Economics 1 Bentz Fall 2002 Topic 1

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall 02

Topic 1: Introduction to Economics 1 (The Price System)


Economics 1, Fall 2002 Andreas Bentz Based Primarily on Frank Chapter 1

Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall 02

Micro and Macroeconomics


A Quick Taxonomy

Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Micro and Macroeconomics


Microeconomics studies individual decisionmaking:

How do individuals make decisions? How do people interact? If we can understand how individuals make decisions, we can predict what they will do in different situations (that is, we can give economic advice).

Micro and Macroeconomics, contd


Macroeconomics traditionally studies the behavior of large aggregates, for instance:

inflation unemployment output (business cycles, output growth) etc.

(Modern Macroeconomics has become a lot more like Microeconomics in its approach.)

Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall 02

What is Microeconomics about?


The Rationality Assumption The Maximization Principle

What is Microeconomics about?


How do we make decisions? The method of Economics:

Assumption (Rationality): Individuals are rational. Maximization Principle: A rational individual always chooses to do what she most prefers to do, given the options that are open to her.

(Almost) all of economics is a working-out of the consequences of this assumption.


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Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Maximization: Scarcity
A rational individual always chooses to do what she

most prefers to do, given the options that are open to her.

given the options that are open to her signals that we live in a world of scarcity (not all options are open to us):

money time natural resources information etc.


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Maximization: Preferences
A rational individual always chooses to do what she most prefers to do, given the options that are open to her.

chooses to do what she most prefers to do says that we always do the best we can by our own standard (what we most prefer to do).

Is this straightforward? Philosophically, no. You may choose to do things you do not prefer most, maybe because they are good for you (give up smoking), or maybe because they are good for someone else (care for your child).
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Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Rationality
What does rationality mean?

Completeness. For any two alternative options, you can always say:

either: which you prefer most, or: that you are precisely indifferent between them. This rules out that you could say I cannot rank these two alternatives.

Transitivity. This is really a consistency requirement:

if you prefer apples to bananas and you prefer bananas to cactus fruit, then you must also prefer apples to cactus fruit.
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Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall 02

What is this Course about?


Introduction and Outline

Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

A Tour around Economics 1


Consumers Preferences Constraints Producers (Firms) Production Costs Industry Supply Market Structure:

Individual Demand
= Market Demand

Perfect Competition, Monopoly Efficiency, Externalities, Public Goods. The Role of Government

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Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 1, Fall 02

Thinking like an Economist


Costs and Benefits Sunk Costs Marginal Analysis

Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Costs and Benefits


Should I do something or not? When Economists evaluate what they should do, they think in terms of costs and benefits. Example: should you go to the movies or study for this class? Movie: Study:

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Opportunity Cost
Should I go to the movies in isolation makes no sense to an economist:

in the example, you might think that since the benefit is greater than the cost, you should go to the movies.

But we always need to compare one option to the best available alternative.

We sometimes express this by saying that there is an opportunity cost to going to the movies: you cannot do whatever you could have done otherwise.
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Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Opportunity Cost, contd


You could think about the movie example in terms of opportunity cost:

Movie:
benefit: - direct cost: - opportunity cost: = total: $10 - $7 - $5 - $2

Here the opportunity cost is what you could have done instead: study.

Since the costs are greater than the benefit, you should not go to the movies (i.e. study).
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Sunk Costs
Example: You have already paid $10 for a ticket for a Dartmouth football game. Your friend has a free ticket. On the day of the game, there is a tremendous thunderstorm. If you both have the same tastes, who do you think is more likely to attend the game?

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Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Sunk Costs, contd


Sunk costs are costs that you incur regardless of what decision you make (for instance, whether or not to go to the football game). They should therefore not influence your decision. You should not count sunk costs in your costbenefit calculation.

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Marginal Analysis
How much of something should I do? Example: Each slice of pizza you eat at Thayer costs $1.75. Each slice gives you the following benefit (in money terms):

1st slice: 2nd slice: 3rd slice: 4th slice:

$4.00 $2.00 $0.50 - $0.20

How many slices should you eat?


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Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Marginal Analysis, contd


Example, contd:

In the example, the first slice gives you a benefit of $4, but it costs you only $1.75. So you should eat that slice. Now think about eating one more slice: the second slice gives you a benefit of $2, but it costs you only $1.75. So you should eat that slice. Now think about eating one more slice: the third slice gives you a benefit of $0.50, but it costs you $1.75. So you should not eat that slice (or any further slices).
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Marginal Analysis, contd


Example, contd:
marginal cost marginal benefit $4.00

$2.00 $1.75 $0.50 $0.00 -$0.20

slices of pizza
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Andreas Bentz

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DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

ECONOMICS 1

Marginal Analysis, contd


Economists always think in terms of should I consume one more unit?, or: should I produce one more unit? This is often the most natural way of framing decisions. (For instance, think about the manager who has to decide about whether to expand production by hiring one more worker.) And it makes life a lot easier: we only need to think about the costs and benefits of one more (or, the marginal) unit of the good.
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Marginal Analysis, contd


The idea of marginal analysis - wondering about whether to do one more (or one less) of something (consume, produce) - is one of the most important in economics.

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Andreas Bentz

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