Midterm Questions Flashcards

1
Q

Method of economics Mises, Rothbard

A
  • Scarce means for satisfying urgent wants

- Using praxeology with logic: A then B, B then C, etc.

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2
Q

Praxeology only for materialistic or selfish?

A
  • Concerned with end and means themselves not content

- Ends can be materialistic, selfish, or altruistic (doesn’t matter)

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3
Q

Non-precisive vs. Precisive abstraction

A

Non-precisive: features are absent from the analysis
Precisive: features are specified as absent

Precisive is false: Horse cannot be absent of colour but colour can not be mentioned.

Perfect Competition

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4
Q

Implications of the notion of human action

A
  • Only individuals
  • Ways to attain ends
  • Scarce means must be allocated and others ignored
  • Uncertainty of the future
  • Actions can change something
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5
Q

How is the scale of preferences implied by any action?

A

Choice between different ends makes ranked ends, chosen end is the highest ranked

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6
Q

Why is time just like any other means?

A
  • Scarce
  • Used to achieve ends
  • Ends can only be achieved in the future
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7
Q

What role does uncertainty about the future have in our actions relating to cause and effect?

A
  • If certain, actions are unnecessary
  • It comes from acts of choice
  • and insufficient knowledge of natural phenomena
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8
Q

Difference between consumers’ goods and producers’ goods?

A

Consumers: Directly serviceable to consumers wants
Producers: Indirectly serviceable to wants

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9
Q

Economic good vs general circumstance of human action and welfare

A

The scarcity of the good. If the good is abundant and unlimited it cannot be used as a means to service ends so is not an economic good

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10
Q

What could capital goods be traced back to over time?

A

Nature and labour. No capital

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11
Q

What is time-preference? Interest rates related?

A

Earlier is better.

Interest rates: reward for lessening time-preference

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12
Q

Insistence on economic value subjective? Fundamental for exchange?

A

No real way to quantify value (happiness for example)

Exchange wouldn’t happen without a difference in value judgement

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13
Q

Law of diminishing marginal utility?

A

Each unit has different utility. Large supply will decrease urgency for the good and lower the marginal utility, and vice versa

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14
Q

Can we measure utility of different goods by a common unit (before money)?

A

We can only rank them and it cannot be multiplied, subtracted, or added.

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15
Q

Response to “increasing marginal utility”?

A

Utility is based on satisfying most urgent want. This may not be constant.

Eggs.

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16
Q

What is price theory supposed to do?

A

Explain market value

17
Q

Cost-of-production explanation? Problems with it?

A

Cost of inputs + profit

Problems:

  • Doesn’t explain non-reproducible goods
  • Changes in day-to-day price changes/trends
  • Can’t trace back prices
18
Q

Why is labour theory better than cost-of-production?

A

Explains how to trace back prices by including labour

19
Q

Why is subjective theory better than cost-of-production?

A
  • Explains how win-win exchange occurs
  • Works for any type of good
  • Incorporates truths of cost-of-production theory.
20
Q

What is the origin of money? Problems it solves?

A

Accumulation of a medium of exchange

Problems it solves:

  • coincidence of wants
  • indivisibility
21
Q

What is fractional reserve banking? Why is it seen as fraud?

A

Lending money without the reserves

Fraud: If a bank run not everyone could get their money back

22
Q

Why does fractional reserve banking expand supply of money substitutes?

A

More warehouse receipts printed than gold reserves

Incentive to print more receipts

23
Q

What are the checks on inflation in fractional reserve banking?

A

Free banking checks:
Limits of clientele, client confidence

No checks other than bank policy

24
Q

What problems of the fractional reserve system were supposed to be solved by central banks?

A

Takes out clientele limit. Allows for government inflation control

25
Q

What would happen if fairy doubled the amount of money in pockets?

A

Purchasing power wouldn’t change

26
Q

How does an increase in money supply affect distribution of wealth? Who would win or lose?

A

Benefits first-comers to the economy. Late-comers are fixed income.

27
Q

What are the checks on monetary expansion in international system with central banks having hard money reserves?

A

Hard-money deficient countries will have to limit their paper inflation in order to not lose all their hard money

28
Q

What is fiat money? What are problems with going off the gold standard?

A

Money with no other value.

Allows governments control over inflation