ECON1101 Chapter Notes - Chapter 1: Economic Surplus, Rationality, Reservation Price

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Topic 1 - Thinking as an Economist
Microeconomics 1 - ECON1101
This is an introductory economics course that focuses on the theory of markets and the application of that
theory in the real world. More details can be found here
In the first topic you will learn foundational concepts that are critical for success later on in this course. The
prescribed textbook for this course is Principles of Microeconomics 3ED [1]
What is Economics?
Simply stated, Economics is the study of how people make choices under conditions of scarcity & the
results of those choices on society. More importantly, Microeconomics is the study of how firms and
households make decisions in allocating their scarce resources.
Other Sub Categories of Economics
1. Positive Economics attempts to explain what happens and why
2. Normative Economics attempts to explain what should or ought to happen
The Scarcity Principle
In real life, people are faced with choices. If you choose to go to soccer you cannot study for economics.
The scarcity principle recognises that there is no free lunch and individuals face trade-offs. They must
compromise between their competing interests, more of 'x' means less of 'y'.
The Cost Benefit Principle
Before making any decisions, individuals must weight up the costs and benefits that would result from their
choice. The Cost Benefit Principle states that an should undertake a particular action if the marginal
benefits exceed the marginal costs. We can use this model to predict behaviour however there are 2 key
assumptions:
1. Rationality
We assume people are rational and compare the costs and benefits of
alternative actions. Often this assumption can be questioned as emotions
can easily impede rational decision making
2. Ceteris Paribus
All other variables remain unchanged
Costs, Benefits and Surplus
In utilising the cost benefit model, people will always attempt to maximise their economic surplus. Surplus
is the difference between all the benefits and all the costs.
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Document Summary

This is an introductory economics course that focuses on the theory of markets and the application of that theory in the real world. In the first topic you will learn foundational concepts that are critical for success later on in this course. The prescribed textbook for this course is principles of microeconomics 3ed [1] Simply stated, economics is the study of how people make choices under conditions of scarcity & the results of those choices on society. More importantly, microeconomics is the study of how firms and households make decisions in allocating their scarce resources. Other sub categories of economics: positive economics attempts to explain what happens and why, normative economics attempts to explain what should or ought to happen. In real life, people are faced with choices. If you choose to go to soccer you cannot study for economics. The scarcity principle recognises that there is no free lunch and individuals face trade-offs.

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