3.1.1 - Economic Methodology and the Economic Problem Flashcards

1
Q

What does economics study?

A

The choices people take under conditions of scarcity and uncertainty.

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2
Q

What is microeconomics the study of?

A

Economics at the individual, industry or household level.

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3
Q

What is a positive statement?

A

A statement that can be tested, proved and/or amended due to evidence.

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4
Q

What is a normative statement?

A

A subjective statement.

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5
Q

What are the 3 assumptions microeconomists make?

A
  1. Rational consumers want to maximize satisfaction
    from the products they purchase.
  2. Producers/Companies wish to maximize profits by
    producing goods at the lowest cost.
  3. Government operates in the best interests of it’s
    citizens by improving the economic and social
    welfare of the aforementioned.
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6
Q

What is opportunity cost?

A

It measures the cost of a choice compared to the next best option.

i.e. If you go out for food, the opportunity cost is that you didn’t put that money into savings.

On a more macro scale, if you use land for agriculture and farming, you can’t then also use that land for education or healthcare.

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7
Q

What are the factors of production?

A

Land
Labour
Enterprise
Capital

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8
Q

What does land mean?

A

The scarce physical natural resources available for production.

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9
Q

What is labour?

A

The human input to create goods.

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10
Q

What is enterprise?

A

The people who own the companies that manufacture the goods.

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11
Q

What is capital?

A

The goods used in the supply of other products.
i.e. technology, machinery etc.

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12
Q

What are capital goods?

A

Goods that are used to make and manufacture consumer goods and services.

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13
Q

What are the three types of consumer goods?

A

Consumer durables
Consumer non-durables
Consumer services

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14
Q

Give an example of a consumer durable.

A

A washing machine

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15
Q

Give an example of a consumer non-durable.

A

A latte
Turning on the heating.

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16
Q

Give an example of a consumer service.

A

Hair cut
Tickets to a show

17
Q

What does the rate of extraction of finite resources depend on?

A

It depends in part on the current market price. In a free market economy, businesses that extract resources such as oil will have a greater incentive to do so.

18
Q

What are the two main economies?

A

Free market
Command
(Mixed)

19
Q

What are the principles of a free market?

A

Markets allocate resources to people.
The economy is driven by the profit motive (i.e. this thing costs more therefore companies will make more of it).
Limited role of state because everything is privatised.

20
Q

What are the principles of a command economy?

A

Most if not all resources are state-owned.
Planning from the state allocates resources.
Very little role for market prices.

21
Q

What are the advantages of free market competition?

A

A natural efficient allocation of scarce resources (i.e. resources tend to go where market return is highest)
Competition tends to improve the quality of goods through innovation.
Competition means consumers can choose between companies to purchase from.
The profit motive stimulates capital investment lowering prices in the long run.

22
Q

What is the role of State in a mixed economy?

A

There is a mix of private and public sectors.

State-owned industries (i.e. RBS or Network Rail)
Welfare (State pension, free healthcare etc.)
Spending on public services (Education and health investment)

23
Q

What do normative statements have to contain?

A

A value judgement, be it implicit or explicit.

24
Q

What is a value judgement?

A

Whether something is desirable or not.