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WHAT IS ECONOMICS? 1 C H A P T E R

What Is Economics?

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1. C H A P T E R. What Is Economics?. ECONOMICS. The social science concerned with the efficient use of scarce resources to achieve the maximum satisfaction of economic wants. ECONOMICS. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: What Is Economics?

WHAT IS ECONOMICS?

1C H A P T E R

Page 2: What Is Economics?

ECONOMICS

The social science concerned with the efficient use of scarce resources to achieve the maximum satisfaction of economic wants.

Page 3: What Is Economics?

ECONOMICS

The social science concerned with the efficient use of scarce resources to achieve the maximum satisfaction of economic wants.

Page 4: What Is Economics?

WHY STUDY ECONOMICS• Most __________ decisions involve

economics. • An understanding of economics

and government are the keys to participatory citizenship.

• Learn analytical and observational skills that are important in the workplace.

• Business managers or owners need these skills and understanding.

• Make better financial decisions with your investments.

• Foundation for careers in accounting, business, finance, marketing, or public policy.

Page 5: What Is Economics?

THE FOUNDATION OF ECONOMICS

SOCIETY HAS VIRTUALLYUNLIMITED WANTS...

Page 6: What Is Economics?

BUT LIMITED OR SCARCERESOURCES!

SOCIETY HAS VIRTUALLYUNLIMITED WANTS...

THE FOUNDATION OF ECONOMICS

Page 7: What Is Economics?

GOODS & SERVICES PROVIDE...

UTILITY

Page 8: What Is Economics?

WANT

GOODS & SERVICES PROVIDE...

UTILITY

Page 9: What Is Economics?

WANT vs. NEED

GOODS & SERVICES PROVIDE...

UTILITY

Page 10: What Is Economics?

THE ECONOMIC WAY OF THINKING

ScarcityThe world has limited

resources.These resources are

desirable.TINSTAAFL There is no such thing as a free lunch

Page 11: What Is Economics?

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A TRADE-OFF AND OPPORTUNITY COST?

Trade-Off

An exchange of one or more thing(s) in return for another.

Opportunity Cost

The value of the next-highest valued alternative or the forgone cost.

Page 12: What Is Economics?

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A TRADE-OFF AND OPPORTUNITY COST?

Trade-Off

An exchange of one or more thing(s) in return for another.

Opportunity Cost

The cost of passing up the next best choice.

Page 13: What Is Economics?

FRIDAY NIGHT OPTIONS

Go out with friends

Stay home and watch TV

Go on a date

Study economics

Attend the basketball game

The one we pick is our choice, the rest become Trade-offs.

The “next best” alternative becomes the Opportunity Cost.

Page 14: What Is Economics?

FRIDAY NIGHT OPTIONS

Go out with friends

The one we pick is our choice, the rest become Trade-offs.

The “next best” alternative becomes the Opportunity Cost.

Page 15: What Is Economics?

GO OUT ON A DATE

The Opportunity Cost of going out on a date is what you’ve lost by not going out with friends.

Excitement Fun

Your decision was based on getting more utility on your date.

That’s the “incentive”

Page 16: What Is Economics?

ANY OTHER COSTS?

Dating is expensive. Let’s say you spend $30. You could have spent that $30 on something else.

Page 17: What Is Economics?

SO OUR OPPORTUNITY COST IS…?The lost fun you would have had with your friends.

The cash you spent on your date.