Positive Economics vs. Normative Economics
- Positive Economics: Claims that attempt to describe the world as it is.
- Descriptive in nature.
- Fact based.
- Examples include: minimum wage laws causing unemployment.
- Normative Economics- Claims that attempt to prescribe how the world should be.
- Opinion based.
- Examples include: government should raise minimum wage
- Wants: Desire of citizens
- Needs: basic requirements for survival
- Shortage- temporary, quantity demand is greater than quality supplied.
- Surplus- Quantity supply is greater than quantity demanded.
- P^ QD> QS scarcity
- Pv QS>QD shortage surplus
Factors of production (4)
- Land: Natural resources
- Labor: Work exerted
- Capital (2):
- Human capital- knowledge/skills that a worker gains through education and experience.
- Physical Capital- human made objects used to create other objects. An example would be machinery, tools, etc
- Entrepreneurship:innovative and risk taker
Production Possibilities Graph (PPG, PPC)
(as could be known as "PPF= Production possibilities frontier")
- Alternate ways to use resources, each point on the graph reflects a trade off.
- It also shows the most that society can produce if it uses every available resource to do the best of it's abilities.
- Production possibilities curve illustrates the basic principle that if all resources in an economy in use, more of one good can be produced only if less of another is produced.
- Law of increasing opportunity cost- as you produce more of one good, the opportunity cost (forgone) production of another good will increase.
- Key Assumptions:
- Full employment- NOTS = THEY LAZY, THEY RETIRE, & DISABLED PEOPLE
- 80- 90% factor capacity
- 4-5% unemployment
- Productive Efficiency-
- Fixed Resources (3)- Land, Labor, and Capital.
- Fixed state of technology.
- No international trade
- two goods produced
- This bullet point talks about the points on the graph ABC.
- Point A- Inside the curve. Attainable, but inefficient. Under utilization.
- Due to underemployment, war, famine, depress/recession
- Point B- On the curve. Attainable and efficient.
- Point C- Outside the curve. Unattainable.
- Due to technology and economic growth.
Concave vs. Constant PPG
- Concave means bowed out ( curve line down )
- Constant PPG- means the same ^ ( straight line down)
Production efficiency vs. Allocative efficiency
- Production Efficiency- products are being produced in the least costly way.
- Allocative Efficiency- the products being produced are the ones most desired by society.

Having a production possibility graph for display will certainly help others understand shifts in quantities and prices!
ReplyDelete