Chapter 1: First Principles Flashcards

1
Q

KEY TERM:
Individual Choice

A

the decision by an individual of what to do, which necessarily involves a decision of what not to do.

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2
Q

KEY TERM:
Resource

A

something that can be used to produce something else; includes natural resources (from the physical environment) and human resources (labor, skill, intelligence).

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3
Q

KEY TERM:
Scarce

A

in short supply; a resource is scarce when there is not enough of the resource available to satisfy all the needs and wants of a society.

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4
Q

KEY TERM:
Opportunity Cost

A

the real cost of an item: what you must give up in order to get it.
What is given up ÷ what is gained.

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5
Q

KEY TERM:
Trade-off

A

a comparison of costs and benefits of doing something.

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6
Q

KEY TERM:
Marginal Decisions

A

a decision made at the “margin” of an activity to do a bit more or a bit less of that activity.

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7
Q

KEY TERM:
Marginal Analysis

A

the study of marginal decisions.

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8
Q

KEY TERM:
Incentive

A

anything that offers rewards to people to change their behaviour.

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9
Q

KEY TERM:
Trade

A

the practice, in a market economy, in which individuals provide goods and services to others and receive goods and services in return.

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10
Q

KEY TERM:
Gains from Trade

A

mutual gains achieved by specialisation (dividing tasks) and trading; in this way people can get more of what they want through trade than they could if they tried to be self-sufficient.

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11
Q

KEY TERM:
Specialization

A

the situation in which each person specialises in the task that they are good at performing.

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12
Q

KEY TERM:
Equilibrium

A

an economic situation in which no individual would be better off doing something different.

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13
Q

KEY TERM:
Economic efficiency

A

description of a market or economy that takes all opportunities to make some people better off without making other people worse off. Productive and allocative efficiency is maximised. Also called Pareto efficiency.

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14
Q

KEY TERM:
Equity

A

fairness; everyone gets their fair share.

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15
Q

KEY TERM:
Potential

A

the total amount of goods and services that can be produced.

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16
Q

4 principles that guide individual choice?

A

1) Choices are necessary because resources are scarce. Society in the market economy makes choices as an amalgamation of individual choices.
2) The true cost of something is its opportunity cost. Monetary costs are only an indication.
3) Marginal decisions require making trade-offs.
4) People respond to incentives, exploiting opportunities to make themselves better off.

17
Q

4 principles that guide how individuals interact (microeconomics)?

A

1) Gains from trade.
2) Markets move towards equilibrium (predictable).
3) Resources should be used as efficiently as possible to attain society’s goals, otherwise they need rearranging. Policy makers don’t always strive for efficiency as they have to look at trade-offs of economic efficiency and equity (social justice, individual liberty).
4) Government intervene during market failure to improve societal welfare.

18
Q

3 principles that guide economy-wide interactions (macroeconomics)?

A

1) One person’s spending is another person’s income.
2) Overall spending sometimes gets out of line with the economy’s productive capacity. Recession = spending < supply. Inflation = spending > supply.
3) Increases in the economy’s potential leads to economic growth (emergence of new technologies and resources for production). Production rises = higher living standards AND winners and losers of growth. In a dynamic competitive market, losers don’t always stay losers (principle #4 and #9).

19
Q

What is an economy’s resource?

A

Land, labour, capital, human capital (entrepreneurship).