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The Economic Problem of Scarcity
ECON002 Lesson 3
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Imagine life as a grand balancing act. On one side, we have our Endsβ€”an infinite thirst for knowledge, success, and leisure. On the other, we have our Scarce Meansβ€”the finite 24 hours in a day. This is the heart of the Robbins Definition: economics is the science of human behavior as a relationship between these competing ends and limited resources.

GPA (Grade) Free Time g* t* Feasible Frontier (MRT) Indifference Curve (MRS) FEASIBLE SET Optimal Choice: MRS = MRT

Decision-Making Under Scarcity

When you choose "High Study Time" for a GPA of 3.43 over "Low Study Time" (GPA 3.36), you are operating under business as usual logic. Every choice carries an Opportunity Costβ€”the net benefit of the next best alternative you sacrificed. Economists model these trade-offs by applying the ceteris paribus assumptionβ€”holding other variables constant to isolate the impact of your decision.

The Social Dilemma

While individuals pursue self-interest, their independent actions can lead to a Social Dilemma. This is a outcome inferior to what collective action could achieve. Just like the men in CΓ©zanne’s painting, we are locked in strategic interactions where our best individual move might lead to a worse collective outcome unless regulated by markets, governments, or social norms.