| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Contents | ||
Economics begins with the premise that resources are scarce and that it is necessary to choose between competing alternatives. That is, economics deals with tradeoffs. With scarcity, choosing one alternative implies forgoing another alternative -- the opportunity cost. The opportunity costs creates an implicit price relationship between competing alternatives. In addition, in both market oriented and planned economies, scarcity is often explicitly quantified by price relationships.
Economics is said to be positive when it attempts to explain the consequences of different choices given a set of assumptions and normative when it prescribes a certain route of action.
The subject is broadly divided into two main branches: microeconomics -- which deals with individual agents, such as households and firms, and macroeconomics -- considers the economy as a whole (including inflation, unemployment, industrial production, and the role of government). Aspects receiving particular attention in economics are resource allocation, production, distribution, trade, and competition. Economics may in principle be, and increasingly is, applied to any problem that involves choice under scarcity.
Buyers bargain for good prices while sellers put forth their best front in ChichicastenangoChichicastenango also known as Santo Tomas Chichicastenango is a town in the El Quiche department of Guatemala, known for its traditional Maya Indian culture. Chichicatenango is a small and stucco-white town, lying on the crests of mountaintops at an alti Market, GuatemalaFor the city, see Guatemala City. The Republic of Guatemala is a country in Central America, in the south of the continent of North America, bordering both the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. It is bordered by Mexico to the north, Belize to the north.
Understanding choices by individuals and groups is central. Economists believe that incentives and desires play an important role in shaping decision makingDecision making is the cognitive process of selecting a course of action from among multiple alternatives. Common examples include shopping, deciding what to eat, and deciding who or what to vote for in an election or referendum. Decision making is said t. Concepts from the UtilitarianUtilitarianism is a suggested theoretical framework for morality, based on quantitative maximisation of some definition of " utility" for society or humanity. Utilitarianism "The greatest good for the most people. or: "The greatest good over the least pai school of philosophyPhilosophy literally means 'love of wisdom' from the Greek 'philo' and 'sofia'. It is now widely used to designate the pursuit of knowledge or wisdom about fundamental matters concerning life, death, meaning, reality, being and truth. The term may also re are used as analytical concepts within economics, though economists appreciate that society may not adopt utilitarian objectives. One example of this is the idea of a utility function, which is assumed to be the means by which individual economic actors decide what makes them "happy" and what decisions they make in pursuit of that happiness.
Economics has been referred to as "the dismal science". The term was originally coined by Thomas CarlyleFor the Carlyle Group, see Carlyle Group Thomas Carlyle ( December 4, 1795 February 5, 1881) was a Scottish essayist and historian, whose work was hugely influential during the Victorian era. He was born in Ecclefechan, Dumfries and Galloway, and was educ, who favoured an economic system based on slaverySlavery is involuntary servitude, enforced by violence or other, clear forms of coercion. It is sometimes regarded as an expectation associated with other relationships, such as marriage and/or other family relations, military service, or debt relationshi, in rejection of the leading economists of the 1840s, who were typically libertarians opposed to slavery. Today, it is often used in reference to the emphasis on scarcity in economics.