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Basic Economic Concepts

Subject: Economics
Topic: 1
Cambridge Code: 0455 / 2281


The Economic Problem

Economics - Study of how we allocate scarce resources to unlimited wants

Scarcity

Scarcity - Limited resources, unlimited wants

Resources (Factors of Production):

  1. Land: Natural resources (soil, minerals, water)
  2. Labor: Human effort and skills
  3. Capital: Equipment, buildings, tools
  4. Enterprise: Entrepreneur organizing production

Problem:

  • Resources finite
  • Human wants infinite
  • Must choose what to produce
  • Cannot have everything

Opportunity Cost

Opportunity cost - What you give up to get something

Definition: Value of next best alternative foregone

Example:

  • Study in evening vs work and earn £50
  • Opportunity cost of studying = £50 foregone
  • Study is worthwhile if benefit exceeds £50

Why it matters:

  • All decisions involve trade-offs
  • Helps evaluate choices
  • Varies by person and situation
  • Often not financial

Production Possibility Frontier (PPF)

PPF - Shows maximum production combinations possible

Characteristics

Curved line showing:

  • All combinations at full capacity
  • Points inside curve: Underutilization
  • Points outside curve: Impossible

Example: Producing cars and food

     Cars
|
100|●
|
80|
|
60|
|
40|
|
20| ●●●
|●
+----+----+----+---- Food
2 4 6 8

Interpreting PPF

Reality points on curve:

  • Efficient (no waste, full capacity)
  • Must choose which combination

Points inside curve:

  • Inefficient (unemployment, underutilization)
  • Resources not fully used

Points outside curve:

  • Impossible with current resources
  • Future goal (if economy grows)

Shifts in PPF

Outward shift (Economic growth):

  • More resources
  • Better technology
  • More skilled workers
  • More capital

Inward shift (Economic contraction):

  • Resources lost (war, disease)
  • Technology lost
  • Capital destroyed

Economic Systems

Economic system - How society organizes production and distribution

Types

Market Economy:

  • Private ownership
  • Competition drives decisions
  • Consumers choose (demand)
  • Producers seek profit
  • Minimal government

Planned Economy:

  • Government ownership
  • Central planning
  • Government decides production
  • Focuses on equality
  • May be inefficient

Mixed Economy:

  • Combination of market and planned
  • Private and public sectors
  • Government regulations
  • Most modern economies
  • Tries to balance efficiency and fairness

Microeconomics vs Macroeconomics

Microeconomics

Focus: Individual markets, consumers, firms

Studies:

  • How prices determined
  • Demand and supply
  • Consumer behavior
  • Production decisions
  • Job markets

Example: Why do coffee prices change?

Macroeconomics

Focus: Whole economy, national level

Studies:

  • Overall price level (inflation)
  • Total employment
  • Economic growth
  • International trade
  • Government policies

Example: Is the economy growing? Is unemployment rising?


Positive vs Normative Economics

Positive Economics

Factual statements:

  • "If prices rise, demand falls"
  • "Unemployment is 5%"
  • Testable, provable
  • No value judgments

Normative Economics

Opinion-based statements:

  • "Prices should be controlled"
  • "Unemployment is too high"
  • Contains judgments
  • What "should" happen

Importance: Distinguish fact from opinion in economic arguments


Specialization and Comparative Advantage

Specialization - Focusing on what you do best

Absolute Advantage

Absolute advantage - Ability to produce more with same resources

Example: Person A produces 10 cakes/day, Person B produces 5

  • Person A has absolute advantage in cakes

Comparative Advantage

Comparative advantage - Produce with lower opportunity cost

Example:

  • Worker A: 10 cakes OR 20 bread per day
  • Worker B: 5 cakes OR 15 bread per day

Opportunity costs:

  • A: 1 cake costs 2 bread
  • B: 1 cake costs 3 bread

A has comparative advantage in cakes (lower opportunity cost)

Trade benefit:

  • Each specializes in comparative advantage
  • Total output increases
  • Both can benefit

Key Points

  1. Scarcity forces choices
  2. Opportunity cost: Value of next best alternative
  3. PPF shows production possibilities
  4. Economic systems allocate resources differently
  5. Microeconomics: Individual markets
  6. Macroeconomics: Whole economy
  7. Specialization increases efficiency
  8. Comparative advantage benefits trade

Practice Questions

  1. Define scarcity and opportunity cost
  2. Draw and interpret PPF
  3. Explain economic system types
  4. Distinguish micro and macro
  5. Calculate opportunity cost
  6. Explain comparative advantage
  7. Analyze specialization benefits

Revision Tips

  • Know economic problem clearly
  • Understand opportunity cost deeply
  • Practice PPF diagrams
  • Know factor of production
  • Understand economic systems
  • Learn system advantages/disadvantages
  • Practice trade-off analysis