Monday, January 18, 2016

Unit One Notes Macroeconomics



Jan. 5, 2016

Unit 1
·      Macroeconomics- study of the economy as a whole (looking at the big picture)
Inflation
International trade
Wages
·      Microeconomics- study of individual or specific units of the economy
supply &demand
market structures
business organizations
·      Positive economics- attempts to describes the world as is.
Very descriptive, describes “what is”, collect and presents facts
·      Normative Economics- attempts to prescribe the world should be
“ought to be”, “should be”
Opinion
·      Needs- basic requirements for survival
·      Wants- desires of citizens
·      Goods- Tangible commodities
Capital goods- items used in the creation of other goods
Consumer goods- goods that are intended for final use by the consumer.
·      Services- work that is performed for someone. Ex. Education, concerts
·      Scarcity-the most fundamental economic problem that all societies face
How to satisfy unlimited wants with limited resources
·      Shortage- quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied.
·      Factors of production- resources required to produce goods and services.
1.     Land- natural resources
2.     Labor- work force
3.     Capital- human capital/ physical capital
4.     Entrepreneurship- innovation/ risk taken 

Jan. 6. 2016

·      Capital:
·      Physical capital- tools, machines, factories, robot
·      Human Capital- knowledge, skills, abilities, and talents that are gained through education and work experience.
·      Trade offs- Alternatives that we give up when we choose one course of action over another.
·      Opportunity costs- the next best alternative
·      Production possibility graphs (PPG)- shows alternative ways to use an economy’s resources.
·      4 assumptions of a (PPG)
1.     Two goods
2.     Fixed resources (Land, capital, ent., labor)
3.     Fixed technology
4.     Full employment of resources
·      Efficiency- using resources in such a way as to maximize the production of goods and services.
·      Allocative efficiency- the products being produced are the ones most desired by society
·      Productive efficiency- products are being produced in the least costly way and this is any point on the production possibility curve.
·      Underutilization- using fewer resources than an economy is capable of using.
·      3 types of movement that occur within the PPC
1.     Inside of the curve- it occurs when resources are unemployed or under employed
2.     Along the PPC
3.     Shifts of the PPC

Jan. 7, 2016

·      What causes the PPC/PPF to shift?
1.     Technological changes
2.     Economic growth
3.     Change (delta) in resources
4.     Change (delta) in the labor force
5.     Natural disasters/war/famine
6.     More education & training (human capital)
·      Inside the curve--> attainable but inefficient/ Underutilization
·      On the curve--> Attainable and efficient
·      Outside the curve-->unattainable

Jan. 14, 2016

·      Elasticity of demand- A measure of how consumers react to change in price.
·      Elastic Demand- Demand that is very sensitive to a change in price.
1.     Always greater than 1
2.     The product is not a necessity
3.   The product
·      Inelastic demand- a demand that is not very sensitive to a change in price
·      Less than 1
1.     The product is a necessity
2.     There are few or no substitutes
3.     People will buy no matter what
·      Unitary Demand is always equal to one.


Elastic
Inelastic
Soda
Gas
Steaks
Salt
Candy
Milk
Candy
Insulin/ Medicine
Fur Coat
Toothpaste

·      Price elasticity of demand (PED)
Step 1: Quantity- Take new quantity- old quantity/ Old quantity
Step 2: Price- New Price- old price/ old price
Step 3: %Din quantity demand/ %Din price= PED (absolute value)

PT. 2

·      Total Revenue- the total amount of money a firm receives from selling goods and services.  PxQ= TR
·      Fixed Cost- a cost that doesn’t change no matter how much is being produced. Ex. Rent, Mortgage, Insurance, salaries
·      Variable cost- a cost that rises or falls depending upon how much is produced.
·      Marginal cost- The cost of producing one more unit of a good.

Formulas:
TFC+ TVC= TC
AFC+ AVC= ATC
TFC/Q=AFC
TVC/Q= AVC
TC/Q= ATC
TFC= AFCxQ
TVC= AVCxQ

MC= NEW TC- OLD TC

6 comments:

  1. If I wanted to buy Dr. Pepper at Whataburger and they didn't have any, the next best alternative or opportunity cost would be Sprite. Great blog!

    ReplyDelete
  2. The concept of price elasticity is rooted in the law of demand. http://youtu.be/AAzrBcJxIQU this video breaks down the concept in simpler words. Nice blog!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Let me inform you that the 4 factors of production are land, labor, Capitol and entrepreneurship.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Next time you could have elaborated more on the 3 types of movement that occur within the PPC, but overall a great blog!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Is it possible for milk to be considered elastic? Because milk isn't exactly a necessity and it could be substituted for, something like water.

    ReplyDelete
  6. When explaining how and why a PPC graph shifts it would be helpful to add pictures, but overall your information is gets the point across.

    ReplyDelete