Chapter 1: The Nature and Methods of Economic Definition of Economics The social science concerned...

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Chapter 1: The Nature and Chapter 1: The Nature and Methods of EconomicMethods of Economic

Definition of EconomicsDefinition of Economics

The social science concerned with the efficient use of limited or scarce resources to achieve maximum satisfaction of human needs.

Human wants are unlimited, but the means to satisfy the wants are limited.

Got stuff?Got stuff?

• Who made it?

• How was it made?

• How did you get it?

I. The Economic ProblemI. The Economic Problem

• the basic economic problem is scarcity:

-- wants are unlimited, but resources

are limited

• so with scarcity, we must make choices,

• and with choices, come costs

2. Products are sometimes classified as luxuries or necessities, but the division is subjective.

3. Services satisfy wants as well as goods.

4. Businesses and governments also have wants.

5. Over time, wants change and multiply.

B. the second fundamental fact: Scarce resources:

1. Economic resources are limited relative to wants.

2. Economic resources are sometimes called factors of production (inputs) and include four categories:

Scarcity and choiceScarcity and choice

• Resources can only be used for one purpose at a time.

• Scarcity requires that choices be made. we have to decide (make a choice) what we will have and what we will forgo

• The cost of any good, service, or activity is the value of what must be given up to obtain it (opportunity cost).

• Cost is the opportunity cost

-- what you give up when you make a choice

-- “there’s no such thing

as a free lunch”

Cost of going to college

-- what you can buy with tuition & fees

-- what you could earn by working

-- what you could do with the free time

• you are willing to give up

-- tuition

-- wages

-- leisure time

to go to college

-- b/c you expect higher income or more rewarding career

economics is the study of choiceseconomics is the study of choices

• of how to allocate scarce resources

• choices made by

-- consumers

-- businesses

-- governments

What are resources?What are resources?

• use resources to produce goods and services

• factors of production

-- land

-- labor

-- capital

-- entrepreneurship

LandLand

• all natural resources

-- land-- minerals

-- water

-- wildlife

LaborLabor

• size of labor force (quantity)

• skills of labor force (quality)

-- human capital

• the value of time

CapitalCapital

• physical capital

-- goods used to make other goods

-- factories

-- machines

-- infrastructure

• NOT financial capital

-- stocks, bonds, bank loans

• financial capital facilitates building of physical capital

entrepreneurshipentrepreneurship

• human resource

• ideas

-- doing things better

-- e-commerce

-- new products

RESOURCE PAYMENTS

Rent or Rental Income

Interest Income

WAGES

PROFIT & LOSS

PROPERTY RESOURCES

LAND

CAPITAL

HUMAN RESOURCES

LABOR

ENTREPRENEUR

Three Questions to answer:Three Questions to answer:

1. What to produce?

2. How to produce the stuff in #1?

3. For whom to produce?

(who gets the stuff in #1?)

Example: A BentleyExample: A Bentley

1. What to produce?• Bentley Motors designs a luxury car with

buyers in mind

• Bentley Motors decides how much to produce give the price and their costs

• Buyers decide how many to buy, based on price, their income, tastes, etc.

• Bentley Motors designs factory, uses machinery, & trains workers to minimize cost BUT retain a certain quality

• government restricts this decision:• Pollution laws

• safety laws

• labor laws

2. How to produce?2. How to produce?

• Those who are willing and able to pay K.D 50,000 for one.

(this is why I don’t have it)

3. Who gets the 3. Who gets the BentleyBentley??

Who answers #1-3?Who answers #1-3?

• pure capitalism

• when buyers and sellers interact to

answer these questions

• markets unrestricted

• private property

• prices coordinate #1-3

• the U.S. is a mixed market economy, since government plays a role

• enforces property rights

• regulates markets

• taxes to provide goods & services

• command system

• the government answers questions 1-3

• former U.S.S.R., N. Korea

• reduced incentives for efficiency

• coordination failures

Why Study Economics?Why Study Economics?Economics for citizenshipEconomics for citizenship

1. Most political problems have an economic aspect, whether it is balancing the budget, fighting over the tax structure (Kuwait is planning to introduce income tax), welfare reform, international trade, or concern for the environment.

2. Both the voters and the elected officials can fulfill their role more effectively if they have an understanding of economic principles.

Why Study Economics? Why Study Economics? Professional and personal applications Professional and personal applications

• Economics helps people to make sense of every day activity they observe around them

• Economic principles enable business managers to make more intelligent decisions.

• Economics can help individuals make better buying decisions, better employment choices, and better financial investments.

• Economics is to examine problems and decisions from a social rather than personal point of view.

Policy economics Policy economics applies economic facts and principles to help resolve

specific problems and to achieve certain economic goals.

• Steps in formulating economic policy:

1. State goals.

2. Recognize various options that can be used to achieve goals.

3. Evaluate the options on the basis of specific criteria important to decision-makers.

Macroeconomics and MicroeconomicsMacroeconomics and Microeconomics

Macroeconomics examines the economy as a whole. It includes measures of total output, total employment, total income, aggregate expenditures, and the general price level.

Microeconomics looks at specific economic units.

• It is concerned with the individual industry, firm or household and the price of specific products and resources.

SpecializationSpecialization

• How do we get the most out of our resources?

• We specialize in what we do best

and trade that for what we need

• I teach.

• I get paid for it.

• I use the money to buy

• food

• oil changes

• clothes

• If I• grew my own food

• made my own clothes

• fixed my own car

• I would not consume as much

• Specialization produces gains!• I can consume more

than what I could make

on my own

Who specializes in what?Who specializes in what?

• Comparative advantage• if you produce a good at a lower

opportunity cost

then you should specialize in it

Example: married coupleExample: married couple

• Husband: surgeon• $250,000 /year

• Wife: 5th grade teacher• $50,000 /year

• who should run the household?• Who has lower opportunity cost?

The wife.

with specialization,with specialization,

• division of labor• different people specialize in different

things

• people become very good at their task

• efficiency gains

-- get more out of same resources

specialization is everywherespecialization is everywhere

• doctors• neurosurgeon, obstetrics, pediatrics,…

• lawyers• divorce, real estate, patent law,

personal injury...

The bottom line:The bottom line:

• Scarcity & opportunity cost are unavoidable.

BUT

• efficiency & specialization

make the most of scarce resources

Employment and Efficiency

Economics is a science of efficiency in the use of scarce resources. Efficiency requires full employment of available resources and full production.

1. Full employment means all available resources should be employed.

2. Full production means that employed resources are providing maximum satisfaction of our economic wants. Underemployment occurs if this is not so.

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

39

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

40

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

41

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

42

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

43

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

44

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical form

Ro

bo

ts(t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

45

At any point in time, a full-employment, full-production economy must sacrifice some of product X to obtain more of product Y.

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIESLimited Resources meansa limited output...

46

Choices will be necessary because resources and technology are fixed. A production possibilities table illustrates some of the possible choices.

A production possibilities curve is a graphical representation of choices.

1. Points on the curve represent maximum possible combinations of robots and pizza given resources and technology.

2. Points inside the curve represent underemployment or unemployment.

3. Points outside the curve are unattainable at present.

47

Optimal or best product-mix:

1. It will be some point on the curve.

2. The exact point depends on society; this is a normative decision.

48

Q

QQ

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A B

C

D

E

W

Attainablebut

Inefficient

Unattainable

Attainable& Efficient

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

49

Q

Q

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A B

C

D

E

W

Attainablebut

Inefficient

Unattainable

Attainable& Efficient

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Notes...

The amount of other products that must beforgone or sacrificed to obtain 1 unit of a specific product is called the opportunity cost of that good.

LAW OF INCREASINGOPPORTUNITY COSTS

50

QQ

QQ

Ro

bo

ts

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)(t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas Pizzas (hundred thousands)(hundred thousands)

14141313121211111010 99 88 77 66 55 44 33 22 11

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 81 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A B

C

D

E

W

Attainablebut

Inefficient

UnattainableUnattainable

AttainableAttainable& Efficient& Efficient

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Notes...LAW OF INCREASINGOPPORTUNITY COSTS

A graph of the production possibilities curve will be CONCAVE - bowed out from the origin.

Economic resources arenot completely adapt-able to other uses.

51

E. Law of increasing opportunity costs:1. The amount of other products that must be

foregone to obtain more of any given product is called the opportunity cost.

2. Opportunity costs are measured in real terms rather than money (market prices are not part of the production possibilities model).

3. The more of a product produced the greater is its (marginal) opportunity cost.

4. The slope of the production possibilities curve becomes steeper, demonstrating increasing opportunity cost. This makes the curve appear bowed out, concave from the origin.52

Economic Rationale:

a. Economic resources are not completely adaptable to alternative uses.

b. To get increasing amounts of pizza, resources that are not particularly well suited for that purpose must be used. Workers that are accustomed to producing robots on an assembly line may not do well as kitchen help.

How does society decide its optimal point on the production possibilities curve?53

Unemployment, Growth, and the Future

Unemployment and productive inefficiency occur when the economy is producing less than full production or inside the curve (point U in the following figure).

In a growing economy, the production possibilities curve shifts outward:

1. when resource supplies expand in quantity or quality.

2. when technological advances are occurring.54

Q

Q

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

U

Unemployment &Underemployment Shown by Point U

More of either orboth is possible

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

55

Q

Q

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

U

Unemployment &Underemployment Shown by Point U

More of either orboth is possible

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Notes...Economic Growth

The ability to producea larger total output -a rightward shift of the production possibilities curve caused by...

56

Q

Q

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

U

Unemployment &Underemployment Shown by Point U

More of either orboth is possible

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Notes...Economic Growth1 – Increase in resource

supplies

2 – Better resource quality

3 – Technological advances

57

Economic Growth

Q

Q

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A’

B’

C’

D’

E’

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

58

Present choices and future possibilities:

Using resources to produce consumer goods and services represents a choice for present over future consumption. Using resources to invest in technological advances, education, and capital goods represents a choice for future over present goods. The decision as to how to allocate resources in the present will create more or less economic growth in the future.

(See for example Global Perspective 2-1 where various countries are compared with respect to their economic growth rates relative to the share of GDP devoted to investment.)

D. A Qualification: International Trade1. A nation can avoid the output limits of its domestic Production

Possibilities through international specialization and trade.2. Specialization and trade have the same effect as having more and

better resources of improved technology.59

Two Examples of Economic GrowthALTA - FAVORS

PRESENT GOODS

Goods for the Present

Go

od

s fo

r th

e F

utu

reG

oo

ds

for

the

Fu

ture CURRENT

CURVE

FUTURECURVE

CONSUMPTION

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Alta60

Two Examples of Economic GrowthALTA - FAVORS

PRESENT GOODSZORN - FAVORSFUTURE GOODS

Goods for the Present

Go

od

s fo

r th

e F

utu

re CURRENTCURVE

FUTURECURVE

CONSUMPTION

Goods for the Present

Go

od

s fo

r th

e F

utu

re

FUTURECURVE

CONSUMPTION

CURRENTCURVE

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Alta Zorn61

Economic systems

Economic systems differ in two important ways: Who owns the factors of production and the method used to coordinate economic activity.

A. The market system:

1. There is private ownership of resources.2. Markets and prices coordinate and direct economic activity.3. Each participant acts in his or her own self-interest.4. In pure capitalism the government plays a very limited role.

62

Economic systems

B. Command economy, socialism or communism:

1. There is public (state) ownership of resources.

2. Economic activity is coordinated by central planning.

C. Mixed economy

63

SpecializationSpecialization

• How do we get the most out of our resources?

• We specialize in what we do best

and trade that for what we need

• I teach.

• I get paid for it.

• I use the money to buy

• food

• oil changes

• clothes

• If I• grew my own food

• made my own clothes

• fixed my own car

• I would not consume as much

• Specialization produces gains!• I can consume more

than what I could make

on my own

Who specializes in what?Who specializes in what?

• Comparative advantage• if you produce a good at a lower

opportunity cost

then you should specialize in it

Example: married coupleExample: married couple

• Husband: surgeon• $250,000 /year

• Wife: 5th grade teacher• $50,000 /year

• who should run the household?• Who has lower opportunity cost?

The wife.

with specialization,with specialization,

• division of labor• different people specialize in different

things

• people become very good at their task

• efficiency gains

-- get more out of same resources

specialization is everywherespecialization is everywhere

• doctors• neurosurgeon, obstetrics, pediatrics,…

• lawyers• divorce, real estate, patent law,

personal injury...

The bottom line:The bottom line:

• Scarcity & opportunity cost are unavoidable.

BUT

• efficiency & specialization

make the most of scarce resources

Employment and Efficiency

Economics is a science of efficiency in the use of scarce resources. Efficiency requires full employment of available resources and full production.

1. Full employment means all available resources should be employed.

2. Full production means that employed resources are providing maximum satisfaction of our economic wants. Underemployment occurs if this is not so.

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

73

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

74

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

75

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

76

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

77

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical formR

ob

ots

(th

ou

san

ds)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

78

PIZZA 0 1 2 3 4(in hundred thousands)

ROBOTS 10 9 7 4 0(in thousands)

in table form

graphical form

Ro

bo

ts(t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

79

At any point in time, a full-employment, full-production economy must sacrifice some of product X to obtain more of product Y.

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIESLimited Resources meansa limited output...

80

Choices will be necessary because resources and technology are fixed. A production possibilities table illustrates some of the possible choices.

A production possibilities curve is a graphical representation of choices.

1. Points on the curve represent maximum possible combinations of robots and pizza given resources and technology.

2. Points inside the curve represent underemployment or unemployment.

3. Points outside the curve are unattainable at present.

81

Optimal or best product-mix:

1. It will be some point on the curve.

2. The exact point depends on society; this is a normative decision.

82

Q

QQ

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A B

C

D

E

W

Attainablebut

Inefficient

Unattainable

Attainable& Efficient

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

83

Q

Q

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas (hundred thousands)

1413121110 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A B

C

D

E

W

Attainablebut

Inefficient

Unattainable

Attainable& Efficient

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Notes...

The amount of other products that must beforgone or sacrificed to obtain 1 unit of a specific product is called the opportunity cost of that good.

LAW OF INCREASINGOPPORTUNITY COSTS

84

QQ

QQ

Ro

bo

ts

Ro

bo

ts (t

ho

usa

nd

s)(t

ho

usa

nd

s)

Pizzas Pizzas (hundred thousands)(hundred thousands)

14141313121211111010 99 88 77 66 55 44 33 22 11

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 81 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

A B

C

D

E

W

Attainablebut

Inefficient

UnattainableUnattainable

AttainableAttainable& Efficient& Efficient

PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Notes...LAW OF INCREASINGOPPORTUNITY COSTS

A graph of the production possibilities curve will be CONCAVE - bowed out from the origin.

Economic resources arenot completely adapt-able to other uses.

85

E. Law of increasing opportunity costs:1. The amount of other products that must be

foregone to obtain more of any given product is called the opportunity cost.

2. Opportunity costs are measured in real terms rather than money (market prices are not part of the production possibilities model).

3. The more of a product produced the greater is its (marginal) opportunity cost.

4. The slope of the production possibilities curve becomes steeper, demonstrating increasing opportunity cost. This makes the curve appear bowed out, concave from the origin.86

The Market The Market System and System and the Circular the Circular FlowFlow

2C H A P T E R

PROPERTY RESOURCESPROPERTY RESOURCES

1. LAND1. LAND

2. CAPITAL2. CAPITAL

HUMAN RESOURCESHUMAN RESOURCES

3. LABOR3. LABOR

4. ENTREPRENEURIAL ABILITY4. ENTREPRENEURIAL ABILITY

SCARCE RESOURCESSCARCE RESOURCESECONOMIC RESOURCESECONOMIC RESOURCES

Resource payments: correspond to resource Resource payments: correspond to resource categoriescategories

RENTALRENTALINCOMEINCOME

INTERESTINTERESTINCOMEINCOME

WAGESWAGES

PROFIT &PROFIT &LOSSLOSS

PROPERTY RESOURCESPROPERTY RESOURCES

LANDLAND

CAPITALCAPITAL

HUMAN RESOURCESHUMAN RESOURCES

LABORLABOR

ENTREPRENEURENTREPRENEUR

Macroeconomics Starts Here

Economic SystemsEconomic Systems

• Definition: A particular set of institutional arrangements and a coordinating mechanism to respond to the economizing problem.

• Economic systems differ as to:

1) who owns the factors of production

2) the method used to motivate, coordinate, and direct economic activity.

The Command SystemThe Command System

• The government owns most property resources and economic decision making occur through a central economic plan.

• The central planning board determines production goals for each firm and resources to be allocated.

The Market SystemThe Market System

• There is private ownership of resources.

• Markets and prices coordinate and direct economic activity.

• Each participant acts in its own self-interest.

• In pure capitalism the government plays a very limited role.

Characteristics of the Market Characteristics of the Market SystemSystem

• Private Property.

• Freedom of firms to choose.

• Self interest.

• Competition.

• Markets and prices.

• Technology and capital goods.

• Specialization.

• Use of money.

• Active, but limited government.

The Circular Flow Model The Circular Flow Model

• There are two groups of decision makers in There are two groups of decision makers in the private economy: households the private economy: households (resource (resource owners)owners) and businesses and businesses (resource users)(resource users)

• The market system The market system (resource markets and (resource markets and product markets)product markets) coordinates these coordinates these decisions.decisions.

What happens in the resource markets? What happens in the resource markets?

a.a. Households Households sellsell resources directly or resources directly or indirectly (through ownership of corporations) to indirectly (through ownership of corporations) to businesses.businesses.

b. Businesses b. Businesses buybuy resources in order to produce resources in order to produce goods and services.goods and services.

c.c. Interaction of these sellers and buyers Interaction of these sellers and buyers determines the determines the price of each resourceprice of each resource, which , which in turn provides in turn provides incomeincome for the owner of that for the owner of that resource.resource.

d.d. Flow of payments from businesses for the Flow of payments from businesses for the resources constitutes business resources constitutes business costscosts and and resource owners’ resource owners’ incomesincomes..

What happens in the product markets?What happens in the product markets?a. Households are on the a. Households are on the buyingbuying side of these side of these

markets, purchasing goods and services.markets, purchasing goods and services.

b.b. Businesses are on the Businesses are on the sellingselling side of side of these markets, offering products for sale.these markets, offering products for sale.

c.c. Interaction of these buyers and sellers Interaction of these buyers and sellers determines the price of each product.determines the price of each product.

d.d. Flow of consumer expenditures Flow of consumer expenditures constitutes constitutes sales receiptssales receipts for businesses. for businesses.

CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS

RESOURCEMARKET

PRODUCTMARKET

BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS

RESOURCEMARKET

RESOURCES INPUTS

PRODUCTMARKET

CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS

RESOURCEMARKET

RESOURCES INPUTS

$ COSTS $ INCOMES

GOODS &GOODS &SERVICESSERVICES

GOODS &GOODS &SERVICESSERVICES

PRODUCTMARKET

CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS

RESOURCEMARKET

RESOURCES INPUTS

$ COSTS $ INCOMES

PRODUCTMARKET

GOODS &SERVICES

GOODS &SERVICES

CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS

RESOURCEMARKET

RESOURCES INPUTS

$ COSTS $ INCOMES

PRODUCTMARKET

GOODS &SERVICES

GOODS &SERVICES

$ CONSUMPTION$ REVENUE

CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

CIRCULAR FLOW MODEL

BUSINESSES HOUSEHOLDS

RESOURCEMARKET

RESOURCES INPUTS

$ COSTS $ INCOMES

PRODUCTMARKET

GOODS &SERVICES

GOODS &SERVICES

$ CONSUMPTION$ REVENUE

More Realistic Circular FlowMore Realistic Circular Flow

Macroeconomic PoliciesMacroeconomic Policies

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