Utilisateur
The social science studying how people make decisions in the face of scarcity and the impact of those decisions.
A universal phenomenon where resources (time, labor, income) are finite, implying that people must confront tradeoffs
Studies individual units (households, firms, specific markets).
Studies the economy as a whole (GDP, inflation, unemployment).
Descriptive, fact-based claims about how the world actually functions.
Opinion-based claims about how the world should be, often involving value judgments.
People respond to incentives. For example, Mike Ditka’s helmet argument suggests that removing helmets would increase the "cost" of a hit (risk of injury), leading players to change their behavior to be safer.
Questions are answered through individual decision-making in free markets.
Questions are answered by a central authority using "legal coercion"
Benefit from consumption; provide factors of production (labor).
Produce goods/services for households.
Households are sellers; firms are buyers
Firms are sellers; households are buyers.
Ability to produce more of a good than someone else
Ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than someone else.
Inverse relationship between price and quantity demanded (downward sloping).
Direct relationship between price and quantity supplied (upward sloping).
The point where the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied.
Medium of exchange, store of value, and unit of measure
Total gains outweigh total losses; a win-win outcome is possible.
Total gains and losses equal zero.
Total losses outweigh total gains.
Buyer's gain (Value - Price).
Seller's gain (Price - Cost).
The sum of Consumer and Producer Surplus
The loss in Total Social Surplus when the market is not at its efficient level (equilibrium).
Price does not change the total gains from trade; it only determines how the "pie" is split between the buyer and seller.
