Title: Choice, Change, Challenge, and Opportunity
 1CHAPTER 1
Macroeconomics Ratna K. Shrestha 
 2Understanding Our Changing World
- You are studying economics at a time of enormous 
change.  - Some of the change is for the betterthe 
information age (laptops, wireless internet 
connection, MP3, palms, iPods, etc) and all the 
benefits that it brings.  - Some of the change is for the worseterrorism, 
recession, mad cow disease, SARS and trade 
dispute that send shockwaves through our lives.  - Your economics course will help you to understand 
the powerful forces that are shaping and changing 
our world. 
  3Definition of Economics
- All economic questions arise because we want more 
than we can get.  - Because of our inability to satisfy all our 
wants, we face scarcity and we must make choices.  - The choices we make depend on the incentives we 
face.  - An incentive is a reward that encourages or a 
penalty that discourages an action. 
  4Definition of Economics
- Economics is the social science that studies the 
choices that individuals, businesses, 
governments, and societies make as they cope with 
scarcity and the incentives that influence and 
reconcile those choices.  - The subject is divided into two parts 
 -  Microeconomics 
 -  Macroeconomics
 
  5Definition of Economics
- Microeconomics 
 - Microeconomics is the study of choices made by 
individuals and businesses, the way these choices 
interact and the influence of government on those 
choices. E.g., how would a tax on e-commerce 
affect Amazon.com?  - Macroeconomics 
 - Macroeconomics is the study of the effects on the 
national and global economy of the choices that 
individuals, businesses, and governments make. 
E.g, Why did production and jobs in Canada 
expanded so rapidly in 2002 but not in 2003? What 
happens when the Bank of Canada cuts the interest 
rate? 
  6Two Big Economic Questions 
- Two big questions summarize the scope of 
economics  -  How do choices end up determining what, how, and 
for whom goods and services get produced?  -  When do choices made in the pursuit of 
self-interest also promote the social interest? 
  7Two Big Economic Questions 
- 1. What, How, and For Whom? 
 - Goods and services are the objects that people 
value and produce to satisfy wants.  - What? 
 - What we produce changes over time. 
 - Sixty years ago, almost 20 percent of Canadians 
worked on farms Today that number is 3 percent.  - Today, almost 80 percent of Canadians provide 
services. 
  8Two Big Economic Questions
- This figure shows the trends in what the Canadian 
economy has produced over the past 55 years.  - It shows the decline of agriculture, mining, 
construction, and manufacturing, and the 
expansion of services. 
  9Two Big Economic Questions
- The facts about what we produce raise the deeper 
question  -  What determines the quantities of new homes, DVD 
players, and corn that we produce?  -  Economics provides some answers to these 
questions. 
  10Two Big Economic Questions
- How? 
 - Goods and services are produced by using 
productive resources called factors of 
production.  - The major factors of production are 
 -  Land 
 -  Labour 
 -  Capital (machines, instruments) 
 -  Entrepreneurship (human capital)
 
  11Two Big Economic Questions
- This figure shows a measure of the growth of 
human capital in Canada over the past 30 years. 
  12Two Big Economic Questions
- For Whom? 
 - Who gets the goods and services depends on the 
incomes that people earn.  -  Land earns rent. 
 -  Labour earns wages. 
 -  Capital earns interest. 
 -  Entrepreneurship earns profit.
 
  13Two Big Economic Questions
- 2. When is the Pursuit of Self-Interest in the 
Social Interest?  -  Every day, 6.5 billion people make economic 
choices that result in What, How, and For 
Whom goods and services get produced.  - Do we produce the right things in the right 
quantities?  - Do we use our factors of production in the best 
way?  - Do the goods and services go to those who benefit 
most from them? 
  14Two Big Economic Questions
- You make choices that are in your self-interest. 
 - Can the choices made in self-interest be 
beneficial to the society as a whole (social 
interest)?  
  15Two Big Economic Questions
- Eight issues in todays world illustrate the 
importance of this question  -  Does public ownership and central planning do a 
better job than private business and free 
markets?  -  Is globalization a good thing or a problem? 
 -  Do the technological advances in the new 
economy bring benefits to all?  -  How did 9/11 change our economic lives?
 
  16Two Big Economic Questions
-  Dont corporate scandals (such as Enron case) 
show that big business works against the social 
interest?  -  Should drug companies be forced to make HIV/AIDS 
drugs at a low cost?  -  Are we destroying our tropical rain forests? 
 -  Are the worlds water resources being managed 
properly? 
  17The Economic Way of Thinking
- Choices and Tradeoffs 
 - The economic way of thinking places scarcity and 
its implication, choice, at centre stage.  - You can think about every choice as a 
tradeoffgiving up one thing to get something 
else.  - The classic tradeoff is guns versus butter. 
 
  18The Economic Way of Thinking
- What, How, and For Whom Tradeoffs 
 - The questions what, how, and for whom become 
sharper when we think in terms of tradeoffs.  - What? Tradeoffs arise when people choose how to 
spend their incomes, when governments choose how 
to spend their tax revenues, and when businesses 
choose what to produce.  - If you decide to spend your 100 on books, you 
have 100 less for other purposes you face a 
trade off. 
  19The Economic Way of Thinking
- How? Tradeoffs arise when businesses choose 
among alternative production technologies. For 
example, use more labor and less capital in 
production (trade off labor for capital).  - For Whom? Tradeoffs arise when choices change 
the distribution of buying power across 
individuals.  - Government redistribution of income from the rich 
to the poor creates a big tradeoffthe tradeoff 
between equality and efficiency. We achieve 
equality but at the expense of efficiency.  - How does the redistribution of income from rich 
to poor affect efficiency? 
  20The Economic Way of Thinking
- Choices Bring Change 
 - What, how, and for whom goods and services get 
produced changes over time and the quality of our 
economic lives improve.  - But the quality of our economic lives and the 
rate at which they improve depends on choices 
that involve tradeoffs.  - We face three tradeoffs between enjoying current 
consumption, leisure time, and increasing future 
production. Future economic growth comes at the 
expense of current consumption. 
  21The Economic Way of Thinking
- If we save more, we can buy more capital and 
increase our production in the future.  - If we take less leisure time, we can educate and 
train ourselves to become more productive.  - If businesses produce less and devote resources 
to research and developing new technologies, they 
can produce more in the future.  - The choices we make in the face of these 
tradeoffs determine the pace at which our 
economic condition improves. 
  22The Economic Way of Thinking
- Opportunity Cost 
 - The highest-valued alternative that we give up to 
get something is the opportunity cost of the 
activity chosen.  - What is the opportunity cost of coming to Econ 
311 lecture?  - For some of you, it is the 1 hour of time you can 
enjoy with your friends. For others it is the 
income they could have earned by working for 1 
more hour.  
  23(No Transcript) 
 24The Economic Way of Thinking
- Choosing at the Margin 
 -  People make choices at the margin, which means 
that they evaluate the consequences of making 
incremental changes in the use of their 
resources.  -  The benefit from an extra unit of an activity is 
its marginal benefit (MB).  -  The opportunity cost of pursuing an extra unit 
of an activity is its marginal cost (MC).  -  What is the MB and MC of attending one more year 
of school? 
  25The Economic Way of Thinking
- Responding to Incentives 
 - For any activity, if marginal benefit exceeds 
marginal cost, people have an incentive to do 
more of that activity.  - Incentives are also the key to reconciling 
self-interest and the social interest.  - Will the 5 marks allocated for attendance 
provide you an incentive to attend the lecture?  
  26The Economic Way of Thinking
- Human Nature, Incentives, and Institutions 
 -  Economists take human nature as given and view 
people as acting in their self-interest.  -  But if human nature is given and people pursue 
self-interest, how can the social interest be 
served?  -  Paramount the rule of law that protects private 
property and facilitates voluntary exchange in 
markets.  - With voluntary exchange, both the trading parties 
are better off and hence the society. 
  27Economics A Social Science
- Economics is a social science. 
 - Economists distinguish between two types of 
statement  -  What is (reporting facts)positive statements 
 -  What ought to benormative statements 
 - A positive statement can be tested by checking it 
against facts. So a positive statement is a 
statement of a fact.  - A normative statement cannot be tested. It is 
usually made based on the facts from the ground. 
And so it is prescriptive in nature. 
  28Economics A Social Science
- Positive or Normative Statements? 
 -  An increase in the minimum wage causes a 
decrease in employment among the least skilled.  -  Higher federal budget deficits causes interest 
rates to increase.  -  Every Canadian should have equal access to 
universal health care.  -  Intel Centrino computers are better than Intel 
Pentium. 
  29Economics A Social Science
- The task of economic science is to discover 
positive statements that are consistent with what 
we observe in the world and that enable us to 
understand how the economic world works.  - This task is large and breaks into three steps 
 -  Observation and measurement 
 -  Model building 
 -  Testing models
 
  30Economics A Social Science
- Observation and Measurement 
 - Economists observe and measure economic activity, 
keeping track of such things as  -  Wages and work hours 
 -  Prices and quantities of goods and services 
produced  -  Taxes and government spending 
 -  Quantities of goods and services bought from and 
sold to other countries.  - As do other scientists, economists develop models 
based on the observation on the ground.  
  31Economics A Social Science
- Model Building 
 - An economic model is a description of some aspect 
of the economic world that includes only those 
features of the world that are needed for the 
purpose at hand. To develop international trade 
model, for example, we may assume two countries 
and two goods.  - Testing Models 
 - An economic theory is a generalization that 
summarizes what we think we understand about the 
economic choices that people make. Since trade 
between two nations usually benefits both the 
countries, trade makes both the trading partners 
better off is an economic theory. 
  32Economics A Social Science
- Obstacles and Pitfalls in Economics 
 - Most economic behavior has many simultaneous 
causes.  - For example, unemployment may be caused by many 
factors, including the increase in minimum wage 
rate. If we want to see the effect of increase in 
minimum wage on unemployment rate then we must 
keep (or have a situation where) all other 
factors dont change.  - Economists use the concept of ceteris Paribus (or 
other things being equal) to isolate 
cause-and-effect relationship by changing only 
one variable at a time, holding all other 
relevant factors unchanged.