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How is economics like a science?
Why do economists make assumptions?
Should an economic model describe reality exactly?
Draw and explain a production possibilities frontier for
an economy that produces milk and cookies. What happens to this frontier if disease kills half of the economy's cow population?
Use a production possibilities frontier to describe the idea of "efficiency."
6. What are the two subfields into which economics is divided? Explain what each subfield studies.
7. What is the difference between a positive and a normative statement? Give an example of each.
8. What is the Council of Economic Advisers?
9. Why do economists sometimes offer conflicting advice to policymakers?
Problems and
1. Describe some unusual language used in one of the other fields that you are studying. Why are these special terms useful?
2. One common assumption in economics is that the products of different firms in the same industry are indistinguishable. For each of the following industries, discuss whether this is a reasonable assumption.
a. steel b. novels c. wheat d. fast food
3. Draw a circular-flow-diagram.html">circular-flow diagram. Identify the parts of the model that correspond to the flow of goods and services and the flow of dollars for each of the following activities.
a. Sam pays a storekeeper $1 for a quart of milk.
b. Sally earns $4.50 per hour working at a fast food restaurant.
c. Serena spends $7 to see a movie.
d. Stuart earns $10,000 from his 10 percent ownership of Acme Industrial.
4. Imagine a society that produces military goods and consumer goods, which we'll call "guns" and "butter."
a. Draw a production possibilities frontier for guns and butter. Explain why it most likely has a bowed-out shape.
b. Show a point that is impossible for the economy to achieve. Show a point that is feasible but inefficient.
c. Imagine that the society has two political parties, called the Hawks (who want a strong military) and the Doves (who want a smaller military). Show a point on your production possibilities frontier that the Hawks might choose and a point the Doves might choose.
d. Imagine that an aggressive neighboring country reduces the size of its military. As a result, both the Hawks and the Doves reduce their desired production of guns by the same amount. Which party would get the bigger "peace dividend," measured by the increase in butter production? Explain.
5. The first principle of economics discussed in Chapter 1 is that people face tradeoffs. Use a production possibilities frontier to illustrate society's tradeoff between a clean environment and high incomes. What do you suppose determines the shape and position of the frontier? Show what happens to the frontier if
Applications engineers develop an automobile engine with almost no emissions.
6. Classify the following topics as relating to microeconomics or macroeconomics.
a. a family's decision about how much income to save b. the effect of government regulations on auto emissions c. the impact of higher national saving on economic growth d. a firm's decision about how many workers to hire e. the relationship between the inflation rate and changes in the quantity of money
7. Classify each of the following statements as positive or normative. Explain.
a. Society faces a short-run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.
b. A reduction in the rate of growth of money will reduce the rate of inflation.
c. The Federal Reserve should reduce the rate of growth of money.
d. Society ought to require welfare recipients to look for jobs.
e. Lower tax rates encourage more work and more saving.
8. Classify each of the statements in Table 2-2 as positive, normative, or ambiguous. Explain.
9. If you were president, would you be more interested in your economic advisers' positive views or their normative views? Why?
10. The Economic Report of the President contains statistical information about the economy as well as the Council of Economic Advisers' analysis of current policy issues. Find a recent copy of this annual report at your library and read a chapter about an issue that interests you. Summarize the economic problem at hand and describe the council's recommended policy.
11. Who is the current chairman of the Federal Reserve? Who is the current chair of the Council of Economic Advisers? Who is the current secretary of the treasury?
12. Look up one of the Web sites listed in Table 2-1. What recent economic trends or issues are addressed there?
13. Would you expect economists to disagree less about public policy as time goes on? Why or why not? Can their differences be completely eliminated? Why or why not?
APPENDIX GRAPHING: A BRIEF REVIEW
Many of the concepts that economists study can be expressed with numbers—the price of bananas, the quantity of bananas sold, the cost of growing bananas, and so on. Often these economic variables are related to one another. When the price of bananas rises, people buy fewer bananas. One way of expressing the relationships among variables is with graphs.
Graphs serve two purposes. First, when developing economic theories, graphs offer a way to visually express ideas that might be less clear if described with equations or words. Second, when analyzing economic data, graphs provide a way of finding how variables are in fact related in the world. Whether we are working with theory or with data, graphs provide a lens through which a recognizable forest emerges from a multitude of trees.
Numerical information can be expressed graphically in many ways, just as a thought can be expressed in words in many ways. A good writer chooses words that will make an argument clear, a description pleasing, or a scene dramatic. An effective economist chooses the type of graph that best suits the purpose at hand.
In this appendix we discuss how economists use graphs to study the mathematical relationships among variables. We also discuss some of the pitfalls that can arise in the use of graphical methods.
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