๐ก What is Economics?
Scarcity, choice, micro vs macro, GDP and opportunity cost.
๐ก The Science of Choices
Economics is the study of how people, businesses, and governments make choices about using scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants.
The central problem: Human wants are unlimited but resources (land, labour, capital) are limited/scarce. This forces us to make choices โ and every choice has an opportunity cost (the next best alternative given up).
Two branches:
โข Microeconomics โ studies individual units: one consumer, one firm, one market. Deals with demand, supply, price, wages, profit.
โข Macroeconomics โ studies the economy as a whole: GDP, inflation, unemployment, monetary policy, fiscal policy.
Opportunity Cost โ value of the next best alternative forgone. If you spend โน1000 on a movie, the opportunity cost is what else you could have done with that money.
GDP (Gross Domestic Product) โ total value of all goods and services produced within a country in a year.
GNP (Gross National Product) โ GDP + income earned by residents abroad - income earned by foreigners in India.
Inflation โ general rise in price levels. Measured by CPI (Consumer Price Index) and WPI (Wholesale Price Index) in India.
โข Capitalist/Market Economy โ private ownership, price mechanism decides. USA, UK.
โข Socialist Economy โ government owns means of production. Former USSR, Cuba.
โข Mixed Economy โ both private and public sectors. India is a mixed economy.
โข Traditional Economy โ customs/traditions guide production. Some tribal societies.
India shifted from planned economy (1947-1991) โ liberalized mixed economy (post-1991 LPG reforms).
Micro vs Macro Economics
AnimationMicro = trees. Macro = forest. Both are needed to understand the full picture.
Economic Concepts Explorer
InteractiveGNP (Gross National Product) = GDP + (Income earned by Indians abroad) - (Income earned by foreigners in India).
Formula: GNP = GDP + Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA)
For India: GDP > GNP because India has more foreigners earning in India (MNCs, foreign workers) than Indians earning abroad on a net basis. However, remittances from NRIs (Non-Resident Indians) are substantial โ India is the world's top remittance-receiving country (~$125 billion in 2023).
For USA: GDP โ GNP (roughly similar).
For small countries with many workers abroad (Philippines, Nepal): GNP > GDP.
Real-life examples:
โข A student who spends 3 hours studying for SSC gives up the opportunity to earn โน500 by working part-time. The opportunity cost of studying is โน500.
โข A farmer who grows wheat on his land gives up the opportunity to grow rice. The opportunity cost of wheat is the forgone rice income.
โข India spending โน50,000 crore on defence means that money cannot be spent on education or health โ that is the opportunity cost.
Concept behind it: Resources are scarce. Every use of a resource means giving up another use. Opportunity cost helps in rational decision-making.
SSC tip: Opportunity cost is also called Alternative Cost or Economic Cost. It is never zero โ even "free" choices have opportunity costs.