ECON 2106 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Unintended Consequences, Opportunity Cost, Microeconomics

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Fundamental concerns: scarcity - refers to the limited nature of society"s resources, given these unlimited terms, in layman"s terms, we can just give everyone everything they want because there isn"t enough. Incentives and innovation: patents a securing of intellectual property that allows investors a short-term monopoly to profit on their designs, this, and other ip law, offer protections that allow the incentive of profit to encourage investors. Inventives everywhere: college offers more incentives than just an education, sports team identities, dating, social life, and opportunities are outside incentives for college education, trade-offs. Simplified - given that we have limited resources, every time we make a decision comes at the expense of not doing something else: ex. Economic thinking requires a purposeful: trade: an voluntary exchange between buyers and sellers in some type of market. Two types of advantages: absolute advantage - producing more of a good than another, comparative advantage - who has the lowest opportunity cost, example.

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