Lesson 1 - Introduction To Applied Economics
Lesson 1 - Introduction To Applied Economics
Lesson 1 - Introduction To Applied Economics
Economic Resources
Economic resources are factors of production used to produce things that people desire
in order to satisfy their wants. The things that people produce are called commodities.
Commodities may be divided into goods and services. Goods are tangible, like bags or
shoes, and services are intangible, like haircuts or education. The act of making goods
and services is called production, and the act of using them to satisfy your wants is called
consumption.
It has been conventional to categorize economic resources (factors of production) as
land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurial ability.
What to produce?
Every economy must determine what goods and services are to be produced and in what
quantities of each. In some, the buyers and producers need to produce in order to obtain
things and exchange the things they already own. Since society cannot have everything,
they must decide which goods and services they want now and which one to give up.
For example, if gadgets are in demand, they need to pay business to produce and sell
these gadgets in the market. If no one desires to buy stereo sets, it is not worth producing
them. In case a company produces an item, which buyers do not buy in much quantity,
there will likely be inadequate income. The company will have to enhance the quality and
transform the product to match the taste of the buyer. In some society, government decide
on what goods and services to produce based on the resources available and demands
of the buyers.
How to produce?
The company must decide on how to use the resources to produce goods and services.
What combination of resources and technologies will be used to produce goods and
services at lowest cost? The manufacturer may wish to maximize profits and minimize
production cost. They may combine labor and capital given the prices of labor and capital
and productivity of those resources.
- Unemployment. According to the Labor Force Survey, the unemployment rate was 6
percent in October 2014 and 6.6 percent in January 2015, Unemployment remains a
persistent problem in the Philippines because of its increase in population. As reported
by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, the total population in the Philippines was late
recorded at 102.2 million people in 2015 from 26.3 million in 1960. The number of people
entering the job market has been greater than the number of jobs created. The rural-
urban migration increases due to insufficient employment opportunities. Many of the
unemployed individuals are college graduates.
What Can Be Done to Solve unemployment Problem?
1. Appropriate economic policies for labor-insensitive industries.
2. Improvement in the educational system of the country specially in the rural areas.
3. Minimize rural-urban migration by improving the economic environment in the rural
areas.
4. Provision of more investment opportunities to encourage local and international
investment like tax incentives.
5. Proper coordination between the government and the private sector to solve the
problem of job mismatch.
6. Decreasing the retirement age from 65 to 60 for public sector to give chance to younger
generation to enter the labor market but providing an attractive well-defined pensions and
retiree health care for retirees.
7. Slowing population growth. To improve standard of living of the Filipinos, Philippine
economic growth must increase faster that its population. If the country’s output over a
period of time increased by 5 percent, while its population increased by 20 percent,
standard of living is better in the beginning of the period but difficult in the end. If
population increased by 5 percent, while output increased by 20 percent, standard of
living would have been improved. The government must encourage people to limit the
size of their families and at the same time increasing economic growth.
- Poverty. As a fast-growing economy, with 6.3 percent Gross Domestic Product for the
4th quarter of 2015, still there is a declined in the incidence of poverty in the Philippines.
Poverty remained not only an economic problem but also a social problem of the country.
Increase in population, increase in the cost of living, unemployment, inequality in the
distribution of income are some of the reasons why a decline in poverty is very slow.
What Can Be Done To Solve Poverty Problem?
1. Reduce unemployment.
2. Appropriate policy on labor income.
3. Promote economic growth to improve the standard of living.
4. Provision of unemployment benefits for those who will be unemployed due to natural
and man-made calamities.
5. Increasing social services like education, health care and food subsidies leads to
sustainable poverty reduction.
Source:
Macalinao, E. (2016). Applied Economics For Senior High School. Unlimited Books
Library Services & Publishing Inc.