Chapter 1 - The Foundations of Economics
Chapter 1 - The Foundations of Economics
Factors of production
- The factor inputs that are used in the production of goods or services in the attempt
to make an economic profit
- Also known as resources
Land:
- Natural resources available for production that comes from land
- Examples: common land or natural resources like water, oil, copper, natural gas and
forests
- Land resources are the raw materials in the production process.
Labour
- The physical and mental effort that people contribute to the production of goods and
services
- The human input in the production process
Free goods
Characteristics:
- Not referring to goods with no market price ( free in the financial sense)
- unlimited supply
- Zero opportunity cost- it can be produced or obtained without having to sacrifice any
resources
- Example: oxygen in the air, sunlight
- Not to be confused with public goods and common pool resources that are free of
charge
- Public goods - goods that can be consumed by anyone e.g. roads and street light-
involves opportunity cost as providing them requires tax revenue and resources
- Common pool resources e.g. lakes and forests- not owned by anyone thus there is
overconsumption leading to scarcity and opportunity cost
Economic goods
Characteristics
- Goods with a market price
- Limited in supply due to limited resources for production
- Opportunity cost is greater than zero- limited resources are sacrificed to produce
more of these goods
- Example: cars, clothing, televisions
Resource allocation
- Resources or factors of production of production are assigned to specific uses and
productive activities while answering the three basic economic questions
Overallocation
- Too many resources diverted to the production of certain goods and services (socially
undesirable)
Underallocation
- Too few resources diverted to the production of certain goods and services (socially
desirable)
Output is distributed by depending on how income is distributed e.g. higher income earners
will be able to afford more goods and services compared to lower income earners.
Government intervention
- Free market economy=no government intervention, demand and supply determine
price and how resources are allocated
- Sometimes, the markets fail to allocate resources efficiently thus there is a need for
government intervention i.e. deliberate government attempt to influence the market to
reach certain social objectives
- Command economy= the government is the central planner and decides how all
resources are allocated
- No country has a pure free market economy or a pure command economy- most are
a mix of both
- Examples of government intervention: provision of public health care and education,
provision public goods such as roads and public transport
In other words…
- If each consumer is allowed to choose freely what to buy and each producer is
allowed to choose freely what to sell and how to produce it, the market will settle on a
product distribution and prices that are beneficial to all.
- The market (consumers and producers) act based on their own self-interests which
leads to a situation where the resulting outcome maximizes the collective satisfaction
of both the consumers and producers
What is a model?
- A hypothetical construct that embodies economic procedures using a set of variables
in a logical and/or quantitative correlations
- It is a simplistic method using mathematical and other techniques created to show
complicated processes - may have many constraints
Scarcity:
- Because there are limited resources, scarcity will not allow the economy to produce
beyond its PPC i.e. point H is unobtainable
- Remember the assumption of the quantity of resources are held fixed
Choice:
- Assuming full employment of resources (operating at full capacity) and there is
productive efficiency, the economy should choose to produce on its frontier either at
point C, J or K
Opportunity cost:
- At point C, 5000 computers and 4000 cars are being produced
- To produce more cars, resources have to be diverted from computers to car
production
- At point K, 3000 cars and 5000 computers are now being produced
- Opportunity cost of producing 1000 extra cars means sacrificing the production of
2000 computers
PPC can shift outwards from PPC 1 to PPC 2 and it is caused by:
- Increase in the quantity of resources e.g. discovery of oil fields or mines or mineral
deposits
- Increase in the quality of resources e.g. invest in education and training to increase
skill levels of workers
- Advancements in technology will help to increase efficiency and productivity i,e can
produce more within a shorter period of time
Four sectors of the economy that contribute to the circular flow of income:
1. Households- consumers
2. Firms- producers
3. Government
4. International trade- exports and imports
Households supply domestic firms with needed factors of production - land, human, capital,
real capital and enterprise
- The factors are supplied by factor owners in return for a reward
- Land is supplied by landowners
Enterprise is provided by entrepreneurs- entrepreneurs combine the other three factors, and
bear the risks associated with production
Firms produce goods and services and results in incomes being generated for factors of
production:
- Land -rent
- Labour - wages and salaries
- Capital - interest
- Entrepreneurship - profit