🔍
🚗 🏡 🏖 Why Can't We Have Everything We Want? | Scarcity and Choice - YouTube
Channel: EconClips
[0]
We live in a world of scarcity.
[3]
This fact is beyond question.
[4]
Our time, land, and work are scarce.
[7]
Producer and consumer goods are scarce as
well.
[10]
Human needs, however, are limitless.
[13]
Economics studies the relationship between
limitless goals and scarce means used to realize
[17]
these goals.
[19]
Though these means indeed can help us achieve
our goals, due to their scarcity we must constantly
[24]
decide on which needs are the most urgent,
while taking into account which goods we can
[29]
use to satisfy them.
[30]
First, consider the concept of scarce means,
or simply goods.
[35]
For something to be called a good, it must
meet two conditions: People must consider
[39]
it able to satisfy their needs, and its amount
must be limited.
[44]
An example might be a nice way to explain
this:
[46]
Imagine you have a very rare germ that causes
a terrible disease.
[50]
Is it a good?
[52]
Of course not, because you cannot use it to
further your goals.
[55]
Just because something is scarce does not
mean that it is useful.
[59]
But sunlight and air are useful.
[61]
True, both are very much needed, though they
are not scarce – in most situations anyone
[66]
can easily get any needed amount of them.
[69]
Of course, we can imagine some exceptions.
[72]
For example, the germ we mentioned can be
used as a biological weapon, and as such can
[76]
be valued on the black market.
[79]
Or we can imagine someone selling a diving
cylinder filled with air to a person who wants
[83]
to dive at great depths.
[84]
In most situations, however, these are not
goods.
[88]
Now let’s deal with types of goods.
[90]
We can divide them into three categories:
The first category is natural resources or
[96]
original factors of production – these goods
are supplied by nature itself and are not
[100]
created by use of human action.
[102]
Such resources are both human work, understood
as expenditure of human energy, and land.
[108]
When we talk about land as a natural resource,
we are not talking about farmed land.
[113]
Land that is already farmed is a capital good.
[115]
Land is a natural resource if untouched by
human hand, and includes raw materials, climate
[120]
and all other elements that humans can use.
[122]
The second category is capital goods or intermediate
goods.
[126]
They are called intermediate, because they
are not directly serviceable in the satisfaction
[130]
of wants, but may be transformed into such
directly serviceable goods.
[135]
In other words, they are only used in production
of goods that consumers can use directly.
[140]
Suppose you want to satisfy your need to eat
bread.
[143]
You need an oven to bake bread.
[145]
An oven cannot satisfy your need directly,
but can be used as a mean to this end.
[149]
Thus, capital goods include machines, factory
buildings, tools, or computers used in the
[154]
process of production.
[157]
Natural resources and capital goods can be
called by a common name of factors of production.
[162]
The third category is consumer goods or final
goods.
[165]
They satisfy human needs directly.
[168]
The production process is as follows: People
transform natural resources into capital goods,
[173]
and then transform capital goods into consumer
goods.
[177]
Consumer goods can then be consumed.
[179]
As we mentioned earlier, human needs are limitless,
and in that they differ from natural resources.
[185]
Natural resources are scarce in any point
of time, and because of that you cannot have
[189]
everything at once.
[190]
So you must always judge what you value the
most at the moment or, in other words, what
[195]
specific use of scarce means will satisfy
your needs the most.
[199]
Confronted with the necessity to choose between
different uses of scarce means, you create
[203]
your own value scale that ranks the ends you
value.
[207]
The values are completely subjective.
[209]
As an illustration imagine an employee working
in a high position whose great results were
[213]
rewarded with a bonus of 50 thousand dollars.
[217]
The 50 thousand dollars are a scarce resource,
so he must decide on the use of the money
[221]
most valuable to him.
[223]
Assume that the employee has the following
value scale, and each value can be satisfied
[227]
by use of exactly 50 thousand dollars:
[231]
1. Having a yacht – this would make his childhood
dream come true, and he values it the most
[237]
2. Going on a trip around the world – this
is his second-best choice, as he always wanted to do it
[244]
3. Having a motorcycle – buying a Harley is
his third-most valued choice
[250]
4. Having his house renovated – his fourth-most
valued choice
[255]
5. Setting up his own bar – this is his last
choice that will allow him to lead
[261]
a more modest but calmer life.
[263]
As the employee values the yacht’s purchase
the most, he will do exactly that.
[268]
Can we assume that he judges other things
unimportant?
[270]
Obviously, the other things are important
as well.
[273]
All these things are worth more to him than
50 thousand dollars.
[277]
He values the yacht the most, however.
[280]
If he had gotten a bonus of one hundred thousand
dollars, he would have bought a yacht AND
[284]
taken a trip around the world.
[285]
If he had gotten two hundred thousand dollars,
he would have bought a motorcycle and renovated
[290]
his house as well.
[291]
However, scarcity of means allows him to satisfy
only one of his needs.
[296]
Every time you decide on how to use scarce
means, you create a subjective value scale
[301]
by assigning ranks to your various ends in
a process of value judgment.
[305]
Obviously, such value scales are fluid.
[308]
Subjective value judgments can and do change.
[311]
And they are inseparable from human action,
as only action can reveal one’s priority.
[316]
Let’s say that you are walking along a street
after receiving your wage.
[320]
You had your expenses planned in your head,
but suddenly you see your favorite band’s
[324]
album displayed in a store window, so you
buy the album.
[328]
Does it mean that you have acted against your
value scale?
[331]
No.
[332]
It only means that your situation has changed
and you have adjusted your value scale to
[335]
include your valuation of the album.
[339]
Before taking any action, you judge how it
might satisfy your needs, and compare it with
[344]
every other value on the scale.
[345]
To satisfy your most valued want in your value
scale, you need to forgo the opportunity to
[350]
satisfy your second-most valued want.
[353]
And this foregone opportunity is called cost.
[356]
For the employee with the bonus, the 50 thousand
dollars are not an end in itself.
[361]
The bonus is merely a means to an end.
[363]
So the real cost here is not the money, but
the second want on the value scale, that is
[368]
going on a trip around the world.
[370]
The employee decides on a yacht, because he
judges that satisfying this need will outweigh
[374]
the cost.
[376]
Every person taking action believes that the
resulting satisfaction will outweigh the cost.
[381]
From this perspective, human action is always
rational, even if it seems otherwise to an
[386]
external observer.
[387]
Of course, after taking action, it may turn
out that you have made a mistake, and that
[392]
the need was actually less urgent than expected.
[395]
You may think that if you could turn back
time, you would make a different choice.
[398]
This is because the future is uncertain.
[400]
It might turn out that the employee who bought
the yacht is prone to seasickness, which he
[405]
was unaware of before, and for him every trip
on his new yacht is a nightmare.
[410]
Looking back, he will regret not spending
his money on a trip around the world.
[414]
But it does not mean that his decision to
buy a yacht was irrational.
[418]
People are always trying to improve their
future situation precisely because the future
[423]
is uncertain.
[424]
If the future was known and certain, everyone
would just wait idly for the inevitable to
[429]
happen instead of trying to act.
[432]
Only a choosing person knows his subjective
value scale, and through action reveals only
[436]
a small part of it.
[438]
If I buy a mug for 10 dollars, it means not
only that at this moment the mug is worth
[442]
more to me than having 10 dollars, but also
that it is worth more than anything else you
[447]
can buy for 10 dollars.
[449]
Meanwhile, the role of the producer is to
try to anticipate the future human needs and
[453]
act to satisfy them.
[455]
If his anticipation is correct, then he will
succeed.
[458]
If not, he will fail.
[460]
I encourage you to visit the econclips.com
website, where you can find additional materials
[463]
that expand on the topic.
[464]
Thank you very much for all the support you
give us and for further help allowing us to
[468]
develop.
[469]
We encourage you to subscribe to our YouTube
channel and to like our Facebook page.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





