Introduction
©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. &
©Y.E.Riyanto
Lecture 1
1
Themes of Microeconomics
Microeconomics deals with limits that economic agents (consumers, workers, firms, etc) face:
Limited budgets
Limited time
Limited ability to produce
How do we make the most of limits?
How do we allocate scarce resources?
©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. &
©Y.E.Riyanto
Lecture 1
2
Themes of Microeconomics
Limited resources (constraints)
Choices must be made Unlimited wants Maximizing your objective (e.g. utility & profits)
©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. &
©Y.E.Riyanto
Lecture 1
3
Themes of Microeconomics
Workers, firms and consumers must make trade-offs
Do I work or go on vacation?
Do I purchase a new car or save my money?
Do we hire more workers or buy new machinery? How are we going to manage these trade-offs? ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. &
©Y.E.Riyanto
Lecture 1
4
Themes of Microeconomics
Consumers
Limited incomes
How consumers maximize their well-being
(utility), using their preferences, to make decisions about trade-offs.
E.g. How do consumers make decisions about consumption (what to consume and how much? and savings?)
Consumer demand can be derived.
©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. &
©Y.E.Riyanto
Lecture 1
5
Themes of Microeconomics
Workers
Individuals decide when and if to enter the work-force Trade-offs
of working now or obtaining more education/training What choices do individuals make in terms of jobs or work places?
How many hours do individuals choose to work? Trade-off of labor and leisure
Labor supply can be derived.
©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. &
©Y.E.Riyanto
Lecture 1
6
Themes of Microeconomics
Firms
What types of products do firms produce?
Constraints
on production capacity & financial resources create trade-offs.
Product
supply can be derived.
How many