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EPS notes for 1st year IRO

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the class notes for EPS in 1st year IRO. Including definitions and schemes. Grade 8.5

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June 14, 2023
Number of pages
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Written in
2022/2023
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Mia
Probst




1st year class notes : Economics for Political Scientists




Overview
1. Lecture 1: introduction, growth and inequality
2. Lecture 2 : game theory
3. Lecture 3 : modeling
4. Lecture 4 : institutions, production and inequality
5. Lecture 5 : firms, principal-agent problem and transaction costs
6. Lecture 6 : firms, supply and demand
7. Lecture 7 : monopoly redux and macro labor market
8. Lecture 8 : time travel (credit and borrowing)
9. Lecture 9 : money and financial assets
10. Lecture 10 : market failures
11. Lecture 11 : governments and markets
12. Lecture 12 : globalization of commerce
13. Lecture 13 : environmental economics

,lecture 1 (02/11): intro & growth & inequality


what is the study of economics
- centers on the study of human behavior
- but w focus: eco incentives & eco outcomes

eco incentive: choose outcome that improves your economic welfare & how those choices
are shaped by markets & other circumstances

how ppl make choices under scarcity : eco vs sentiment

eco outcomes:
study indiv incentives = microeconomics
study of aggregated outcomes = macroeconomics

what eco does not tell → no moral judgment
⇒ study of the world as it is

pol scientists need to understand eco
- who gets what, where, when and how
- pol can shape eco incentives




1. key concepts
- nominal GDP (or GDP growth)
- GDP measured in current currency amount
- does not account for inflat° or diff in purchasing power across country
- “sticker price”

- real GDP (in constant price)
- important to measure change over time
- growth adjusted for changes in inflat°
- applies to any type of price measure
- translate current nominal prices → consistant baseline

- PPP
- change across countries & time
- adjust for differences in currencies & what they purchase
- generally translate local eco activity in $ of a particular year
- consumer price index (CPI)




2. nominal vs constant

, 3. economic growth
how to measure it ?
- GDP : compare size of ecos across time & countries

4. where do eco growth come from?
= learning to produce more w the same amount of stuff

increase: techno, human K, natural resources, law & creat institut° to make eco actv easier,
short term: ex:rainfall, war

5. what does GDP measure
gdp: measure the market value of all finished goods produced within a country (usually per
y).

finished good: good that will not be sold again as a part of another good
intermediate goods: goods that will be used to make something else that will be sold
capital goods: goods that are used to produce other goods but not a part of other goods

does not include: things imported from other countries
includes: exports

Y= C+I+G+(X-M)

y= gdp
c= consumer spending on finished goods
I= investment in capital goods
G= gov spending
X= exports
M= imports

GDP per capita

how wealthy a country is
GDP/populat°

6. calculate eco growth (tx de variat°)

7. wealth & health of nat°
gdp : calculates material values
BUT good indicator of “dev” bc correlated w health, happiness…

hockey stick : rapid, sustained growth in average living standards

8. faults of GDP
inequality across countries
1000 y ago world was flat: small diff between countries
1980 & since: skyscrapers increased

, 9. local & global inequality

eco → techno & capitalism
pol → demo & property rights

eco systems :
explosion growth rates correlate w development of diff eco systems (+ capitalist)
BUT no pure eco system

increase in eco growth likely starts w capitalism
capitalism: en eco system in which pv property markets & firms play an important role
⇒ eco system based on individualism & eco incentives

3 elements of capitalism
- pv property
- can keep gains of their labour protected from gov & others
- markets : allocat° of goods & services are determined by buying & selling, not govs
- firms (pv & organized)

what capitalism gives us
- division of labour
- specializat°
- entrepreneurial innovators
- new technology

incentives (incentive to work in smt you good at & being + compensated) & eco organizat°
→ leads to specializat° & division of labor : leads to + eco growth


self sufficiency road to poverty

every step of the way = someone specialized in a particular element
resources wasted to do everything by oneself → someone can do it + effiently

specializat°: when entity produces a + narrow range of goods and services that it consimes
aquiring the goods and services that is not producced by trade

division of labour: specializat° of producers to carry out diff tasks in the product° process

gains increased when individuals incentivized to do what they do best

techno innovat°

techno innovat° tied to improving eco & improving living standards
where do techno innvovat° comes from → incentives matter
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