January 2014
Essential Reading
C. Mulhearn and H.R. Vane, Economics for Business, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, Second Edition, 2012. (henceforth M&V) Chapter 1.
W. Kiechel, ‘The Management Century’, Harvard Business Review, November (2012), pp.63-75.
We consider in this week’s introductory tutorial what economics is and how it applies to business. Currently in N. Ireland, as in the rest of the UK, there is a debate about rebalancing the economy away from public sector and financial services and towards manufacturing and the private sector. This focus on economic structure is crucial. As the text makes clear economics is concerned with ‘What goods and services societies produce, how they produce them and for whom they are produced’ (p.2). In questions 1 to 2 we consider how economics helps understand business and in question 3 we turn our attention to a brief history of management as published in Harvard Business Review (HBR) in 2012. HBR is one of the world’s most prestigious journals devoted to management. The paper is particularly useful as it highlights the ways that economic reasoning has influenced management thinking in the last century. Indeed, as the article suggests management study was to be ‘rooted in economics’ (p.63). Currently, many economic/management graduates are employed as analysts and there is a fair chance if you get a 2:1 or better you could do so after graduation. We will see why economic reasoning is so valued.
M&V
Q1. Look at Table 1.1 (p.2). The Table covers the four categories of what is produced by a given society. Considering the four categories applied to the UK, which goods and services are and are not produced within the UK? Why, as exemplified by healthcare or housing, are how questions linked to for whom questions (pp.4-5)? Why do economists claim expertise in providing positive answers to normative concerns rather than direct expertise on normative issues?
Q2. What are ‘the two complementary parts of modern economics’ described by M&V? (p.20). Why do the two branches both matter for understanding the impact of economics on business? (hint: see M&V pp.23-25)
HBR (2012)
Q3. What are the three phases in management thinking identified in the article? What examples of the long-standing relationship between economics and management does the paper present? To what extent can we view management as a form of “social engineering” for which economists have provided some of the tools? (hint: see p.66; another hint: ‘Google’ some of the following names ‘Peter Drucker’, ‘John Kenneth Galbraith’ and ‘John Maynard Keynes’)
Graham Brownlow
You May Also Find These Documents Helpful
-
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS SESSION 1, 2008 ECONllOl MICROECONOMICS I FINAL EXAMINATION TIME ALLOWED - 2HOURS…
- 1953 Words
- 8 Pages
Good Essays -
Farnham, Paul G. Economics for Managers. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. Print.…
- 3009 Words
- 9 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Is there either a recessionary output gap (negative GDP gap) or an inflationary output gap (positive GDP gap) at the equilibrium interest rate, and, if either, what is the amount?…
- 1109 Words
- 5 Pages
Good Essays -
Farris, M. T. & Happel, S. K. (1987). Modern managerial economics. London: Scott, Foresman and Company.…
- 1142 Words
- 5 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Bibliography: BTEC Business Level 3 Book1 (Jon Bevan, Helen Coupland- Smith, Rob Dramsfield, John Gaymore and Catherine Richards.…
- 1038 Words
- 3 Pages
Good Essays -
Plenert, G. (2014). Economics. Retrieved from Reference for Business Encyclopedia of Business, 2nd Ed: http://www.referencefor business.com/management/De-Ele/Economics.html…
- 1235 Words
- 4 Pages
Better Essays -
8. A country’s standard of living depends on its ability to produce goods and services…
- 1268 Words
- 6 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Hubbard, R. G., Garnett, A. M., Lewis, P. & O’Briend, A. P. (2013). Essentials of economics (2nd ed.). Frenchs Forest, NSW: Pearson Australia.…
- 1304 Words
- 6 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Bibliography: 1. K. Alec Chrystal & Richard G. Lipsey (1997), ¡°Economics for Business and Management, New York: Oxford University Press.…
- 1113 Words
- 5 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Level 5 (year 2) core module for students on all undergraduate business programmes taking the module from week beginning 26 September 2011 to 16 January 2012…
- 2598 Words
- 11 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Discuss critically the following statement: “Per-capita Gross Domestic Product is an excellent measure of a country’s average standard of living”.…
- 373 Words
- 2 Pages
Satisfactory Essays -
Sloman, J.: Essential of Economics (2nd ed). Pearson Education Limited, Edinburgh Gate, Harlow, Essex, CM20 2JE.…
- 1700 Words
- 7 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Griffiths A, Wall S (2008). Economic for business and Management 2nd Edition Harlow: FT Prentice Hall pp: 539-646.…
- 3801 Words
- 16 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Peter Earl, Tim Wakeley (2005). Business Economics: A Contemporary Approach. Berkshire: McGraw - Hill Education.…
- 2620 Words
- 11 Pages
Powerful Essays -
Q. 1. (a) Answers the following : (i) Effective demand is (A) Demand exceeds supply (B) Aggregate demand is equal to aggregate supply (c) Elasticity of demand for a product is high (D) Difference between actual and forecast demand. (ii) Progressive taxation means (A) Tax burden decreases with income (B) Tax burden increases with income (C) Large quantity of tax evasion (D) Large quantity of tax avoidance. (iii) Cross elasticity of demand relates (A) Price of one commodity and demand for another commodity (B) Substitutes and complementary goods (C) Market and supply (D) Production and cost (iv) Central Problem of all Economics are (A) What to produce? (B) How to Produce? (C) For whom to produce? (D) All the above (v) Exceptions to the law of demand are (A) Conspicuous goods (B) Giffen goods (C) Shares’ speculative market (D) All the above…
- 10522 Words
- 43 Pages
Good Essays