001 The Nature and Purpose of Economic Activity
001 The Nature and Purpose of Economic Activity
001 The Nature and Purpose of Economic Activity
The basic economic problem is scarcity. Scarcity arises because human wants for goods and services are infinite but the resources required to produce them are finite.
The central purpose of economic activity is the production of goods and services with these limited resources in order to try and satisfy as many of the unlimited needs and wants as possible. This is done in order to try and improve or maximise economic welfare. The level of prosperity and quality of living standards in an economy.
ECONOMIC WELFARE
THE PROBLEM OF SCARCITY Not all wants can be satisfied, therefore choices have to be made over which wants to satisfy, or how the scarce resources are allocated amongst competing wants. This leads to conflict and economics tries to relieve conflict. The problem of scarcity means that choices have to be made and therefore an allocative mechanism is needed to answer the basic economic questions of:
What to produce? How to produce? For whom to produce? The method by which resources are allocated between alternative uses.
ALLOCATIVE MECHANISM
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ECONOMIC WELFARE
Economic welfare is a concept which isnt easily defined; it refers to how well people within society are doing. Economic welfare is usually measured in terms of real income, real GDP. An increase in real output and real incomes suggests people are better off and therefore there is an increase in economic welfare. However, economic welfare will be concerned with more than just levels of income. For example, peoples living standards are also influenced by factors such as levels of congestion and pollution, levels of literacy and education, healthcare and social service provision etc. These quality of life factors are important in determining economic welfare. Real income is the income of individuals or nations after adjusting for inflation. It is calculated by subtracting inflation from the nominal income. Real gross domestic product (GDP) is a macroeconomic measure of the size of an economy after changes in inflation have been taken into account.
REAL INCOME
REAL GDP
OPPORTUNITY COST
The problem of scarcity and the fact that choices need to be made leads us to the very important concept of opportunity cost. Every choice involves a sacrifice or trade off in simple terms, choosing more of one thing means giving up something else in exchange. This is called opportunity cost, i.e. the sacrifice of the next best alternative. It is the direct result of scarcity and occurs every time a choice is made. The opportunity cost of a choice is what economists call a real cost the cost of an item in terms, not of money, but of the resource, good or service that has had to be given up to obtain that item. The benefits forgone of the next best alternative use of resources.
OPPORTUNITY COST
Opportunity Cost is the true cost of an economic decision. The true cost of an economic decision is always measured in terms of opportunity cost and never in monetary/financial terms. Opportunity cost is the benefits of something real which is actually given up. If we are talking about the opportunity cost of money it is the benefits of the alternative use of the money rather than the money itself which constitutes the true cost of a purchasing decision. For example the opportunity cost of spending 50m on a new warship is not the 50m itself but the benefits forgone of spending the 50m on a new hospital. Other opportunity cost examples:
The opportunity cost of the governments decision to fight the Iraq war is the benefit that would have arisen from building 10 new schools. The opportunity cost of spending my monthly income is the benefit I would have received from saving it.
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The opportunity cost of buying a new Range Rover is the benefits that would have arisen from buying a Land Rover.
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
A mechanism for determining the allocation of scarce resources in the face of unlimited and competing human wants.
ECONOMIC SYSTEM
The purpose of any economy is to deal with the economic problem; therefore it has to deal with and try and resolve the three key economic questions: WHAT - What is going to be produced with the limited resources on offer? HOW - How is the output going to be produced? FOR WHOM - Who gets the output that is produced? The fundamental economic problem facing all societies is what, how and for whom goods and services should be produced and this is what am economic system tries to resolve. There are three main types of economic system: 1. Free Market Economy 2. Command or Planned Economy 3. Mixed Economy
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SUPPLY
The amount of a good which producers are both willing and able to sell at a given price. The amount of a good or service that a consumer is willing to buy at a particular price. The price mechanism is a term used to describe the means by which the many millions of decisions taken each day by consumers and businesses interact to determine the allocation of scarce resources between competing uses.
DEMAND
PRICE MECHANISM
The free market system answers the three key economic questions in the following way: WHAT - generally there is an economic incentive for the firm to choose to produce the most profitable goods and services and these will be those which are in highest demand. HOW there is an incentive for firms to choose the production method which is the least costly and therefore is the most profitable. FOR WHOM - the people who get the goods and services produced in a free market are those who are willing and able to pay the price for them.
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MERIT GOOD
PUBLIC GOODS - Non provision of public goods (bus stops, parks, street lighting, army, police, fire services) as they are not profitable to produce as consumers are not willing to pay for them. DEMERIT GOODS - Over consumption of demerit goods (drugs, cigarettes, alcohol etc.) if consumers have a desire for these goods, then they will be provided as they are profitable to produce, even though it may not be desirable from the point of view of society for them to be over consumed. Goods which can be of harm to society that are over produced and over consumed in a free market economy.
DEMERIT GOOD
EXTERNALITIES Private firms will ignore externalities such as air, water and noise pollution as it will reduce their profit levels if they do take these factors into account. They are defined as third party (or spill-over) effects arising from the production and/or consumption of goods and services for which no appropriate compensation is paid.
EXTERNALITIES
SOCIAL INJUSTICE There may be high levels of social injustice in a free market economy, where the economically strong get richer and the economically weak get poorer.
PLANNED ECONOMY
In a Command Economy or Planned Economy, the central or state government regulate the use of resources. The government is the final authority to take decisions regarding production of goods and services, the distribution of goods and services and the allocation of the revenues earned from their distribution.
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MIXED ECONOMIES
Where resources are allocated by a mixture of free markets and government intervention.
MIXED ECONOMY
In reality all economies are mixed economies and are a mixture of elements from the free market and planned economic systems. Simply in such a type of economy there is the presence of private economic freedom and centralised planning with a common goal of avoiding the problems associated with both economic systems.
TRANSITIONAL ECONOMIES
A transition economy or transitional economy is an economy which is changing from a centrally planned economy to a free market.
TRANSITIONAL ECONOMY
Transitional economies undergo or are undergoing economic liberalisation. During this process market forces take over setting prices rather the government. There is privatisation of government-owned enterprises and resources, and the creation of a financial. The process has been applied in China, the former Soviet Union and Communist bloc countries of Europe, and many third world countries.
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