Principles of Economics
Principles of Economics
Principles of Economics
27/02/20
The Capitalist Revolution
Inequality
1,000 years ago, the world was “flat”. Today, there are large differences both within and
across countries.
While both types of inequality seemed to have increased, differences in average income
between countries are much larger today than they were in the past.
For a very long time, living standards did not grow in any sustained way. When sustained
growth occurred it began at different times in different places.
The countries that took off economically a century or more ago—UK, Japan, Italy—are now
rich.
The countries that took off only recently, or not at all, are in the flatlands.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) = A measure of total income and output of the economy in a
given period.
Usually expressed in per-capita terms (as an average income).
GDP per capita ≠ Disposable income
Disposable income = Total income – taxes + government transfers
GDP is an imperfect measure of well-being. However, it is highly correlated with other
measures of well-being, such as life expectancy at birth and the infant mortality rate, both of
which capture some aspects of quality of life.
Timing of Growth
A Connected World
Technological progress also greatly improved the speed at which information travels, making
the world more connected.
Environmental Consequences
Capitalism
Institutions are the laws and social customs governing the production and distribution of
goods and services.
Capitalism – an economic system where the main institutions are private property, markets,
and firms.
Private property = ownership rights over possessions
An important type of private property is capital goods = the non-labour inputs used in
production.
Does not include some essentials, e.g. air, knowledge Markets = a way for people to
exchange products and services for their mutual benefit. Unlike other types of exchange,
markets
o are reciprocated transfers
o voluntary
o usually there is competition
Firms = business organisation that uses inputs to produce outputs, and sets prices to at least
cover production costs.
o Inputs and outputs are private property
o Firms use markets to sell outputs
o The aim is usually to make profit
This pursuit of profit provides an incentive for firms to innovate and adopt new technologies,
as witnessed during the Industrial Revolution.
Comparative Advantage
All producers can benefit by specialising and trading goods, even when this means that one
producer specialises in a good that another could produce at lower cost.
Markets contribute to increasing the productivity of labour by allowing people to specialise.
Divergence in growth
Political Systems
5/03/20
What happens in an economy depends on the actions and interactions of millions of people.
We use models to see the big picture.
Building a model
Building a model
1. Capture the elements of the economy that we think matter for our question
2. Describe how agents act, and how they interact with each other and the elements of the
model
3. Determine the outcomes of these actions (an equilibrium)
4. Study what happens when conditions change
Equilibrium of a model = situation that is self-perpetuating. Something of interest does not
change unless an external force is introduced that alters the model's description of the
situation.
Key Concepts
Less is more: Ceteris paribus = simplification that involves "holding other things (in/outside
the model) constant”.
Incentives = economic rewards or punishments, which influence the benefits and costs of
alternative courses of action.
Relative prices help us compare alternatives.
Economic rent = the benefit received from a choice, taking into account the next best
alternative (reservation option)
o Forms the basis of how we make choices.
Explaining growth
Why did the Industrial Revolution happen first in the 18th Century, on an island off the coast
of Europe?
There are many alternative explanations
o Access to colonies
o Relatively high cost of labour
o Europe’s scientific revolution and Enlightenment
o Political and cultural characteristics of nations as a whole
o Abundance of coal
Firms aim to maximise their profit, which means producing cloth at the least possible cost.
This is why the firms’ choice of technology depends on economic information about relative
prices of inputs
Explaining Stagnation
Mathus Model
Key ideas:
o Population expands if living standards increase
o But the law of diminishing average product of labour implies that as more people
work on the land, their income will inevitably fall
In equilibrium, living standards will be forced down to subsistence level.
Population and income will stay constant.
12/03/20