Eco Term Paper
Eco Term Paper
Eco Term Paper
BY
GROUP 1:
SAKSHI CHITRANSH
RITIKA TIWARI
KALYANI DIXIT
SHIVANI SHARMA
RANJANA
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PART-1
THE BASICS OF ECONOMICS
INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS
Economics is the study of, how people allocate the limited resources to produce
& consume goods, to satisfy their endless wants with the objectives of
maximising their gain.
It is the science of choice that arises from two basic conditions, that
SCARCITY OF GOODS
The word scarce is closely associated with the word limited or economic as
opposed to unlimited or free. Scarcity is the central problem of every society.
EFFICIENCY OF RESOURCES
Economy makes best use of its limited resources. That brings the critical notion
of efficiency. Efficiency denotes most effective use of a society’s resources in
satisfying people’s wants and needs.
Example: For e.g. most of us want to lead an exciting life i.e. life full of
excitements, adventures etc. but unluckily we do not always have the resources
necessary to do everything we want to do. Therefore choices have to be made or
in the words of economists “individuals have to decide “how to allocate scarce
resources in the most effective ways”. For this a body of economic principles
and concepts has been developed to explain how people and also business react
in this situation. Economics provide optimum utilization of scarce resources to
achieve the desired result. It provides the basis for decision making.
The major four sectors of the economy are engaged in three economic activities
of production, consumption and exchange of goods and services. These sectors
are as follows:
FIRMS: Firms employ the input factors to produce various goods and
services and make payments to the households.
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GOVERNMENT: The government purchases goods and services from firms
and also factors of production from households by making payments.
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THE THREE PROBLEMS OF ECONOMIC ORGANIZATION:
WHAT TO PRODUCE?
The first question every society faces is what to produce. Should a society build
more roads or schools? Because of scarcity, society cannot build everything it
wants. Choices have to be made. Once a society determines what to produce it
then needs to decide how much should be produced. In a market economy the
"what" question is answered in large part by the demand of consumers?
HOW TO PRODUCE?
The next question a society needs to decide after what to produce is how to
produce the desired goods and services. Each society must combine available
technology with scarce resources to produce desired goods and services. The
education and skill levels of the citizens of a society will determine what
methods can be used to produce goods and services. For example, does a nation
possess the technology and skills to pick grapes with a mechanized harvester, or
does it have to pick the grapes by hand?
NATURE OF ECONOMICS
SCIENCE ART
POSITIVE NORMATIVE
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ECONOMICS AS A SCIENCE
Economics is the systematic study of knowledge & facts: All the facts &
theories related to micro &, macro economics are systematically collected
, classified & analysed.
Economics deals with the correlation ship between cause & effect: For
ex. Supply is a positive function of price i.e. changes in price is a cause &
change in supply is the effect.
All the laws in economics are universally accepted: Like Law of demand
, Law of supply .
Positive Economics deals with, how the economic problem is solved, &
not how it should be solved.
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NOT NEUTRAL : Is not neutral between positive & normative
economics.
It makes distinction between good & bad & what should be done to
promote human welfare.
CONCLUSION
Economics is both, a positive as well as a normative science , because it does
not only tell why certain things happen but also gives an idea whether it is the
right thing to happen or not?
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ECONOMICS AS AN ART
CONCLUSION
Economics is neither an exact science nor an art, but is a golden
combination of both.
ECONOMICS
MICRO MACRO
MICRO ECONOMICS:
It has been defined as that branch where the unit of study is an
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Individual, firm or household. It studies how individual make their choices
about what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce, and what
price to charge. It is also known as the price theory and is the main source of
concepts and analytical tools for managerial decision making. Various micro-
economic concepts such as demand, supply, elasticity of demand and supply,
marginal cost, various market forms, etc. are of great significance to managerial
economics.
MICRO ECONOMICS
Law of demand/supply .
Determinants of demand/supply.
Consumer’s requirements, tastes & preferences.
How the change in income & the prices of products affect the purchase?
Elasticity of demand.
Cross elasticity.
2) PRODUCTION THEORY
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3) PRICING THEORY
4) PROFIT THEORY
The study of profits which are said to be the reward for enterprise, the fourth
factor of production. No doubt profits are associated with entrepreneur and his
functions but the economists from time to time have expressed diverse and
conflicting views about the nature, origin and role of profits. Till today, there is
no complete agreement among economists about the true nature and origin of
profits. As a matter of fact, there has been perhaps no topic in the whole
economic theory which has been in such a confused and tangled state as the
theory of profit. A part of the confusion in the theory of profit is due to the lack
of agreement among economists about the true or proper function of the
entrepreneur. Some have held the view that the function of the entrepreneur is to
organise and co-ordinate the other factors of production.
5) INVENTORY THEORY.
Inventory theory (or more formally the mathematical theory of inventory and
production) is the sub-specialty within operations research and operations
management that is concerned with the design of production/inventory systems
to minimize costs: it studies the decisions faced by firms and the military in
connection with manufacturing, warehousing, supply chains, spare
part allocation and so on and provides the mathematical foundation for logistics.
The inventory control problem is the problem faced by a firm that must decide
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how much to order in each time period to meet demand for its products. The
problem can be modelled using mathematical techniques of optimal
control, dynamic programming and network optimization. The study of such
models is part of inventory theory.
MACRO ECONOMICS:
It’s not only individuals and forms that are faced with having to make choices.
Governments face many such problems. For e.g. How much to spend on health;
How much to spend on services; How much should go in to providing social
security benefits. This is the same type of problem faced by all of us in our daily
lives but in different scales. It studies the economics as a whole. It is
aggregative in character and takes the entire economy as a unit of study. Macro
economics helps in the area of forecasting. It includes National Income,
aggregate consumption, investments, employment etc.
.
1) THEORY OF NATIONAL INCOME
The study of macroeconomics is very important for evaluating the overall
performance of the economy in terms of national income. With the advent
of the Great Depression of the 1930s, it became necessary to analyse the
causes of general overproduction and general unemployment. This led to
the construction of the data on national income. National income data help
in forecasting the level of economic activity and to understand the
distribution of income among different groups of people in the economy.
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2) EMPLOYMENT
3) MONEY
The general price level is a hypothetical daily measure of overall prices for
some set of goods and services (the consumer basket), in an economy
or monetary union during a given interval (generally one day), normalized
relative to some base set. Typically, the general price level is approximated
with a daily price index, normally the Daily CPI. The general price level
can change more than once per day during hyperinflation.
Inflation.
Deflation.
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5) ECONOMIC GROWTH
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PART-2
NATURE, SCOPE & SIGNIFICANCE OF
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS
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managerial practices. It is based on economic analysis for identifying
problems, organizing information and evaluating alternatives.
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Managerial Economics, though micro in character, deals with the firm
and has nothing to do with an individual’s economic problems. But
Micro-Economics as a branch of Economics deals with both economics
of the individual as well as economics of the firm.
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Choice and Allocation: - Managerial economics is concerned with
decision-making of economic nature. This implies that managerial
economics deals with identification of economic choices and allocation of
scarce resources on the best alternative.
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of Profit, Profit Policies and techniques of Profit Planning like Break-
Even Analysis.
SIGNIFICANCE
How managerial economics is useful?
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– Managerial economics can be used to understand logic of company,
consumer, and government decisions.
CONCLUSION
To conclude, the usefulness of managerial economics lies in borrowing and
adopting the tool-kit from economic theory, incorporating relevant ideas from
other disciplines to achieve better business decisions, serving as a catalytic
agent in the course of decision-making by different functional
departments/specialists at the firm’s level and finally accomplishing a social
purpose through orienting business decisions towards social obligations.
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PART 3
ROLE AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF
MANAGERIAL ECONOMIST
ROLE OF MANAGERIAL ECONOMIST
A managerial economist can play a very important role by assisting the
management in using the increasingly specialised skills and sophisticated
techniques, required to solve the difficult problems of successful decision-
making and forward planning. In business concerns, the importance of the
managerial economist is therefore recognised a lot today. In advanced countries
like the USA, large companies employ one or more economists. In our country
too, big industrial houses have understood the need for managerial economists.
Such business firms like the Tatas, DCM and Hindustan Lever employ
economists. A managerial economist can contribute to decision-making in
business in specific terms. In this connection, two important questions need be
considered:
1. What role does he play in business, that is, what particular management
problems lend themselves to solution through economic analysis?
2. How can the managerial economist best serve management, that is, what
are the responsibilities of a successful managerial economist?
External
Internal
INTERNAL FACTORS
1- Replacement decision
2- Make or buy decision
3- Shut down decision
4- Decision on export and import
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5- Location decision
6- Capital budgeting
The external factors lie outside the control of management because they are
external to the firm and are said to constitute business environment. The internal
factors lie within the scope and operations of a firm and hence within the
control of management, and they are known as business operations. To
illustrate, a business firm is free to take decisions about what to invest, where to
invest, how much labour to employ and what to pay for it, how to price its
products, and so on. But all these decisions are taken within the framework of a
particular business environment, and the firm’s degree of freedom depends on
such factors as the government’s economic policy, the actions of its competitors
and the like.
The outlook for the national economy, the most important local, regional
or worldwide economic trends, the nature of phase of the business cycle
that lies immediately ahead.
Population shifts and the resultant ups and downs in regional purchasing
power.
The demand prospects in new as well as established markets. Impact of
changes in social behaviour and fashions, i.e., whether they will tend to
expand or limit the sales of a company’s products, or possibly make the
products obsolete?
The areas in which the market and customer opportunities are likely to
expand or contract most rapidly.
Whether overseas markets expand or contract and the affect of new
foreign government legislations on the operation of the overseas plants?
Whether the availability and cost of credit tend to increase or decrease
buying, and whether money or credit conditions ahead are likely to easy
or tight?
The prices of raw materials and finished products.
Whether the competition will increase or decrease.
The main components of the five-year plan, the areas where outlays have
been increased and the segments, which have suffered a cut in their
outlays.
The outlook to government’s economic policies and regulations and
changes in defence expenditure, tax rates tariffs and import restrictions.
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Whether the Reserve Bank’s decisions will stimulate or depress industrial
production and consumer spending and how will these decisions affect
the company’s cost, credit, sales and profits.
Reasonably accurate data regarding these factors can enable the management
to chalk out the scope and direction of their own business plans effectively. It
will also help them to determine the timing of their specific actions. And it is
these factors, which present some of the areas where a managerial economist
can make effective contribution. The managerial economist has not only to
study the economic trends at the micro-level but also must interpret their
relevance to the particular industry or firm where he works. He has to digest the
ever-growing economic literature and advise top management by means of
short, business-like practical notes. In mixed economy like that of India, the
managerial economist pragmatically interprets the intentions of controls and
evaluates their impact. He acts as a bridge between the government and the
industry, translating the government’s intentions and transmitting the reactions
of the industry. In fact, the government policies emerge out of the performance
of industry, the expectations of the people and political expediency.
Business Operations
A managerial economist can also be helpful to the management in making
decisions relating to the internal operations of a firm in respect of such
problems as price, rate of operations, investment, expansion or contraction.
Certain relevant questions in this context would be as follows:
· What will be a reasonable sales and profit budget for the next year?
· What will be the most appropriate production schedules and inventory
policies for the next six months?
· What changes in wage and price policies should be made now?
· How much cash will be available next month and how should it be invested?
Specific Functions
The managerial economists can play a further role, which can cover the
following specific functions as revealed by a survey pertaining to Brittain
conducted by K.J.W. Alexander and Alexander G. Kemp:
Sales forecasting.
Industrial market research.
Economic analysis of competing companies.
Pricing problems of industry.
Capital projects.
Production programmes.
Security / Investment analysis and forecasts.
Advice on trade and public relations.
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Advice on primary commodities.
Advice on foreign exchange.
Economic analysis of agriculture.
Analysis of underdeveloped economics.
Environmental forecasting.
The managerial economist has to gather economic data, analyse all relevant
information about the business environment and prepare position papers on
issues facing the firm and the industry. In the case of industries prone to rapid
theological advances, the manager may have to make continuous assessment of
tl1e impact of changing technology. The manager' may need to evaluate the
capital budget in the light of short and long-range financial, profit and market
potentialities. Very often, he also needs to prepare speeches for the corporate
executives. It is thus clear that in practice, managerial economists perform many
and various functions. However, of all these, the marketing functions, i.e., sales
force listing an industrial market research, are the most important.
For this purpose, the managers may collect statistical records of the sales
performance of their own business and those rehiring to their rivals, carry out
analysis of these records and report on trends in demand, their market shares,
and the relative efficiency of their retail outlets. Thus, while carrying out heir
functions, the managers may have to undertake detailed statistical analysis.
There are, of course, differences in the relative importance of· the various
functions performed from firm to firm and in the degree of sophistication of the
methods used in performing these functions. But there is no doubt that the job
of a managerial economist requires alertness and the ability to work under
pressure.
Economic Intelligence
Besides these functions involving sophisticated analysis, managerial economist
may also provide general intelligence service. Thus the economist may supply
the management with economic information of general interest such as
competitors, prices and products, tax rates, tariff rates, etc.
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Indian Context
In the Indian context, a managerial economist is expected to perform the
following functions:
Macro-forecasting for demand and supply.
Production planning at macro and micro levels.
Capacity planning and product-mix determination.
Economics of various production lines.
Economic feasibility of new production lines / processes and projects.
Assistance in preparation of overall development plans.
Preparation of periodical economic reports bearing on various matters
such as the company's product-lines, future growth opportunities, market
pricing situation, general business, and various national/international
factors affecting industry and business.
Preparing briefs; speeches, articles and papers for top management for
various chambers, Committees, Seminars, Conferences, etc
Keeping management informed of various national and International
Developments on economic/industrial matters.
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be that in study teams, committees or special projects is another important
requirement. This is because it is necessary for the managerial economist to win
continuing support for himself and his professional ideas. Clarity of expression
and attempting to minimise the use of technical terminology while
communicating his ideas to management executives is also an essential role so
as to win approval.
To conclude, a managerial economist has a very important role to play by
helping management in successful decision-making and forward planning. But
to discharge his role successfully, it is necessary to recognise the 'relevant
responsibilities and obligations. To some business executives, however, a
managerial economist is still a luxury or perhaps even a necessary evil. It is not
surprising, therefore, to find that while their status is improving and their
importance is gradually rising, managerial economists in certain firms still 'feel
quite insecure. Nevertheless, there is a definite and growing realisation that they
can contribute significantly to the profitable growth of firms and effective
solution of the problems, and this' promises them a positive future.
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