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Published byΖηναις Παπακώστας Modified over 5 years ago
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Economics -Economics -the system that society uses to produce and distribute goods and services -Why study economics??? -Why does the government pay so much attention to the economy???
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Wants and Needs -Wants are the things which people would like to have
-Needs are the things which people need to survive -Goods -things that can be made or manufactured -Capital goods are the things used to manufacture other goods -consumer goods are goods meant to be sold to consumers for use -Services -work that is done for someone for a certain price
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Limited Availability -Goods and Services are produced using resources Natural Resources or Human Resources -Scarcity -the economic problems of limited goods and the unlimited wants of society in general -Scarcity limits the availability of goods and services that people desire or need. -This scarcity gives goods and services VALUE
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Economic Choices -Opportunity Cost -this is the benefit that you have given up in order to pursue an alternative -Trade Off -this is the choice that you make when faced with economic decisions where you have to choose one thing over another
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Types of Costs Fixed Costs Expenses that are the same no matter how many units of goods are produced Ex: Mortgage payments and property taxes – it makes no difference whether your company produces 1 bike helmet or Your mortgage & taxes will remain the same -Variable Costs Expenses that change with the number of items produced Ex: Wages & raw materials -Total Costs Add fixed costs & variable costs -Marginal Costs The additional cost of producing one additional unit of output. Example $1500 to produce 30 bikes helmets, but $1550 to produce 31 helmets. What is the marginal cost of the additional unit? = $50
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Ex: If 42 units of a product are sold at $2 each:
Types of Revenue Total Revenue is the number of units sold multiplied by the average price per unit. Ex: If 42 units of a product are sold at $2 each: 42 units X $2 = $84 (total revenue Marginal Revenue- The change in revenue that results from selling an additional unit Ex: If DVDs sell for $10 and a store sells 100 DVDs a month, the total revenue is $1,000 If the store sells 101 DVDs instead of 100 DVDs for $1,010, the Marginal Revenue is $10 We do something because we expect to achieve some benefit. Marginal Benefit- the additional satisfaction or benefit received when one more unit is produced
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Cost-Benefit Analysis
The best decision is make by comparing the (marginal) benefits against the (marginal) costs Economists use a type of decision making called Cost-Benefit Analysis- weighing the costs vs. benefits. CHOOSE an action when the benefits are greater than the costs. REJECT the option if the costs outweigh the benefits
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