Principles of Economics

Cards (27)

  • Economics
    Studies how individuals and societies use limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants
  • Schools of economic thought
    • Pre-classical economy (Ancient economic thought, Scholasticism, Mercantilism, Physiocrats)
    • Classical school (focuses on the tendency of markets to move to equilibrium - Adam Smith)
    • Austrian school (Carl Menger, F.A. Hayek, Ludwig von Mises)
    • Keynesian school (John Maynard Keynes)
  • Keynes vs Hayek
    Austrian vs Keynesian schools
  • Presentation about broken window fallacy
  • Milton Friedman speech about The Free Lunch Myth
  • Scarcity
    Individuals and societies must choose among available alternatives
  • Opportunity cost
    The cost of any activity measured in terms of the value of the best alternative that is not chosen (that is foregone)
  • Assessing opportunity costs is essential to calculate the true cost of any course of action
  • Homo economicus
    The concept of humans who are rational and will always attempt to maximize their utility - whether it be from monetary or non-monetary gains
  • Homo reciprocans
    The concept that human beings are primarily motivated by the desire to be cooperative, and improve their environment
  • Economic goods, free goods, and economic bads
    • Economic good (scarce good) - the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a zero price
    • Free good - the quantity supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at a zero price
    • Economic bad - people are willing to pay to avoid the item
  • Factors of production
    • Land (natural resources, the "free gifts of nature", not processed goods)
    • Labour (the contribution of human beings)
    • Capital (machines, buildings, tools, plant and equipment, "financial capital" is used to buy non-financial capital)
  • Resource payments
    • Land - rent
    • Labour - wages
    • Capital - interest
  • Information economics
    Branch of microeconomic theory that studies how information affects an economy and economic decisions
  • Positive economics
    Attempts to describe how the economy functions, relies on testable hypotheses
  • Normative economics
    Relies on value judgements to evaluate or recommend alternative policies, often used by politicians
  • Economic methodology
    Observe a phenomenon, make simplifying assumptions and formulate a hypothesis, generate predictions, and test the hypothesis
  • Ceteris paribus
    Latin phrase meaning "with other things the same", used to simplify reality in economics
  • Hasty generalization fallacy occurs when it is incorrectly assumed that what is true for each and every individual in isolation is true for an entire group
  • Post hoc, ergo propter hoc fallacy (association as causation) occurs when one incorrectly assumes that one event is the cause of another because it precedes the other
  • Microeconomics
    The study of individual economic agents and individual markets
  • Macroeconomics
    The study of economic aggregates, studies economy as a whole
  • Types of relationships
    • Direct relationship
    • Inverse relationship
    • Independent relationship
  • Linear relationships
    If an equation can be written in the form: Y=mX+b, then: m = slope, and b = Y - intercept
  • Henry Hazlitt: 'The art of economics consists in looking not merely at the immediate but at the longer effects of any act or policy; it consists in tracing the consequences of that policy not merely for one group but for all groups.'
  • The Forgotten Man by William Graham Sumner
  • Literature
    • www.oswego.edu/~kane/eco101.htm
    • www.wikipedia.org (opportunity cost, homo economicus, homo reciprocans, logical fallacies)
    • www.investopedia.com
    • https://www.theadvocates.org/quiz/
    • https://www.swarthmore.edu/SocSci/rbannis1/AIH19th/Sumner.Forgotten.html
    • Czarny B. Podstawy ekonomii