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Economics

Essentials of Economics

Paul Krugman,Robin Wells and Kathryn Graddy - Personal Name;

model is any simplified representation of reality that is used to better
understand real-life situations. But how do we create a simplified representation
of an economic situation?
One possibility—an economist’s equivalent of a wind tunnel—is to find or
create a real but simplified economy. For example, economists interested in the
economic role of money have studied the system of exchange that developed in
World War II prison camps, in which cigarettes became a universally accepted
form of payment even among prisoners who didn’t smoke.
Another possibility is to simulate the workings of the economy on a computer.
For example, when changes in tax law are proposed, government officials use tax
models—large mathematical computer programs—to assess how the proposed
changes would affect different types of people.
Models are important because their simplicity allows economists to focus
on the effects of only one change at a time. That is, they allow us to hold everything
else constant and study how one change affects the overall economic
outcome. So an important assumption when building economic models is the
other things equal assumption, which means that all other relevant factors
remain unchanged.
But you can’t always find or create a small-scale version of the whole economy,
and a computer program is only as good as the data it uses. (Programmers have
a saying: “garbage in, garbage out.”) For many purposes, the most effective form
of economic modeling is the construction of “thought experiments”: simplified,
hypothetical versions of real-life situations.
In Chapter 1 we illustrated the concept of equilibrium with the example
of how customers at a supermarket would rearrange themselves when a new
cash register opens. Though we didn’t say it, this was an example of a simple
model—an imaginary supermarket, in which many details were ignored.
(What were customers buying? Never mind.) This simple model can be used to
answer a “what if” question: what if another cash register were opened?
As the cash register story showed, it is often possible to describe and analyze
a useful economic model in plain English. However, because much of economics
involves changes in quantities—in the price of a product, the number of units
produced, or the number of workers employed in its production—economists
often find that using some mathematics helps clarify an issue. In particular, a
numerical example, a simple equation, or—especially—a graph can be key to
understanding an economic concept.


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Detail Information
Series Title
Essentials of Economics
Call Number
-
Publisher
USA : Worth Publishers., 2014
Collation
1-698
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
13: 978-1-4292-7850-
Classification
NONE
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
3rd Edition
Subject(s)
Economics
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility
-
Other version/related

No other version available

File Attachment
  • Economics
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Accra Metropolitan University
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Accra Metropolitan University is a forward-thinking, private higher education institution in Ghana dedicated to empowering minds and shaping futures for sustainable global development. Fully accredited by the Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC), the university is built on the core pillars of LIFE: Leadership, Innovation, Flexibility, and Entrepreneurship.

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