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Principle of microeconomics Chapter 1 to 11 summary (MPME511) MID YEAR EXAM SOL PLAATJE

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Introduction to Economics: Study Notes Organized, concise, and visually appealing notes for effective learning 1 What is Economics? • Definition: The study of how scarce resources are used to satisfy human wants. • Multiple Perspectives: – George Leland Bach: Study of how scarce resources satisfy human wants. – Michael Parkin: Social science studying choices by individuals, governments, and societies under scarcity. – Interaction of people with each other and their natural surroundings over time. • Key Characteristic: Economics is a social science focused on human behavior and resource allocation. 2 Key Questions in Economics • Why do petrol prices fluctuate? What determines them? • How do petrol price changes impact economic agents (e.g., consumers, businesses)? • What is money, and how is it created? • How does money supply affect the economy? • What is unemployment? What causes it, and what government measures address it? • What are South Africa’s economic prospects and growth potential? 3 Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity Cost • Wants vs. Needs: Wants are desires; needs are essentials for survival. • Demand: Wants backed by purchasing power. • Resources: Limited in supply (e.g., land, labor, capital). • TANSTAAFL: ”There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch” – everything has a cost. • Scarcity: Resources are insufficient to meet all wants. • Choice: Decisions made due to scarcity. • Opportunity Cost: Value of the next best alternative forgone due to a choice. 4 Production Possibilities Curve (PPC) • Definition: Graph showing maximum combinations of two goods with full resource use. • Purpose: Illustrates scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost. • Key Points: 1 – On the curve: Attainable and efficient. – Inside the curve: Attainable but inefficient. – Beyond the curve: Unattainable with current resources. 5 Applications of the PPC 5.1 Goods and Services Classification • Consumer Goods: Non-durable (e.g., food), semi-durable (e.g., clothing), durable (e.g., cars). • Capital Goods: Used to produce other goods (e.g., machinery). • Services: Intangible products (e.g., education, healthcare). • Final vs. Intermediate Goods: Final goods for end-use; intermediate for further production. • Private vs. Public Goods: Private (exclusive use); public (non-exclusive, e.g., roads). • Economic vs. Free Goods: Economic goods are scarce; free goods are abundant. • Homogeneous vs. Heterogeneous Goods: Identical vs. differentiated products. 5.2 Economic Growth • Outward Shift of PPC: Indicates economic growth. • Causes of Growth: – Increase in resources. – Improved technology. – Higher productivity. • Inward Shift of PPC: Indicates economic decline. • Causes of Decline: – Resource destruction. – Deterioration of techniques. – Decreased productivity. 5.3 Resource Allocation • Deciding what and how much to produce. • Allocating scarce resources among competing alternatives. 6 Economics as a Social Science • Purpose of Economic Theory: – Explanation of economic phenomena. 2 – Prediction of future trends. – Policy formulation for decision-making. • Experimental Economics: Uses real-world data and experiments to test theories. 7 Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics • Microeconomics: – Focuses on individual parts (e.g., consumers, firms). – Describes and explains specific economic phenomena. – Deals with ”what is” (positive economics). • Macroeconomics: – Focuses on the economy as a whole (e.g., GDP, inflation). 8 Positive vs. Normative Economics • Positive Economics: – Objective, fact-based statements. – Describes ”what is” (e.g., ”Inflation is 5%”). • Normative Economics: – Subjective, value-based judgments. – Describes ”what ought to be” (e.g., ”Inflation should be lower”). • Disagreements Among Economists: Arise from differing values, facts, biases, or perspectives. 9 Points to Note in Economics • Economic Way of Thinking: Analytical approach to decision-making. • Common Fallacies: – Biases in judgment. – Post hoc reasoning (assuming cause from sequence). – Correlation vs. causation errors. • Key Concepts: – Wants, needs, resources, scarcity, choice, opportunity cost. – Production possibilities, potential output, economic growth. – Types of goods and services. – Resource allocation. 3 – Social science characteristics. • Common Mistakes: Misinterpreting data, ignoring opportunity costs, or oversimplifying complex issues. For further study, review key concepts and practice applying the PPC to real-world scenarios. Visit xAI Grok for additional resources. 4 Chapter 2: Economic Systems Study Notes for Economics for South African Students (6th Edition) 1 Different Economic Systems • Three Central Economic Questions: – What to produce?: Which goods/services to produce. – How to produce?: Methods and resources used. – For whom to produce?: Who receives the output. – Additional: Where to produce?: Geographical allocation. • Classification Criteria: – Property Rights: Who owns factors of production. – Coordinating Mechanisms: How decisions are made. • Broad Classifications: – Market capitalism. – Planned socialism. – Market socialism. 2 The Traditional System • Definition: Goods/services produced and distributed based on tradition, consistent across generations. • Property Rights: Determined by tradition (e.g., communal or family ownership). • Coordinating Mechanism: All decisions guided by customs and traditions. 3 The Command System • Definition: Central authority directs what, how, and for whom to produce. • Property Rights: State owns all goods, services, and factors of production (except labor). • Coordinating Mechanism: Central authority makes all decisions. 4 The Market System • Definition: Minimal government intervention; decisions result from buyer-seller interactions via market prices. • Property Rights: Private ownership of factors of production. • Coordinating Mechanism: Voluntary exchanges reflected in market prices. • Characteristics: 1 – Incentives: Profit motives drive production. – Competition: Firms compete for consumers. – Negotiation: Buyers and sellers bargain. – Market Capitalism: Private enterprise dominance. – Market Prices: Signal demand and supply. • Functions of Price: – Rationing: Allocates scarce resources. – Allocative: Directs resources to high-demand areas. • Role of Money: Facilitates exchange, replaces barter. 5 The Mixed Economy • Definition: Combines elements of traditional, command, and market systems; one mechanism usually dominates. • Property Rights: Mix of private and public ownership. • Coordinating Mechanism: Decisions by market and/or state. 6 South Africa’s Mixed Economy • Features: – Imperfect Competition: Some markets dominated by few firms. – Nationalization: State ownership of key industries. – Perfect Competition: Rare, idealized market structure. – Privatization: Transfer of state assets to private sector. 7 The Men Behind the Systems • Adam Smith (1723–1790): – Advocated free-market economy and division of labor. – Wealth of Nations: Introduced “invisible hand” concept. • Karl Marx (1818–1883): – Critiqued capitalism; advocated planned socialism. – Communist Manifesto, Das Kapital: Class struggle and labor theory. • John Maynard Keynes (1883–1946): – Emphasized government intervention to stabilize economies. – General Theory: Foundation for macroeconomics and mixed economies. 2 7.1 Comparison of Economic Systems Feature Traditional Command Market Mixed Property Rights Tradition-based State-owned Private Private and public Coordination Tradition Central authority Market prices Market and state DecisionMaking Customs State directives Buyer-seller interaction Combination Example Subsistence communities Former USSR USA (idealized) South Africa 8 Important Concepts • Tradition, command, market, mixed economy, economic system. • Property rights, coordinating mechanism, market prices. • Incentives, competition, negotiation, capitalism, socialism. • Division of labor, money, barter system. • Privatization, nationalization, perfect/imperfect competition. Review Boxes 2-1 to 2-6 for deeper insights. Visit xAI Grok for additional resources.

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Chapter 1 to 11
Subido en
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2024/2025
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Introduction to Economics: Study Notes Organized, concise, and visually
appealing notes for effective learning



1 What is Economics?

• Definition: The study of how scarce resources are used to satisfy human wants.

• Multiple Perspectives:

– George Leland Bach: Study of how scarce resources satisfy human wants.

– Michael Parkin: Social science studying choices by individuals, governments, and societies
under scarcity.

– Interaction of people with each other and their natural surroundings over time.

• Key Characteristic: Economics is a social science focused on human behavior and resource
allocation.

2 Key Questions in Economics

• Why do petrol prices fluctuate? What determines them?

• How do petrol price changes impact economic agents (e.g., consumers, businesses)?

• What is money, and how is it created?

• How does money supply affect the economy?

• What is unemployment? What causes it, and what government measures address it?

• What are South Africa’s economic prospects and growth potential?

3 Scarcity, Choice, and Opportunity Cost

• Wants vs. Needs: Wants are desires; needs are essentials for survival.

• Demand: Wants backed by purchasing power.

• Resources: Limited in supply (e.g., land, labor, capital).

• TANSTAAFL: ”There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch” – everything has a cost.

• Scarcity: Resources are insufficient to meet all wants.

• Choice: Decisions made due to scarcity.

• Opportunity Cost: Value of the next best alternative forgone due to a choice.

4 Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)

• Definition: Graph showing maximum combinations of two goods with full resource use.

• Purpose: Illustrates scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost.

• Key Points:


1

, – On the curve: Attainable and efficient.

– Inside the curve: Attainable but inefficient.

– Beyond the curve: Unattainable with current resources.

5 Applications of the PPC

5.1 Goods and Services Classification
• Consumer Goods: Non-durable (e.g., food), semi-durable (e.g., clothing), durable (e.g.,
cars).

• Capital Goods: Used to produce other goods (e.g., machinery).

• Services: Intangible products (e.g., education, healthcare).

• Final vs. Intermediate Goods: Final goods for end-use; intermediate for further pro-
duction.

• Private vs. Public Goods: Private (exclusive use); public (non-exclusive, e.g., roads).

• Economic vs. Free Goods: Economic goods are scarce; free goods are abundant.

• Homogeneous vs. Heterogeneous Goods: Identical vs. differentiated products.

5.2 Economic Growth
• Outward Shift of PPC: Indicates economic growth.

• Causes of Growth:

– Increase in resources.

– Improved technology.

– Higher productivity.

• Inward Shift of PPC: Indicates economic decline.

• Causes of Decline:

– Resource destruction.

– Deterioration of techniques.

– Decreased productivity.

5.3 Resource Allocation
• Deciding what and how much to produce.

• Allocating scarce resources among competing alternatives.

6 Economics as a Social Science

• Purpose of Economic Theory:

– Explanation of economic phenomena.


2

, – Prediction of future trends.

– Policy formulation for decision-making.

• Experimental Economics: Uses real-world data and experiments to test theories.

7 Microeconomics vs. Macroeconomics

• Microeconomics:

– Focuses on individual parts (e.g., consumers, firms).

– Describes and explains specific economic phenomena.

– Deals with ”what is” (positive economics).

• Macroeconomics:

– Focuses on the economy as a whole (e.g., GDP, inflation).

8 Positive vs. Normative Economics

• Positive Economics:

– Objective, fact-based statements.

– Describes ”what is” (e.g., ”Inflation is 5%”).

• Normative Economics:

– Subjective, value-based judgments.

– Describes ”what ought to be” (e.g., ”Inflation should be lower”).

• Disagreements Among Economists: Arise from differing values, facts, biases, or per-
spectives.

9 Points to Note in Economics

• Economic Way of Thinking: Analytical approach to decision-making.

• Common Fallacies:

– Biases in judgment.

– Post hoc reasoning (assuming cause from sequence).

– Correlation vs. causation errors.

• Key Concepts:

– Wants, needs, resources, scarcity, choice, opportunity cost.

– Production possibilities, potential output, economic growth.

– Types of goods and services.

– Resource allocation.



3

, – Social science characteristics.

• Common Mistakes: Misinterpreting data, ignoring opportunity costs, or oversimplifying
complex issues.
For further study, review key concepts and practice applying the PPC to real-world scenarios. Visit xAI
Grok for additional resources.




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