ECON 219 Study Guide - Midterm Guide: Economic Equilibrium, Public Choice, Imperfect Competition

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ECON 219 Full Course Notes
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ECON 219 Full Course Notes
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Early economists notices that the interaction of self-interested people creates a spontaneous social order the economy is self-organizing. Self-interest, not benevolence, is the foundation of economic order: producers and consumers being self-interested. Loosely speaking, efficiency refers to organizing available resources to produce the goods and services that people most value, when they most want them, and by using the fewest possible resources to do so. Decision-makers all respond to the same set of prices, which are determined in markets that respond to overall conditions of national scarcity or plenty. Self-interest guides individuals buying and selling what is best for them. Individuals respond to incentives selling when prices are high and buying when prices are low. Prices and quantities are set in (relatively) free markets in which individuals trade voluntarily. Institutions, created by the state, protect private property and enforce contractual obligations. How many we have relative to how many we want. Gives rise to the basic economic problem of choice.

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