Economic Analysis For Business Decisions: What Is ECONOMICS About?
Economic Analysis For Business Decisions: What Is ECONOMICS About?
What is
ECONOMICS about?
T.J. Joseph
Alliance Business School, Bangalore
Why Study Economics?
Understanding the behavior of economic agents
in a better way
To understand how business work and how business
can be made more efficient and profitable
Illustration – take any business concern
(Example: Tata Motors)
Adam Smith – Father of Economics
(‘Wealth of Nations’)
2
Why Study Economics?
Economics helps to solve complex problems that are
great importance to society
3
The Economic Problem
Two general observation:
– (1) Resources are limited.
• What are resources?
– (2) Human wants are abound/unlimited
6
Economics Defined
Economics is the study of how people cope with
scarcity
7
Scarcity Necessitates Rationing
Every society must have a means to ration scarce
resources among competing uses.
8
Emergence of Markets
Markets (and its components) emerge in direct
response to scarcity.
In a market, people exchange things that they like less
or have more, for things they like more or have less
Reallocation of their resources and enhance their
individual welfare
9
Fundamental Economic
Questions
How shall we answer the three basic economic
questions?
Shall we allow for individual freedom of choice? Or
shall we make all these decisions collectively?
10
Economic Systems
11
Alternative Economic Systems
The nature of economic system depends on
12
Market Economy
Market mechanism or Price mechanism
coordinates the decision making of various economic
agents
Also known as Free-enterprise economy – one in which
government does not control economic activity
The three fundamental economic questions are solved
by the price mechanism (through demand and supply)
Adam Smith and ‘Invisible Hand’
13
Command Economy
Also known as Centralized economy
15
Economics – A Social
Science
16
Economics as a Social Science
What differentiate economists from other social
scientists?
Economic analysis is based on certain presupposition
about human behavior
Tries to understand why the world is what it is
Example (propositions enabling ‘Law of Demand’):
People prefer more to fewer;
people seek to maximize welfare by making reasonable and
consistent choices
17
Developing Economic Theories
The real world of economic is very complex, therefore,
economists turn to theory
A theory is a set of abstractions about the real world
Economic theories are simplified models abstracted
from the complexity of the real world
Tries to explain observed behavior and make
predictions about the future
Assumption of Ceteris paribus (other things remain the
same)
18
Positive and
Normative Economics
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Positive Economics
The scientific study of “what is, what was and what
will be” the economic relationships
Explanation and prediction (deals with actual
observed phenomena); can be proven right or wrong.
Example:
The inflation rate rises when the money supply is increased
What will be the impact of an import quota on foreign cars?
What will be the impact of an increase in the gasoline excise
tax?
20
Normative Economics
What ought to be (deals with opinions and
recommendations); reflects value judgments.
Normative statements reflect subjective values. They
cannot be proved true or false.
– Example:
The inflation rate should be lower.
The two can be hard to disentangle.
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Common Mistakes –
Pitfalls to Avoid
in Economic Thinking
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Three Pitfalls
Violation of the ceteris paribus condition.
– Ceteris paribus is a Latin term meaning “other things
constant.”
– When describing the effect of a change, the outcome
may be influenced by changes in other things.
23
Three Pitfalls
Fallacy of composition
– The fallacy of composition is the erroneous view
that what is true for the individual (or the part) is
also be true for the group (or the whole).
– Microeconomics focuses on narrowly defined units,
while macroeconomics is focused on highly
aggregated units.
• One must beware of the fallacy of composition when
shifting from micro-to macro-units.
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Microeconomics
and
Macroeconomics
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Microeconomics and Macroeconomics
Microeconomics is the study of economics at the level
of the individual economic entity
Examples: the behavior of individual consumer,
individual firm, etc.
Macroeconomics deals with the sum of the behaviour
of all economic entities together (the economy as a
whole or about economic aggregates)
Examples: Study of national income (GDP),
employment, Inflation (price level), etc.
T.J. Joseph 26
Micro Vs. Macro
Microeconomics
– Studies the economy at the level of individual
consumers, workers, firms, goods, and markets
Macroeconomics
– Studies the economy at the aggregate level, at the
level of the economy as a whole.
– Examines total consumer behavior, total
employment, total production, total sales, etc.
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The Production
Possibilities Curve
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Basic Concepts
Opportunity cost: the value of the highest-valued
alternative that must be forgone when a choice is
made. It is the evaluation of a trade-off.
Im
A1
po
200 G1 E1 0 160
ssi
ble
B1 F1 130 25
175
G1 200 75
150 C1 Efficient
F1 Combinations
125
Underutilized 100
(Inefficient)
Only nondefense
75 D1 goods produced
E1
0
25 50 75 100 125 150 Nondefense Goods
Growth
The PPC moves outward (growth occurs) as the result of:
– Increased labur resources
• Larger labor force
• Change in labor force participation
• Chance in labor-leisure decision
– Improved technology (innovation)
– Expansion of capital stock
– An improvement in the rules (laws, institutions, and
policies) of the economy
A Shift of the PPC
Defense Non-defense
225 A2 A2 225 0
B2 200 75
Defense Goods A1 B2
200 C2 175 120
B1 C2 D2 130 150
175
E2 70 160
150 F2 0 165
C1 D2
125
100
D1 E2
75
E1 F2
0
25 50 75 100 125 150 Nondefense Goods
Marginal Opportunity Cost
The shape of the PPC illustrates the relative cost of
moving productive resources from one activity to
another.
The marginal opportunity cost is the amount of one
good or service that must be given up to obtain one
additional unit of another good or service.
The PPC bows outward because there are ever-
increasing marginal opportunity costs to the
production of any good.
Marginal Costs
To increase its
production of
nondefense
goods, society is
must give up
ever-increasing
amounts of
defense goods..
36
Questions for Thought