Garantie de satisfaction à 100% Disponible immédiatement après paiement En ligne et en PDF Tu n'es attaché à rien
logo-home
Volledige samenvatting van de benodigde stof voor het 1ejaars AMSIB Principles of Economics eindtentamen €7,99   Ajouter au panier

Resume

Volledige samenvatting van de benodigde stof voor het 1ejaars AMSIB Principles of Economics eindtentamen

1 vérifier
 78 vues  11 fois vendu
  • Cours
  • Établissement
  • Book

Dit document bevat de complete samenvatting voor het Principles of Economics eindexamen wat afgenomen wordt in het 2e semester op AMSIB, HvA. De hoofdstukken 1, 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 van het boek Economics Tenth European Edition geschreven door Parkin, Powell en Matthews worden behand...

[Montrer plus]

Aperçu 4 sur 115  pages

  • Non
  • Hoofdstuk 1 t/m 16
  • 30 octobre 2022
  • 115
  • 2021/2022
  • Resume

1  vérifier

review-writer-avatar

Par: edaselinkaya • 7 mois de cela

avatar-seller
Principles of Economics – Theory
Chapter 1 – What Is Economics?
After studying this chapter you will be able to:
 Define economics and distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics
 Explain the big questions of economics
 Explain the key ideas that define the economic way of thinking
 Describe how economists go about their work as social scientists and policy advisers

A Definition of Economics
A fundamental fact dominates our lives: we want more than we can get. Our inability to get
everything we want is scarcity. Scarcity is universal. It confronts all living things.
Scarcity: Our inability to satisfy all our wants.
Because we can’t get everything we want, we must make choices. You can’t afford both a
laptop and an iPhone, so you must choose which one to buy. The same is true about time.
You can’t spend tonight both studying for your next test and going to the cinema, so, again,
you must choose which one to do.
Your choices must somehow be made consistent with the choices of others. If you choose to
buy a laptop, someone else must choose to sell it. Incentives reconcile choices.
Incentive: A reward that encourages an action or a penalty that discourages one.
Economics: The social science that studies the choices that individuals, businesses,
governments and entire societies make and how they cope with scarcity and incentives that
influence and reconcile those choices.
The subject of economics divides into two main parts:
 Microeconomics
 Macroeconomics
Microeconomics: The study of the choices that individuals and businesses make, the way
those choices interact in markets and the influence governments exert on them.
Macroeconomics: The study of the performance of the national economy and the global
economy.

,Two Big Economics Questions
Two big questions summarise the scope of economics:
1. How do choices end up determining what, how and for whom¸ goods and services get
produced?
2. When do choices made in the pursuit of self-interest also promote the social interest?



What, How and For Whom?
Goods and services: The objects that people value and produce to satisfy their wants.
Goods are physical objects, while Services are actions performed such as cutting hair. By far
the largest part of what people in the rich industrial countries produce today is Services.


What?
What we produce changes over time.




How?
Factors of production: The productive resources that businesses use to produce goods and
services.
Factors of production are grouped into four categories:
1. Land
2. Labour
3. Capital
4. Entrepreneurship

,Land: The gifts of nature that we use to produce goods and services (Natural resources).
Labour: The work time and work effort that people devote to producing goods and services.
The quality of labour depends on Human Capital.
Human capital: The knowledge and skill that people obtain from education, on-the-job
training and working experience.
Capital: The tools, equipment, buildings and other constructions that have been produced in
the past and which businesses now use to produce goods and services. Not to be confused
with Financial capital.
Entrepreneurship: The human resource that organises the other three factors of production:
labour, land and capital.

, For Whom?
Who gets the goods and services that are produced depends on the incomes that people
earn. A large income enables a person to buy large quantities of goods and services. A small
income leaves a person with few options and small quantities of goods and services.
People earn their incomes by selling the services of factors of productions they own:
1. Land earns rent.
2. Labour earns wages.
3. Capital earns interest.
4. Entrepreneurship earns profit.



Do Choices Made in the Pursuit of Self-interest also Promote the Social
Interest?
Self-interest: The choices that you think are the best for you.
Social interest: Choices that are the best for society as a whole.
Choices that are made in the pursuit of self-interest can achieve an outcome of social
interest.
Efficiency: A situation in which the available resources are used to produce goods and
services at the lowest possible cost and in quantities that give the greatest value or benefit.
Questions about the social interest are hard ones to answer, and they generate a lot of
discussion, debate and disagreement. Let’s take a closer look at these questions with four
examples:
 Globalisation
 The information-age monopolies
 Climate change
 Financial instability
The term Globalisation means the expansion of international trade, borrowing and lending,
and investment. Globalisation is in the self-interest of consumers because they can buy low-
cost goods and services produced in other countries. The same applies to multinational
firms.
The technological change of the past 40 years has been called the Information Revolution.
Every day, when you make self-interested choices to use electricity and petrol, you leave
your carbon footprint.
Banks’ choices to take deposits and make loans are made in self-interest, but does this
lending and borrowing serve the social interest?

Les avantages d'acheter des résumés chez Stuvia:

Qualité garantie par les avis des clients

Qualité garantie par les avis des clients

Les clients de Stuvia ont évalués plus de 700 000 résumés. C'est comme ça que vous savez que vous achetez les meilleurs documents.

L’achat facile et rapide

L’achat facile et rapide

Vous pouvez payer rapidement avec iDeal, carte de crédit ou Stuvia-crédit pour les résumés. Il n'y a pas d'adhésion nécessaire.

Focus sur l’essentiel

Focus sur l’essentiel

Vos camarades écrivent eux-mêmes les notes d’étude, c’est pourquoi les documents sont toujours fiables et à jour. Cela garantit que vous arrivez rapidement au coeur du matériel.

Foire aux questions

Qu'est-ce que j'obtiens en achetant ce document ?

Vous obtenez un PDF, disponible immédiatement après votre achat. Le document acheté est accessible à tout moment, n'importe où et indéfiniment via votre profil.

Garantie de remboursement : comment ça marche ?

Notre garantie de satisfaction garantit que vous trouverez toujours un document d'étude qui vous convient. Vous remplissez un formulaire et notre équipe du service client s'occupe du reste.

Auprès de qui est-ce que j'achète ce résumé ?

Stuvia est une place de marché. Alors, vous n'achetez donc pas ce document chez nous, mais auprès du vendeur DylanHoevenaars. Stuvia facilite les paiements au vendeur.

Est-ce que j'aurai un abonnement?

Non, vous n'achetez ce résumé que pour €7,99. Vous n'êtes lié à rien après votre achat.

Peut-on faire confiance à Stuvia ?

4.6 étoiles sur Google & Trustpilot (+1000 avis)

79202 résumés ont été vendus ces 30 derniers jours

Fondée en 2010, la référence pour acheter des résumés depuis déjà 14 ans

Commencez à vendre!

Récemment vu par vous


€7,99  11x  vendu
  • (1)
  Ajouter