. So a business activity takes inputs (factors of productions), processes it and gives an
output
ALTERNATIVE USES
All the resources we have on this planet can be utilised in a number of way. They have alternative
uses. For example, a piece of land can be used for making a factory, or doing farming or constructing
a school and so on. Therefore, we have to choose what is best for us. If we talk from an economist
point of view it means ‘making the optimum use of resource available’.
OPPORTUNITY COST
Though we have alternative uses, we have to select the best way to use these resources. When we
choose best alternative, the next best alternative which is left out is known as the Opportunity cost of
making a choice. In other words, the benefits we lost and could have achieved from the next best
alternative.
A person who invests $10,000 in a stock denies themselves the interest they could have earned by
leaving the $10,000 dollars in a bank account instead. The opportunity cost of the decision to invest in
stock is the value of the interest.
If a city decides to build a hospital on vacant land it owns, the opportunity cost is the value of the
benefits forgone of the next best thing which might have been done with the land and construction
funds instead. In building the hospital, the city has forgone the opportunity to build a sports centre on
that land, or a parking lot.
ECONOMIC PROBLEM
The problem then becomes how to determine what is to be produced and how the factors of
production (such as capital and labour) are to be allocated. Economics revolves around methods and
possibilities of solving the economic problem.
LEVELS OF BUSINESS ACTIVITY
There are millions of businesses around us. Business can be categorised in three broad categories or
stages.
PRIMARY SECTOR
All those businesses which are related with extraction of raw material from Mother Nature such as
mining, fishing, farming, and logging are known as Primary Sector businesses.
SECONDARY SECTOR
All businesses which manufacture and process the raw materials which can be used by the end
consumers are known as Secondary Sector businesses. These include building, construction, compute
assembly, shoes factories, textile factories etc.
TERTIARY SECTOR
Whereas all the businesses which provide services and assist both the primary and secondary sector
businesses can be classified as Tertiary sector businesses. These include transportation, insurance,
hospitals, educational institutes, showrooms etc.
A business may exist in all the three sectors also. For example. British Petroleum has its own Oil
wells and it extracts raw oil, this is primary sector activity, this oil is converted into petroleum and
other by products. This is secondary business activity. After processing the oil into useable product
BP sells it to end consumers through its network of Petrol pumps. This comes under the tertiary
sector.
ENTREPRENEURS
SELF MOTIVATION
They are also often very passionate about their ideas that drive toward these ultimate goals and are
notoriously difficult to steer off the course.
POSITIVE ATTITUDE
There might be initial hurdles and failures in ventures. A successful entrepreneur learns from his
mistakes and does not get dismayed by initial failures. He always sees the light at the end of the
tunnel and continues with his journey. Positive attitude also helps in making a strong team which
might be very instrumental in the ultimate success of the venture.
RISK TAKER
"nothing ventured, nothing gained". Successful entrepreneurs are risk takers who have all gotten over
one very significant hurdle: they are not afraid of failure.
A successful entrepreneur must have excellent leadership qualities. It earns the trust and respect of his
team by demonstrating positive work qualities and confidence. They foster a positive environment
and then proliferates these values through the team.
INNOVATOR
Successful entrepreneur are innovators and usually have an ‘out of the box’ approach to solving
problems. They usually identify gaps in consumer demands or needs which have been ignored for
long. They welcome change and are consistently innovating with the changing demand patterns.
DEPENDABLE
Successful, sustainable business people maintain the highest standards of integrity because, at the end
of the day, if you cannot prove yourself a credible business person and nobody will do business with
you, you are out of business. Therefore, a successful entrepreneur should have Strong sense of basic
ethics and integrity. In short, he should be dependable.
RESOURCEFUL
Most new businesses have limited resources such as money, information and time. Successful
entrepreneurs figure out how to get the most out of these resources. They are masters at stretching a
dollar and making a few resources go a long way.
COMMUNICATORS
ACHIEVEMENT ORIENTED
Successful entrepreneurs are achievement oriented. They value accomplishment and the intrinsic
rewards that go along with achieving difficult goals.
MARKET ECONOMIC SYSTEM
The central thought of this system is that it should be the producers and consumers who decide how to
utilise the resources. Thus, the market forces decide what to produce, how much to produce and for
whom to produce.
FEATURES
ADVANTAGES
Free market responds quickly to the people’s wants: Thus, firms will produce what people
want because it is more profitable whereas anything which is not demanded will be taken out
of production.
Wide Variety of goods and services: There will be wide variety of goods and services
available in the market to suit everybody’s taste.
Efficient use of resources encouraged: Profit being the sole motive, will drive the firms to
produce goods and services at lower cost and more efficiently. This will lead to firms using
latest technology to produce at lower costs.
DISADVANTAGES
Unemployment: Businesses in the market economy will only employ those factors of
production which will be profitable and thus we may find a lot of unemployment as more
machines and less labour will be used to cut cost.
Certain goods and services may not be provided: There may be certain goods which might
not be provided for by the Market economy. Those which people might want to use but don’t
want to pay may not be available because the firms may not find it profitable to produce. For
example, Public goods, such as, street lighting.
Consumption of harmful goods may be encouraged: Free market economy might find it
profitable to provide goods which are in demand and ignore the fact that they might be
harmful for the society.
Ignore Social cost: In the desire to maximise profits businesses might not consider the social
effects of their actions.
PLANNED ECONOMY
In a planned economy, the factors of production are owned and managed by the government.
Thus the Government decides what to produce, how much to produce and for whom to produce.
FEATURES:
ADVANTAGES
Prices are kept under control and thus everybody can afford to consume goods and services.
There is less inequality of wealth.
There is no duplication as the allocation of resources is centrally planned.
Low level of unemployment as the government aims to provide employment to everybody.
Elimination of waste resulting from competition between firms.
DISADVANTAGES
Consumers cannot choose and only those goods and services are produced which are decided
by the government.
Lack of profit motive may lead to firms being inefficient.
Lot of time and money is wasted in communicating instructions from the government to the
firms.
North Korea
Cuba
Turkmenistan
Myanmar
Belarus
Laos
Libya
Iran
MIXED ECONOMY
A mixed economy is an economic system that incorporates aspects of more than one economic
system. This usually means an economy that contains both privately-owned and state-owned
enterprises or that combines elements of capitalism and socialism, or a mix of market economy and
planned economy characteristics. This system overcomes the disadvantages of both the market and
planned economic systems.
FEATURES
Resources are owned both by the government as well as private individuals. i.e. co-existence
of both public sector and private sector.
Market forces prevail but are closely monitored by the government.
ADVANTAGES
Producers and consumer have sovereignty to choose what to produce and what to consume
but production and consumption of harmful goods and services may be stopped by the
government.
As compared to Market economy, a mixed economy may have less income inequality due to
the role played by the government.
Monopolies may be existing but under close supervision of the government.