This lesson discusses fundamentals of economics, including the five major economic assumptions.
Economics is the study of how individuals, businesses, and societies (run by a governing body) handle scarcity. The principles of economics provide a foundation for good decision making for all three groups.
There are two branches of economics: macroeconomics and microeconomics. Microeconomics is the study of how individuals or individual businesses allocate resources. Macroeconomics looks at how the economy as a whole works.
Individuals, businesses, and societies have
Because wants are unlimited and resources are limited, decisions need to be made about how to use the available resources. Something must be given up to get or achieve something else.
Any decision that involves a choice between two or more options has an opportunity cost. Going to a restaurant involves time and money. That time canāt be used to study for a test, and that money canāt be spent on going to a concert. Every choice has a value. The final choice has more value than another choice that was available.
People go to work or to school because they are self-interested. They seek personal gain. The reward, or incentive, for going to work is a paycheck. The reward for going to school may be a better job with a bigger paycheck.
Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, reasoned that the best economic benefit for all can usually be accomplished when individuals act in their own self-interest.
To summarize, there are five major economic assumptions:
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