The cornerstone of Harvard professor N. Gregory Mankiw’s introductory economics textbook, Principles of Economics, is a synthesis of economic thought into Ten Principles of Economics ....This vital work informing the public is available as a paper in the Annals of Improbable Research and as a video on YouTube.Yoram’s Translations
- People face tradeoffs.
- The cost of something is what you give up to get it.
- Rational people think at the margin.
- People respond to incentives.
- Trade can make everyone better off.
- Markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity.
- Governments can sometimes improve market outcomes.
- A country’s standard of living depends on its ability to produce goods and services.
- Prices rise when the government prints too much money.
- Society faces a short-run tradeoff between inflation and unemployment.
....
- Choices are bad.
- Choices are really bad.
- People are stupid.
- People aren’t that stupid.
- Trade can make everyone worse off.
- Governments are stupid.
- Governments aren’t that stupid.
- Blah blah blah.
- Blah blah blah.
- Blah blah blah.
To continue to deepen the reader’s understanding of why choices are bad—really bad—let’s return to our previous example, in which somebody offers you a choice between a Snickers bar and a package of M&Ms. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that you take the M&Ms. According to Mankiw, the cost of those M&Ms is the Snickers bar that you had to give up to get the M&Ms. Your gain from this situation—what economists call “economic profit”—is therefore the difference between the value you gain from getting the M&Ms (say, $.75) and the value you lose from giving up the Snickers bar (say, $.40). In other words, your economic profit is only $.35. Although you value the M&Ms at $.75, having the choice of the Snickers bar reduces your gain by $.40. Hence Principle #2: Choices are really bad.Indeed, the more choices you have, the worse off you are. The worst situation of all would be somebody coming up to you and offering you a choice between two identical packages of M&Ms. Since choosing one package (which you value at $.75) means giving up the other package (which you also value at $.75), your economic profit is exactly zero! So being offered a choice between two identical packages of M&Ms is in fact equivalent to being offered nothing.
16 July 2007
Smoke and mirrors
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fun
Yoram Bauman, Ph.D., the stand-up economist, offers us some help with the principles of economics.
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