What Is Economics
What Is Economics
What Is Economics
Contents
.
Figure 1. Economics since the beginning of time.
Economics is a discipline that is only two centuries old, but the topics explored in economics relate to
issues that have affected us from the beginning of time.
Why are some people rich and other people poor? Why are women often paid less than men? Why
does someone decide to start producing electric skateboards instead of scooters? Why do
governments worry if prices fall in the economy, but also worry if they are continuously increasing?
These questions could go on and on, and all of them refer to real-world issues that are studied in
economics. So what does economics study? We can make a list of some of the topics explored in
economics:
● It studies those activities that concern production and consumption of goods and
services.
● It studies choice and how people use their scarce resources to produce the goods
and services that they need and want.
● It studies commerce between countries, including the trade agreements and trade
barriers that governments impose to protect their industries.
● It studies the economy of a country as a whole, analysing variables such as
employment, growth and price stability.
● It studies how to reduce poverty, increase standards of living and reduce inequity
in the distribution of income between the population.
● It is the study of money, banking, capital and wealth.
Economics is all of the above and more. But if we put everything together we have an underlying
theme:
Economics is the study of how societies use their scarce resources, which are
needed to produce goods and services, to fulfil the unlimited needs and wants
of the population, and distribute these goods and services among different
groups.
In this IB Economics course, we will be going through three big units: Microeconomics,
Macroeconomics and The Global Economy. We will examine the ways in which choices are made, how
economic agents are interdependent on each other in order to achieve their economic well-being in a
changing world and the effects and outcomes on society and the environment.
Through the lens of these nine concepts, the IB Economics course will study and apply economic
theory.
But before that, this unit will introduce you to the nature of economic theory, the basic problem that
underlies it and how it approaches the world.
What is economics?
A little history
Figure 1. Adam Smith
(1723–1790).
Adam Smith (1723–1790) is known as the 'father of modern economics'. He was a Scotsman who wrote one of the first and most
important books on economics: The Wealth of Nations. It was written at the start of the Industrial Revolution in Great Britain
when the economy was transforming from a farming based system to an industrialised system, with the appearance of the steam
engine and increased use of machinery in production.
He was an advocate for the 'free market' and believed that if everyone followed their own best interest, with little government
intervention in the economy, it would result in the most efficient outcome for all. This 'laissez-faire' approach and the belief of
the 'invisible hand' of market forces was the widely accepted orthodox view of the time, in reaction to the existing feudal
mercantilist system. This was only the beginning.
Definition
A free market economy is a rationing system by which societies allocate resources to the production of
goods and services using the price mechanism, with no government intervention. All economic decisions are
based on the market forces of demand and supply.
Figure 2. Karl Marx
(1818–1883).
Karl Marx (1818–1883) was born almost one hundred years after Smith and was a German philosopher who wrote extensively
about capitalism with the aim of understanding the capitalist system and all its mechanisms in full. This led him to become
critical of that system which he saw as oppressive of the majority of the population. His ideas inspired many of the communist
regimes in the twentieth century and appeared as a massive critique of capitalism after railroads and mass production in factories
started spreading around the world.
In his book Das Kapital (Capital) Marx proclaimed that capitalism (the free market economy) was doomed because it would not
serve the best interest of workers; therefore these economies would go through a period of economic depression and
revolutionary upheavals that would require the government to take over, resulting in a communist system, also known as
'command economy'. A century after the publication of his book, one-third of the world's population lived in countries whose
economic and political systems were based on Marx's ideas.
Definition
A centrally planned economy is a rationing system where the means of production are owned by the state.
There is no private property and all economic decisions are made by the government.
After the economic slow-down in the 1890s and the Great Depression during the 1930s, another 'founder' of this discipline came
on to the scene: John Maynard Keynes (1883–1946). In 1936, he published his landmark work, the book The General Theory of
Employment, Interest and Money, in which he described a new approach to economics. He sustained that governments needed to
use monetary and fiscal policy to help the economy through the worst periods of business cycles.
According to Keynes, the government should run a budget deficit during a period of low economic activity, and spend more than
it earned through tax collection in order to help ease unemployment. These are called 'demand side policies', which are the core
of Keynesian theory.
The economic intellectual world then went from this line of thought, which predominated until the early 1970s, back to a new
version of the free market view during the late 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. This revival was influenced by the work of Friedrich
Hayek and Milton Friedman from the University of Chicago.
However, in light of the recent financial and economic crisis that started in 2008, there has been a revival of the Keynesian
economic theory, bringing the role of the government in the economy back to the centre of the discussion, and questioning the
validity of the classical free market economic assumptions.
Although many economists have contributed to the body of knowledge that is economics, Adam Smith, Karl Marx and John
Maynard Keynes are three of the most important thinkers who have shaped the basis of our discipline, making economics what it
is today.
Economics is a social science that studies how human beings use their limited resources to satisfy
their infinite needs and wants and how they improve their economic well-being. People cannot have
everything they desire, and that is where economics comes in.
You will find that economics has a lot in common with other social sciences, like sociology, psychology,
history and anthropology. It is 'social' because it deals with human society, interdependence and
behaviour; it is a 'science' because it uses a scientific method to explain economic events and to try to
predict economic outcomes likely to occur in the future.
The scientific method is used in other sciences, and consists of making conclusions and creating
knowledge through the observation, analysis and testing of data from the world around us.
Economists propose a hypothesis about how certain variables relate to each other. They will then
observe a group of data to find patterns, and then compare the predictions of their hypothesis with
the real-world outcomes, to see if they can make a generalised conclusion.
Subjectivity
One fundamental characteristic of social sciences is that there are no absolute answers. There are
many unknown variables and human behaviour is very difficult to predict. There is a lot of uncertainty
in economic life in comparison to natural sciences or mathematics, where you can measure variables
accurately in order to assess the outcome of an experiment.
The problem with social sciences is that they deal with human behaviour. Humans are unique and do
not always behave in a consistent manner.
Social scientists themselves are human and therefore they are part of the experiment that they are
studying. Many economic issues are a matter of opinion, and many times there are ambiguous
answers or multiple possible answers to an economic problem.
Often one solution to a problem is considered better than another, depending on the ‘glasses' you are
using to look at it.
First look at it while covering image (c) with your hand. Do it again, but now cover image (a) with
your hand.
Figure 1.
Seagull or rabbit?
When (c) is covered up, most people think (b) is a seagull. But when (a) is covered, most will see a
rabbit. A similar thing happens in economics: the same facts may tell different stories to different
observers who wear different theoretical glasses or look at the facts in different contexts.
Important
Social sciences, and hence economics, deal with a lot of subjectivity. This is why critical thinking and
the development of the skill of evaluation are so important.
Microeconomics studies the behaviour of individual economic agents, such as households, firms,
industries and the government, and how they make economic decisions.
Microeconomics deals with how consumers decide which goods and services to purchase (and how
many of them), based on their preferences and their incomes. How do people make choices and what
factors determine these choices?
Everyday examples would be questions like: Why do some people change to another brand of soft
drink even if the one they usually buy has become relatively cheap? Why do some people decide to
stop consuming goods that are harmful to the environment? Why do some people keep on consuming
goods that are unhealthy for them?
With respect to firms, microeconomics deals with the factors that affect producers’ decisions. It
explores how firms decide what to produce and what combination of resources to use given the
technology they have, in order to make a higher profit.
For example, why is it that adding more workers in the kitchen of a restaurant increases the amount
of hamburgers that it can produce per meal, but at a certain point, one more extra worker will actually
lower the quantity produced?
Why would a water ski producer decide to produce fewer water skis and try selling wakeboards
instead? Why is the price of food more expensive in places where there is no arable land?
This area of the discipline studies the functioning of specific markets and the outcomes resulting from
the behaviour of consumers and producers interacting together. It also considers why government
intervention is needed in certain cases.
On the other hand,
Macroeconomics studies the economy as a whole, focusing on the 'aggregates' of the economy and on
countries' fundamental economic goals. Instead of individual economic agents, it deals with the
production of all goods and services in an economy at a certain moment in time, and the total
expenditure on goods and services demanded by different groups of consumers.
Macroeconomics explores how governments try to achieve their economic goals and how effective
their policies are. For example, it looks at how to generate economic growth and low unemployment
while having a low and stable rate of inflation. It also looks at how to make economies grow while
protecting the environment to ensure that this growth is sustainable. It considers how to reduce
poverty and create a more equitable distribution of income to improve people’s standard of living.
Be aware
No matter whether we are talking about a specific firm, a certain industry, an individual consumer or a
whole country, both micro- and macroeconomics deal with the problem of scarcity and the choices
that every actor is forced to face to satisfy its needs and improve its economic well-being.
.
Figure 3. The nine central concepts of economics.
Throughout this subject, you will continually come across nine concepts that will be at the heart of
most of the problems, real-world situations and issues which you will discuss. These concepts are
integrated into the conceptual understandings of all the units of this course and will help you to make
connections and understand today’s complex reality from multiple perspectives.
You will gain a more in-depth understanding of them as we go on, but for now, Table 1 gives you a
short description of each concept within this IB Economics course.
Scarcity Scarcity is the starting point of economics. It refers to the fact that the
world’s resources are finite and have to be used to produce goods and
services to satisfy a society’s unlimited needs and wants. Therefore,
economics is the study of how to allocate and use these scarce resources
to fulfil the infinite human material needs and wants.
Choice Because resources are scarce, the goods and services available to us are
finite, and therefore societies are forced to choose, as not all needs and
wants can be satisfied. Choice implies an opportunity cost, having to leave
something behind when deciding between alternative options. Economics
studies the present and future consequences produced by these choices.
Efficiency
Efficiency refers to making the best possible use of resources. From
society’s point of view, economic efficiency is known as allocative
efficiency. Allocative efficiency refers to using the scarce resources to
produce the combination of goods that is optimal for society in the best
possible way, thus minimising resource waste.
Equity Equity has to do with being fair or just, in contrast with equality, which
means being equal to others with respect to something. Equity is a
normative concept. When talking about income, equality would mean that
everybody in society receives exactly the same amount. Equity instead
would mean that everybody has the same opportunities. The terms
inequity and inequality are usually used as if they mean the same thing
when applied to distribution of income, wealth and human opportunities.
The extent to which governments should intervene to make a society
more equitable or more equal is an issue of great debate in economics.
Economic Well-being, in general, is the state of being healthy, happy and
well-being prosperous. Commonly it includes having good mental health, high life
satisfaction and a sense of meaning or purpose. In economics this term is
used in a slightly different way. It refers to the quality of life and
prosperity of the population, including present and future financial
security, being able to meet our basic needs, being able to make
economic choices and achieve personal satisfaction and the ability to
sustain reasonable levels of income over time.
Sustainability Economic sustainability is the ability of the present generation to meet its
own needs without preventing future generations from meeting theirs. It
refers to preventing harmful effects of economic activities on the
environment. It means that societies should pursue the production of
goods and services without depleting or degrading natural resources, so
that future generations can continue to produce and satisfy their needs
and wants too.
Change The world is constantly changing in every possible aspect: institutions, the
state of technology, society and its economy. The economy is in a
permanent state of change and therefore economists should always be
aware of it when analysing any situation. With reference to economic
theory, economics looks at how variables are changing more than their
specific values suggest when investigating or assessing any issue. This is
why economists calculate and compare the rates of change of many
variables from one moment to another.
Activity
Choose three of the key concepts described in Table 1 and create an illustration of your own to explain
the relationship or connections that you can find between them. The image can be a mind map, a
cartoon, a flow chart or any other drawing that you think is suitable.
Then share and discuss with your peers and submit your work.
LO.
● meaning of scarcity
● factors of production
● three basic questions
● economic systems
Scarcity
Goods are physical objects (tangible things) like cars, bread or mobile phones.
Humans tend to want and need more and more of both goods and services.
Resources are all the inputs used to produce these goods and services. These inputs include machines, workers, factories,
materials that come from the land and the space needed for manufacturing or offices. They are also called factors of production.
Therefore, scarcity is the term used to describe the fact that the available resources or factors of production are finite, whilst
human wants and needs are infinite. There are not enough resources to produce everything to satisfy human beings' needs and
wants completely .
Factors of production
Economists group factors of production into four categories:
● Land: This includes the land itself, everything that is under and
above the land and everything that is found in and under the sea.
Therefore, this category encompasses all natural resources, such as
minerals, oil reserves, natural gas, forests, rivers and lakes.
● Labour: This is the human factor needed for production. It includes
the physical and mental effort that people contribute to the
production of goods and services. Examples include a construction
worker, as shown in Figure 2, a teacher, and a carpenter.
Opportunity cost
As people cannot have everything they need and want, they must make choices. Resource scarcity forces society to make a
choice between available alternatives. For example, a government might need to choose between spending on defence or on
agriculture. More spending on defence means that there is less money available to spend on agriculture.
Economics is, therefore, a study of choices and leads to one central issue in our discipline: opportunity cost.
For example, if you have $100 to spend on Friday night and you choose to go out for dinner instead of going to the theatre, the
opportunity cost of the dinner is the theatre. Put simply, it is what you give up in order to have something else. It is never
expressed in monetary terms.
Opportunity cost is the 'next best' alternative that is given up when an economic decision is made.
Goods that are produced with scarce resources, and therefore have an opportunity cost, are called economic goods. Most goods
and services are economic goods. If, for example, resources are used to produce a car then these resources are no longer available
to manufacture a motorbike.
In contrast, free goods are those that are not produced with scarce resources, do not have an opportunity cost, and therefore do
not have a price – for example, air, sunlight and rainwater.
If resources were unlimited, there would be no need to choose, no sacrifices would be necessary, and the opportunity cost of
producing anything would be zero.
● What to produce?
● How to produce?
● For whom to produce?
What to produce?
The question of what to produce? has to do with the choice of which goods and services are going to be produced with the scarce
resources that are available.
For example, are we going to use all the available land to grow crops or is some of it going to be used to build a factory to
produce shoes? Is all the labour going to be dedicated to the production of baked goods or are some labourers going to work on
the construction of new houses? These questions illustrate the dilemma of deciding what to produce with the resources we have.
How to produce?
The question of how to produce? has to do with the combination of resources and production methods that will be used to
produce each of the chosen goods and services.
For example, if we decide to produce crops, what combination of factors of production and what technology should we use to
produce them? Are we going to do intensive agriculture, using fertilisers and high-end sower and harvester machines (more
capital per field of land) and only few workers, or are we going to use extensive agriculture methods and grow crops in a more
traditional way using less capital and more workers to plough, plant and harvest?
For example, which goods are going to be consumed only by those who can pay for them? Which ones are going to be provided
by the government so that everybody can have access to basic necessities or merit goods l ike education and healthcare? Should
everybody receive an equal share of the goods and services produced?
Economic systems
Economic systems are ways in which societies allocate the relatively scarce resources and distribute the goods and services that
are produced with them. They are a way of rationing those resources, goods and services, and are therefore also called rationing
systems.
There are two theoretical economic systems: the free market economy and the centrally planned economy. The difference
between them lies in the extent to which the government intervenes in economic decisions.
Economic models are usually expressed using mathematical equations or analysis, or illustrated by the
use of diagrams. As they are used to show a particular aspect of a complex reality, they focus on a
selected group of variables that are relevant in each case, leaving many other factors out. Therefore
assumptions have to be made about the characteristics of these variables and the important
relationships between them.
Important
Assumptions are used in economic models to simplify reality and focus on the workings of a specific
aspect of real-world situations. We need to be aware of the assumptions we’ve made when we arrive
at conclusions or predict future behaviour based on these assumptions.
The model illustrates an imaginary economy that produces only two goods. These goods are produced
with a combination of the available resources that the country has, using the actual state of
technology at a specific moment in time. The maximum combinations of goods
and services that the country can produce are drawn on the production possibility curve as shown on
Figure 1.
As every society has a certain amount of resources (land, labour, capital and entrepreneurship), the
PPC will determine the potential output of the country.
Important
The production possibility curve or frontier is the curve that shows the maximum combination of goods
and services a country can produce in a specific period of time, using all of its resources and the
available technology in the most efficient way.
Figure 1 represents the economy of a country that produces good X and good Y. The PPC shows, for
every amount of good X produced, the corresponding maximum amount of good Y that this economy
can produce, using its limited resources at their maximum capacity and with the available technology.
For example, if the economy is standing at point A, it will produce an amount X1 of good X and an
amount Y1 of good Y. It is not possible to produce more than Y1 units of good Y while producing X1 of
good X, because this economy does not have more resources than the ones reflected by its PPC.
Theory of Knowledge
The Production Possibilities Curve (PPC) is an example of an economic model. The PPC shows all the
possible combinations of good x and good y that can be produced if all resources were fully utilized in
their best use.
Economists create models such as the PPC to try and describe our complex world. Models often break
down complex phenomena into a simplified world.
In the real world, countries produce tens of thousands of different types of goods, that all have
different costs and prices. In the PPC model, one of the assumptions we make is that countries can
only produce two goods. Is this a reasonable assumption?
Knowledge question: To what extent does this model help us understand the complex workings of an
economy?
As efficiency means that resources are being used in the best possible way, it implies that all
resources are being fully used, there is no waste and output is produced using the smallest possible
amount of resources (productive efficiency).
Be aware
A point on the PPC is the point at which a country cannot increase the production of one good without
decreasing the production of another good. This is by definition a situation of economic efficiency and
recognises the fact that the resources of any country are finite and scarce.
At any point inside the PPC, such as point D, not all the factors of production in the economy are being
used (there is unemployment of resources) or they are being used inefficiently. An economy producing
goods at this point has the potential to increase production of both goods, and it is possible for them
to move towards the PPC.
The point where a country is standing indicates its actual output. When the country is using all of its
resources efficiently, the actual output is a point on the PPC. The greater the unemployment of
resources or the less efficiently they are being used, the further away this point will be from the PPC.
Be aware
No real country in the world is actually producing on its PPC, since there will always be some
unemployed factors of production at any moment in time.
Point E is an impossible, unattainable combination of goods, as it is outside the PPC. This is because
resources are scarce and the maximum potential output is indicated by the PPC.
.
Figure 2. Production possibility frontier.
If a change in the economy caused an increase in the maximum amount of goods that can be
produced, known as the potential output, the PPC would shift outwards, towards points E and F. This
is known as potential growth.
The potential output of a country can be increased (causing the PPC to shift outwards) by one or a
combination of the following factors:
For example, if there is an improvement in the education system, then the quality of the labour factor
will increase and the country’s workforce will be more productive. This will allow the country to
produce more of everything and its production possibility curve will increase, shifting outwards.
If a new source of a natural resource is discovered (the land factor), like a new oil reserve, then the
country will have more sources of energy and will be able to produce more goods and services than
before.
On the contrary, if any situation or event happens that would reduce the quantity or quality of factors
of production, the production possibilities of the economy will be reduced. For example if there were a
war, a natural disaster or an epidemic, resources would be destroyed and the PPC would shift inwards.
Exam tip
When you draw a PPC, make sure that the curve is touching both axes at each extreme and not
floating in the air. Even when you increase the curve, drawing the new curve above the original one,
be aware that it must still go from axis to axis.
Remember that the opportunity cost is what is sacrificed, or left aside, when an economic decision is
made. It is what could have been done if one had not chosen the other option.
For example, using Figure 2, if a country wants to move from point B to point C on the PPC, increasing
the production of goods X from X2 to X3 units, then it needs to reduce the production of goods Y from
Y2 to Y3. This is because its resources are scarce and it is already producing them in the most efficient
way, as it is standing on its PPC.
Therefore, the opportunity cost of producing (X3–X2X3–X2) more units of goods X is the
(Y2–Y3Y2–Y3) units of goods Y that have to be reduced by, as some resources allocated to the
production of goods Y will now have to be transferred to the production of goods X.
Activity
Suppose that, instead of producing any two random goods X and Y, a country chooses between
allocating its resources to the production of capital goods and consumer goods. Capital goods are
those tools and machinery necessary for the production of other goods, for example an industrial
sewing machine. Consumer goods are those finished products, like clothing, that are ready for
satisfying people’s wants, not used in any further production process.
1) What would it mean to be standing on an extreme of the PPC only producing consumer goods and
zero capital goods? What consequences might there be in the future?
2) What shift of the PPC (or PPF) can we expect this situation will bring? Why?
3) Alternatively, what would be the consequence of standing on a point on the PPC (or PPF) producing
some capital goods and some consumer goods today?
Note that capital goods are also a factor of production. If we spend all of our resources today in
producing goods for consumption, how will we be able to produce more goods tomorrow when our
capital stock starts running out?
As seen in Figures 1 and 2, the PPC is drawn as a curve, which means that some factors are more
efficient at producing one good than they are at producing another.
The PPC is usually a curve and not a straight line because the opportunity cost is not normally
constant as you transfer resources from the production of one good to the other. This is because not
all of the factors of production are equally well suited to the production of both goods.
Sometimes all factors of production are equally efficient at producing each good, and in these cases
the PPC would be a straight line.
.
Figure 3. Increasing versus constant opportunity costs.
Suppose an economy produces only TVs and smartphones, as shown in Figure 3 (a). When the PPC
bends to the right, the opportunity cost changes as the economy moves from producing at one point
on the curve to another. For each additional unit of smartphones that it produces, the opportunity cost
in terms of the TVs that are sacrificed gets larger. This is because of the specialisation of factors of
production. Not all factors of production can be used to the same extent and not all are equally
suitable for producing both goods. Therefore they cannot be transferred proportionally from the
production of one good to the other.
On the other hand, when the PPC is a straight line, as in Figure 3 (b), it means that the opportunity
cost is constant as the economy passes from producing at one point on the PPC to another. In this
case, the factors of production can produce any of the two goods indistinctly as they are equally well
suited for both goods. When goods are very similar to each other, for example basketballs and
volleyballs, they need similarly specialised factors of production to produce them. Therefore the
factors of production can be transferred proportionally from the production of one good to the other.
To produce each additional unit of volleyballs, the amount of basketballs that have to be left aside, or
not produced, does not change at any point of the PPC.
Case study
Wuhan is the capital of Hubei province in China. It is the largest city in Hubei and is the most heavily
populated city in central China, with a population of 11 million people. It is considered one of China’s
political, economic and cultural hubs, and is a major transportation centre, crossed by thousands of
roads and railways connecting to other cities.
In January of 2020, an outbreak of a new virus called SARS-CoV-2 was discovered in this city. It
started at the Huanan Seafood Market, which was allegedly selling wild animals, including birds,
rabbits, bats and snakes. It was initially believed the virus came from snakes, but according to a
research paper by a team of virologists at the Wuhan Institute for Virology it is more likely that the
virus came from bats, which were also the source of the SARS outbreak.
Figure 4. The scare caused by the spread of Coronavirus in Wuhan.
This virus usually causes illness in mammals and birds. In humans, it causes respiratory tract
infections that are typically mild, but that are sometimes serious and can be lethal. It has spread
widely throughout China and the rest of the world.
Source: Adapted from How did the coronavirus outbreak start, Fox News
Using your knowledge of the Production Possibilities Curve model, draw a PPC (or PPF) diagram to
explain the possible effects of the outbreak of this virus for the Chinese economy.
Modelling the economy
The circular flow of income model
In this simple two-sector model, households are the owners of all factors of production and offer them to firms in exchange for an
income. Firms hire and organise these factors to produce goods and services, which are then consumed by households.
Households provide the factors of production: land, labour, capital and entrepreneurship. In exchange for their services, firms
will pay for each of these factors of production in different ways:
Households’ income is composed of the sum of the wages, rents, interest and dividends that they earn. They use this income to
buy the goods and services that they need and want. The total amount of money spent on goods and services is called ‘consumer
expenditure’. As there are no foreign countries in this simple model, everything that they consume is produced by domestic firms.
Therefore, all of the consumer expenditure goes back into the firms in exchange for the goods and services that they supply.
As there are no other ways to use income in this simple model, and it cannot be saved in financial institutions for future
consumption, households spend everything they earn.
Figure 2 shows two simultaneous ‘circular’ flows: a monetary one (the red arrows) and a real one (the blue arrows). The
monetary flow of income shows that income flows from firms to households as factor payments, and then flows back from
households to firms as payments for goods and services. The model also illustrates the real flow of factors of production from
households to firms, and of goods and services from firms to households.
Be aware
In this model, ‘everything that goes around comes around’ as there are no ways in which money is coming
into or going out of the economy.
In a closed economy, national income does not change over time. Also, the value of goods and services that firms produce is the
same from one period to another, therefore national output does not change either. Basically, we can conclude that there is no
economic growth and, as households spend all of their income, then the national expenditure will be equal to the total income.
Therefore, the following equation is true:
This simple model is useful to introduce the basic workings of an economy and show the interdependence between households
and firms. However, these are not the only two sectors interacting in a real economy, and consumers do not spend all of their
income consuming national goods. Let’s add the other three sectors and see how the whole circular flow of income works.
When we add the three additional sectors to the previous model, we find that firms can now sell their products to other economic
agents, whilst households now have different uses for their income.
This implies that some income will leave the economy, which will reduce the circulating flow, while some income will enter and
increase the circulating flow.
Figure
3. The circular flow of income model.
In this model, households still receive an income in exchange for the factors of production that they provide, and they still buy
domestically produced goods. However, they can now also buy imported goods, they will need to pay taxes to the government
and they can save part of their income in a financial institution for future consumption.
All of these are called leakages. Leakages are flows of money that leave the economy as savings, taxes and imports. They are the
part of domestic households’ income that is not spent on domestic goods and services.
In this model, firms now have many more potential buyers for the goods and services that they produce. They can still sell them
to domestic households, but now they can also sell them to the government, to foreign countries or to other domestic firms, which
use them to produce other goods and services.
The flows of money generated by this are called injections. They enter the circular flow of income from outside. Injections
include investment, government spending and exports. They are all the money received by domestic firms that does not come
directly from domestic households.
Important
This economy is said to be in equilibrium when leakages are equal to injections. If leakages are equal to
injections, this economy will not grow.
If leakages are bigger than injections, the money that flows out is greater than the amount that flows in, so the national income
will fall as there will be less income circulating and the economy will shrink.
On the other hand, if injections are bigger than leakages, then the opposite will happen, the national income will increase, and the
economy will grow.
For example, governments collect taxes from households and firms, which they then spend to provide public goods and services
such as education, healthcare, infrastructure and law and order. Money leaves the circular flow of income when households pay
taxes, but enters it again when the government uses those funds to buy goods and services from domestic firms.
There is one category of government spending that is not considered an injection in the circular flow of income model. This is
transfer payments. Transfer payments are payments made by governments that are not in exchange for goods or services and
therefore do not increase national output. Examples include pensions, child support and unemployment benefits. They are a
means of redistributing income from one group of households to another.
Financial institutions like banks, stock markets and pension funds receive households’ and firms’ savings. Savings leave the flow
of income at this point, but will then re-enter the economy as financial institutions give loans to firms to buy capital goods.
Capital spending by firms is called investment.
The foreign sector, as explained before, refers to foreign countries that sell their goods and services to domestic households and
firms, and that also buy our domestic products. When we buy imports, money will flow out of the economy. However, when we
sell exports to other countries, money flows in, which will increase the circulating income.
Be aware
Although each leakage is related to one injection and connected through a specific sector, this does not mean
that the amount of the leakage will be exactly the same as the corresponding injection. For example, imports
are not usually equal to exports, and governments sometimes spend more money than they collect through
taxes.
The extent to which injections are greater than leakages will determine whether an economy will grow or not. The circular flow
of income model is widely used to explain how growth can occur and how to measure national income.