2⃣
Chapter 2-Three Basic
Economic Problems
The Three Basic Economic Problems
The three basic economic problems
What to produce
Choice of the types and quantities of goods and services to produce
There is trade-off between different types of goods to be produced
How to produce
Choice of production methods
What kinds of factors of production CELL to use and their quantities
For whom to produce
Choice about how goods and services are distributed
Criteria include age and income
Methods of Tackling Economic Problems
Chapter 2Three Basic Economic Problems 1
Ways to tackle economic problems
By customs and traditions
By government command
In a planned economy, the government owns most of the resources. The
government decides how the resources and goods are allocated
By market mechanism
In a market economy (market-oriented economy). most resources are
privately owned. Allocation of resources and goods are guided by market
prices (market mechanism or price signal/mechanism)
Market economy vs planned economy
💡 HK is a mixed economy
Private Property Rights
Specialization
When different people or economies concentrate on the production of a
particular good or a particular production stage of a good
Exchange
Exchange is a condition for specialization
Private property right IMPORTANT
Chapter 2Three Basic Economic Problems 2
Exclusive right to use the good
Owner can exclude other from using his property and has the right to use
the property in any way
Exclusive right to receive income generated by the use of the good
Right to transfer the good
The owner has the right to transfer his or her property to other people
💡 The transfer may not necessarily involve compensations
💡 If private property rights of a good do not exist or not well-defined,
the good will become a common property and exchange will not take
place. Instead of using price mechanism, other methods will be used
to allocate resources (e.g. violence)
Well-defined private property rights is a prerequisite for the use of price
mechanism by which resources could be allocated to the highest-valued users.
Chapter 2Three Basic Economic Problems 3