Economics in One Page
Economics in One Page
by Mark Skousen
1. Self-interest: The desire of bettering our
condition comes with us from the womb and never leaves till we go into the
grave (Adam Smith). No one spends someone else’s money as carefully as he
spends his own.
2. Economic growth: The key to a higher standard of
living is to expand savings, capital formation, education, and technology.
3. Trade: In all voluntary exchanges, where accurate
information is known, both the buyer and seller gain; therefore, an increase in
trade between individuals, groups, or nations benefits both parties.
4. Competition: Given the universal existence of
limited resources and unlimited wants, competition exists in all societies and
cannot be abolished by government edict.
5. Cooperation: Since most individuals are not
self-sufficient, and almost all natural resources must be transformed in order
to become usable, individuals—laborers, landlords, capitalists, and
entrepreneurs—must work together to produce valuable goods and services.
6. Division of labor and comparative advantage:
Differences in talents, intelligence, knowledge, and property lead to
specialization and comparative advantage by each individual, firm, and nation.
7. Dispersion of knowledge: Information about market
behavior is so diverse and ubiquitous that it cannot be captured and calculated
by a central authority.
8. Profit and loss: Profit and loss are the market
mechanisms that guide what should and should not be produced over the long run.
9. Opportunity cost: Given the limitations of time and
resources, there are always trade-offs in life. If you want to do something,
you must give up other things you may wish to do. The price you pay to engage
in one activity is equal to the cost of other activities you have forgone.
10. Price theory: Prices are determined by the
subjective valuations of buyers (demand) and sellers (supply), not by any
objective cost of production; the higher the price, the smaller the quantity
purchasers will be willing to buy and the larger the quantity sellers will be
willing to offer for sale.
11. Causality: For every cause there is an effect.
Actions taken by individuals, firms, and governments have an impact on other
actors in the economy that may be predictable, although the level of
predictability depends on the complexity of the actions involved.
12. Uncertainty: There is always a degree of risk and
uncertainty about the future because people are often reevaluating, learning
from their mistakes, and changing their minds, thus making it difficult to
predict their behavior in the future.
13. Labor economics: Higher wages can only be achieved
in the long run by greater productivity, i.e., applying more capital investment
per worker; chronic unemployment is caused by government fixing wage rates
above equilibrium market levels.
14. Government controls: Price-rent-wage controls may
benefit some individuals and groups, but not society as a whole; ultimately,
they create shortages, black markets, and a deterioration of quality and
services. There is no such thing as a free lunch.
15. Money: Deliberate attempts to depreciate the
nation’s currency, artificially lower interest rates, and engage in easy money
policies inevitably lead to inflation, boom-bust cycles, and economic crisis.
The market, not the state, should determine money and credit.
16. Public finance: In all public enterprises, in
order to maintain a high degree of efficiency and good management, market
principles should be adopted whenever possible: (1) Government should try to do
only what private enterprise cannot do; government should not engage in
businesses that private enterprise can do better; (2) government should live
within its means; (3) cost-benefit analysis: marginal benefits should exceed
marginal costs; and (4) the accountability principle: those who benefit from a
service should pay for the service.
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