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Econ 2302 – Chapter 1 Notes: The Big Ideas of Economics (Modern Principles of Economics)

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This set of notes summarizes the foundational principles introduced in Chapter 1 of Modern Principles of Economics by Cowen & Tabarrok. It covers the 10 Big Ideas that frame how economists think about scarcity, trade-offs, incentives, markets, and decision-making. Topics include the role of opportunity cost, marginal thinking, the power of trade, how institutions affect growth, and why good institutions matter. These notes are ideal for grasping core concepts that appear throughout the course and are essential for exams, discussions, and real-world applications.

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Institution
Blinn College

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Chapter 1 - The Big Ideas
Principles of Economics (Micro)
INSTRUCTOR: Steve Warwick
08/25/25



1.1 - Big Idea One: Incentives Matter

Real Example: Prison Ships

●​ Captains were originally paid for each prisoner they took onboard, not for
keeping them alive.
○​ Result: No incentive to treat prisoners well.
○​ Some captains even sold the prisoners’ food for profit once they reached
Australia.
●​ Later, the system changed: captains were paid only for prisoners who survived the
journey.
○​ Now, captains had a reason to care if prisoners lived — because dead
prisoners meant lost money.
○​ One writer joked that the captain became the “sincere mourner” — sincerely
sad about losing money!


What Did Adam Smith Say?

●​ In his book The Wealth of Nations (1776), he explained:​
"It is not from the benevolence (kindness) of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker
that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest."
●​ In other words:​
People don’t have to love us to help us — they just need incentives to do so.




1

, 1.2 - Big Idea Two: Good Institutions Align Self-Interest
with the Social Interest

●​ Self-interest can help everyone if it's guided in the right way.
○​ Example: When ship captains were paid only for prisoners who survived,
they had a reason to take better care of them.​
→ Their self-interest (money) matched the social good (keeping people
alive).
●​ Markets often work well at aligning self-interest and social good.
○​ Think of a grocery store:
■​ Farmers, truckers, and business owners are all trying to make
money.
■​ But their actions also help you get food.
■​ Adam Smith called this the "invisible hand"—people acting in their
own interest can still benefit society.​



But markets don’t always work perfectly.

○​ Sometimes self-interest hurts others:
■​ A company may pollute the air because it’s cheaper for them—not
good for society.
■​ Fishermen might catch too many fish, harming the environment.
■​ People might skip flu shots because they only think about themselves,
not others who could get sick.
●​ The government can help when markets fail.
○​ It can use taxes, subsidies, or rules to encourage better behavior.
■​ Example: Taxing pollution or giving a discount for flu shots




.




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Written in
2025/2026
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