1.1 Nature of economics Flashcards

1
Q

Define Ceteris Paribus

A
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2
Q

Inability in economics to make scientific experiments

A
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3
Q

Difference between Positive and Normative Statement

A

A positive statement is one which is factual or can be tested and aren’t linked to individuals’ viewpoints. Whereas a normative statement is more judgemental, an example of this can be seen in extract A, where the prime minister says that “A price cap will not be good for customers.” This is a normative statement because it cannot be proved. However a positive statement would be where it states that households can save on £100. This is a positive statement, as it can be proved.

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4
Q

What is the problem of scarcity/economic problem

A

There are not enough resources available to produce the goods and services which satisfy our infinite wants.

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5
Q

What is opportunity cost

A

the next best alternative foregone when an economic decision is made

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6
Q

Which goods do not involve opportunity cost

A

Free goods (i.e. sunlight) are renewable, therefore they aren’t scarce and have no opportunity cost

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7
Q

What does a Production possibility frontier show

A

It shows the maximum combination of goods and services which can be produced in a given time period. If all the rescources (FOP) are effectively utilised.

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8
Q

Production possibility frontier, show:

A

Any point on the curve shows max productive potential
If it is just one point, it is specialising in consumer goods or capital goods
Any point inside the curve represents inefficiency
Any point outside the curve is unattainable production

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9
Q

Causes of shifts and movements

A

A movement along the PPF occurs when there is a change in the allocation of existing resources in the economy.

An outwards shift demonstrates economic growth, when there is an increase in the productive potential of an economy. An increase in quality or quantity of FOP.
An inwards shift demonstrates economic decline, when the quality or quantity of available FOP falls.

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10
Q

Define the division of labour

A

When a task is broken up into several component tasks

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11
Q

Adam Smith - specialisation and division of labour

A

Division of labour allows workers to specialise by focusing on one (or a few) of the components of the production process. This results in increased output per worker and increased productivity

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12
Q

Advantages of specialisation and division of labour [production]

A
  • high productivty lowers the COP
  • lower costs can be passed on to consumers in the form of lower prices
  • lower costs = increased profits
  • increased productivity allows firms to expand (even globally)
  • creates many low skilled jobs
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13
Q

Disadvantages of specialisation and division of labour [production]

A
  • task repetition can lead to boredom and decreased motivation
  • decreased motivation leads to decreased productivity and poorer manufacturing quality
  • may increase staff turnover rates
  • mass produced products can lack variety and don’t take customer preference into account
  • if workers lose their jobs they will find it hard to find a job as they are only skilled in one job (skills aren’t transferable)
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14
Q

Advantages of specialisation and division of labour [trade]

A
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15
Q

Disadvantages of specialisation and division of labour [trade]

A
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16
Q

What are the 4 functions of money

A

a medium of exchange
a measure of value
a store of value
a method of deferred payment

17
Q

A medium of exchange

A

Money easily facilitates the exchange of goods as no double coincidence of wants is necessary

18
Q

A measure of value

A

Ascribes value to different goods/services
Knowing the price allows producers and consumers to male decisions in their best interest

19
Q

A store of value

A

Money holds its value over time
Money remains valuable in exchange over long periods of time

20
Q

A method of deferred payment

A

Money is an acceptable way to arrange terms of credit and settle any future debts
Allows producers/consumers to acquire goods in the present and pay in the future

21
Q

free market

A

there is little/no govt intervention that provides the most efficient allocation of resources.

22
Q

mixed economy

A

there was a role for govts to ensure there is an efficient allocation of resources and provide public and merit goods. believed the economy functions best when private individuals work in their own best interest.

23
Q

command economy

A

believed that freee markets lead to capitalism, exploiting workers and creating an inequality which would break down the classes. the social role of the state is to share between society equally. state shoudl be the central planner

24
Q

pros/cons of command economy

A
25
Q

pros/cons of free market

A

+ encourages no over-dependency
+

26
Q
A
27
Q

The role of the state in a mixed economy

A

Governmentintervention occurs mainly through taxation (toraiserevenue) andthen
spendingthatrevenuetoredistributeincomeandprovideessential goods/services
Therearemanydierenttypeof taxintervention includingpersonal incometax,
corporation tax, valueaddedtax,tarion imports, inheritancetax etc.
Incomeis redistributedthrough thecreation ofa welfaresystemwhich often includes
unemploymentbenefits, healthcare, andpension provision
Government spendingis often focusedon infrastructure, merit goods (e.g. schools)
andpublicgoods (e.g.nationaldefense)

28
Q

give an example of each economy philosophy

A

free market - USA
command economy - UK
command economy - North Korea