1. What Is Economics?
Economics is the study of how people choose
to allocate their resources among unlimited wants.
Teaching Strategy:
Dissect the definition of economics.
Study of
leads to a discussion of economics as a social science.
People
leads to differentiating macro- versus microeconomics.
How
allocate
leads to rational choice and the use of models
and generalizations.
Scarce
leads to scarcity
versus shortages.
Resources
leads to the
classification of and differences among households and societies.
Unlimited
wants
leads to the difference between output and well-being.
This often takes 20 to 30 minutes but provides a starting point
for the course and an indication for the student of what the course is about.
-
The fallacy of composition is the faulty
logic that whats true for the individual or single business is true
for the whole economy.
-
Teaching Strategy: Ask
students, if they earned a million dollars per year, would they be rich?
Then ask, if everyone earned at least a million dollars per year, would they
be rich?
-
Scarcity is the situation where there
is not enough of an item to satisfy everyone who wants it.
Teaching Strategy: Show
scarcity by starting the lecture with an example from everyday life, for example,
buying food in a supermarket with limited funds or deciding whether to spend
$15 on a CD or on popcorn and a movie.
2. What Are Opportunity Costs?
Opportunity costs are the highest-valued alternative
that must be forgone when a choice is made.
Teaching Strategy: Ask
your students what they would be doing if they were not attending class today.
Answers will usually be sleeping or working!
-
The opportunity cost of going to school
is the money income forgone during four years of study.
Teaching Strategy: Start
your lecture by asking the students to list all their costs of going to college
on a sheet of paper. Then, ask if anyone included the cost of not working
for four years.
-
Resources are classified into three general
categories: land, labor, and capital. (Some economists distinguish entrepreneurship
as distinct from labor.) People sell their resources in order to obtain income.
Teaching Strategy: Use
local examples of capital and natural resources. Ask students if they know
who owns those resources.
3. How Are Specialization and Opportunity Costs Related?
Specialize where opportunity costs are lowest:
Scarce resources must be allocated where they can best perform the job.
Teaching Strategy: Opportunity
costs can be related to your students experience; for example, if they
buy a shirt, they cannot buy shoes or a tie with the same money.
Teaching Strategy: Note
that marginal opportunity costs will increase as resources in specialized
uses are reallocated to other uses.
-
Production possibilities: Trade occurs
because individuals or countries find that it is mutually beneficial to specialize
in goods in which they have a comparative advantage and trade for the other
goods.
Teaching Strategy: Which
goods people specialize in can be illustrated by evaluating their production
possibilities.
4. Why Does Specialization Occur?
Comparative advantage is the ability of one
person or country to do something with a lower opportunity cost than another.
Teaching Strategy:
Students usually have trouble with comparative advantage and trade. This is
not because the ideas are inherently hard to understand, but because there
is a lot to keep track of. Work through an example and give them one to do
on their own.
Gains from trade: Specialization and trade occur
everywhere. Specialization according to comparative advantage followed by
trade allows everyone to acquire more of the goods they want.
Teaching Strategy:
Ask your students why a professor who is good at repairing cars might still
prefer to take his automobile to a garage for a tune up.
5. What Are the Benefits from Trade?
Trade is mutually beneficial for individuals,
families, towns, and countries. Gains from trade are possible because the
people become better off with trade than they would be if they could consume
only those goods they could produce on their own.
About half of the world trade takes place between
industrial countries. Trade between developing countries makes up only 15
percent of the total world trade. Consumer preferences and comparative advantage
drive the pattern of trade.
Teaching Strategy: Have students look at Table
2. Ask them what the common characteristics of industrialized or industrializing
countries are. Ask why developing countries are not major trading partners
with the United States (lack of resources and infrastructure needed for trade).
Barter trade is where people exchange goods
for goods, or services for services, and no money changes hands. It is used
when it is too costly to use money. Such is the case in Russia today; 75 percent
of all exchange is barter. In most cases, however, money is used. Each country
uses its own currency or a foreign currency for trade. International trade
requires that countries convert their currencies into the invoicing currency.
The exchange rate is the price at which a currency is converted into another
currency.