1 / 11

The economist as social scientist

Lecture Notes: Econ 203 Introductory Microeconomics Lecture/Chapter 2: Economic thinking and practice M. Cary Leahey Manhattan College Fall 2012. The economist as social scientist. Art versus science (Nobel prize example) Role of scientist, explaining the world

Download Presentation

The economist as social scientist

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture Notes: Econ 203 Introductory MicroeconomicsLecture/Chapter 2: Economic thinking and practiceM. Cary LeaheyManhattan CollegeFall 2012

  2. The economist as social scientist • Art versus science (Nobel prize example) • Role of scientist, explaining the world • Role of policy advisor, trying to improve it

  3. Assumptions and models • Assumptions to help simplify things (assume a can opener) • Model: simple representation of complex reality-”ballpark”

  4. Models: circular flow diagram • Circular flow-visual model of economy • Two types of economic actors: households and firms • Two markets: goods and services and factors of production

  5. FIGURE 1: The Circular-Flow Diagram Revenue Spending Markets for Goods & Services G & S sold G & S bought Firms Households Factors of production Labor, land, capital Markets for Factors of Production Income Wages, rent, profit 5

  6. Models: Production possibilities frontier (PPF) • The PPF shows the combinations of 2 goods (x, y axis) that can be produced given available resources • Review points along the PPF from Figure 2 • PPF is possible and efficiency • PPF and opportunity cost-shifting resources along the PPF • Slope of PPF is the opportunity cost—the rise over the run

  7. Figure 2: PPF Example E D C B A 7

  8. Models: Economic growth and the PPF • Economic growth shifts the PPF outward • Additional resources= additional output • Shape of PPF shows how opportunity costs can change • Straight PPF = same tradeoff • Bowed PPF opportunity costs changes • Steeper = higher opportunity cost • Why= intensity of resource use

  9. Micro versus macro • Micro – study of individual firms and households • Macro – study of aggregate activity • More agreement on micro than macro basics

  10. Economist as policy advisor • Positive economics-world as it is • Normative economics-would as it should be • Positive statements can be refuted “scientific” • Normative statement is a value judgment • Many economist shy away from value judgments • Where do economist do policy work? (Mankiw plug) • Sources of disagreements are mainly on policy prescriptions, not bedrock economic concepts • Who has studied economics; the list might surprise you (Tiger, the Terminator)

  11. Summary • Economists explain the world using models with built-in assumptions • Two simple models are circular flow and the PPF • Micro is the study of individual behavior; macro is on the aggregate • Positive versus normative economics

More Related