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Samenvatting - Bio Economics

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This clear and structured summary covers all the essential content from Lecture 1 of an introductory economics course. It’s ideal for students in economics, business, social sciences, or policy studies. The summary explains key concepts, models, and theories using concise bullet points, diagrams, and real-world examples—perfect for quick revision and deep understanding. Why Buy This Summary? - Covers all key concepts from Lecture 1 - Visually structured for fast learning - Ideal for exam prep and concept mastery - Easy to convert into flashcards or study notes

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October 12, 2025
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1. Why economics?

• To understand everyday life

• To understand society / be an informed citizen

• To learn a way of thinking



2. The economic problem

2.1. Scarcity & choice

• Resources are scarce & therefore, we need to choose

➢ Natural, capital & human resources

➢ We make constrained choices (beperkte keuzemogelijkheden)

 These choices determine:

1) What gets produced

2) how it is produced

3) who gets what is produced

 How to decide:

➢ Weighting costs and benefits (only of the actual choice)

➢ Taking into account marginal costs and marginal benefits



• Opportunity cost = what you give up when you choose one thing over another

• Marginalism = the process of analyzing the additional or incremental costs and benefits arising from a choice or
decision

• Marginal cost = the extra cost of producing one more unit of a good or service

• Marginal benefit = the increase in benefit from an additional unit produced or consumed



2.2. Specialization & exchange

• Theory of comparative advantage = Specialization and trade will benefit all trading parties (David Ricardo)

➢ Absolute advantage = if they can produce something using less resources than someone else → lower absolute
cost per unit

 More efficient

➢ Comparative advantage = if they can produce something at a lower opportunity cost than someone else

 Making smarter trade-offs

• Production possibility frontier (PPF)

➢ The combination of all goods and services that can be produced if resources are used efficiently



 SUMMARY

➢ Scarcity forces choices. We make decisions by comparing marginal costs and benefits. These choices create
opportunity costs, which lead to specialization and trade. Trade expands what we can achieve.

, 3. The scope of economics

• Economics

➢ what economists do

➢ the study of economies

➢ the study of how individuals and societies choose to use the scarce resources that nature and previous
generations have provided



• Economics

➢ use their tools to a very wide range of topics

➢ simply want to explain everything in society with their methods and models

➢ try to make sense of everyday life



• Micro-economics = Behavior of individual decision-making units: firms & households

➢ Production in a sector or a firm

➢ Prices of individual goods & services

➢ Distribution of income & wealth

➢ Employment in a sector, by individual firms and households



• Macro-economics = Economic behavior of aggregates on a national scale

➢ National production and output

➢ Aggregate price levels

➢ National income

➢ Employment and unemployment in the economy



• Fields of economics:

➢ Agricultural economics • Behavioral economics • Business economics • Development economics • Economic
history • Environmental economics …



• Bio-economics: economics of the bio-economy

➢ The bio-economy = bio-based economy

= biotech-economy (Can be interpreted in a narrow or a broad way)

➢ Focuses on:

 Sustainability: an economy that serves society and respects planetary boundaries

 Circular economy: reducing waste

 Sectors: agriculture, forestry, fishery, food, energy, textile, ….

 Production and consumption of bio-based products: food, feed, flowers, fiber, biofuel, bioplastics,
pharmaceuticals, …
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