Еconomic theory
Еconomic theory
ГОУ ВПО МГУПИ
Реферат
по
предмету:
“английский
язык ”
НА
ТЕМУ:
“Экономическая теория. Классификация
стран
по уровню их экономического развития.”
Работу
выполнил:
студент
1 курса
МФ-ЭФ2-06-01
группы
Крылов
А.И.
Работу
проверила:
преподаватель
Манишова В.Д.
Можайск, 2007г.
Contents:
Introduction
1. The birth of economic theory and
its development
2. Main article: History of Economics
3.Areas of study
4.Techniques
5.Language and reasoning
6.Development of economic thought
7. The system of economic relations
Conclusion
Bibliography
Active vocabulary
Introduction.
In this work I will
consider the notion of economic theory. This is a very important and complex
question. But I will try to analise it and answer this question more completely.
In the process of all life people face creation, obtaining, consumption and the
exchange of various goods and services.
Economics is an area of
activities of people, as a result they create, purchase, distribute and consume
wealth for the diversified needs, as for themself, so for society.
An economic theory as
science (systematized knowledge about the essence of economics) appeared in
17-18 centuries, in the period of the formation of capitalism.
1. The
birth of economic theory and its development.
Theory of economics was
created and is developed by the economists of different schools and directions.
Its definition are very different. The most general definition: Economic theory
is a science about the bases of the economic life of society. And economic life
is an activity of people connected with ensuring of the material conditions of
their life.
The theory of economics was
born in a few stages:
- The scientific
thought of ancientness (Platon, Aristotel and others);
- Stage of mercantilismes
(the wealth of society is determined by the volumes of foreign trade);
- Stage of physiocratismes
(the wealth of society is determined by the levels of development of agrucultures);
- Classic economics
theory (Smith, Rikardo, Petti).
- Stage
bourgeoisly-economics theory (Malkus, Sei, Bastiya).
- Marksists or
proletarian economic theory (Marks, Engels, Lenin).
- The end of XIX - beginning
of XX centuries is characteristed by the row of scientific economics schools.
Any society encounter by
the limited quantity of economic resources. But the needs of people constantly
grow. That is why there exists a matter of the rational using of these
resources. The subject of studies of economics theory is on the first place in
economics relations between people in the process of manufacturing,
distributions, exchange and consumption.
Economics theory studies
the sphere of manufacturing and the distributions of profits in limited
resources.
Economics theory also
studies the motion of economic life - tendencies in the development of prices, manufacturing,
unemployment.
The purposes of economic
theory: economic growth, complete employment, economic efficiency, economic
disengagement, the fair distribution of incomes, economic ensuring, commercial
balance and so on, and so on.
2.Main
article: History of Economics
Although discussions
about production and distribution have a long history, economics in its modern
sense is conventionally dated from the publication of Adam Smith's The Wealth
of Nations in 1776. Smith is also the founder of economics. In this work Smith
defines the subject in practical terms:
Political economy,
considered as a branch of the science of a statesman or legislator, proposes
two distinct objects: first, to supply a plentiful revenue or product for the
people, or, more properly, to enable them to provide such a revenue or
subsistence for themselves; and secondly, to supply the state or commonwealth
with a revenue sufficient for the public services. It proposes to enrich both
the people and the sovereign.
Smith referred to the
subject as 'political economy', but that term was gradually replaced in general
usage by 'economics' after 1870.
3.Areas of study.
Areas of economics may be
divided or classified in various ways; however, an economy is usually analyzed
in either of two ways:
Microeconomics examines
the economic behavior of agents (including businesses and households) and their
interactions through individual markets, given scarcity and government
regulation. Within microeconomics, general equilibrium theory aggregates across
all markets, including their movements and interactions toward equilibrium.
Macroeconomics examines
an economy as a whole "top down" with a view to understanding
interactions between the broadest aggregates such as national income and
output, employment and inflation and broad aggregates like total consumption
and investment spending and their components.
Since at least the 1960s,
macroeconomics has been characterized by further micro-based modeling as to
rationality of players and efficient use of market information, addressing a
long-standing concern about inconsistent developments of the same subject.
The vast majority of
economic theory is in terms of either macro or micro economics. However, a few
authors (for example, Kurt Dopfer, Stuart Holland and Markos Mamalakis) also
argue that 'mesoeconomics', which considers the intermediate level of economic
organization such as markets and other institutional arrangements, should be
considered an additional branch of economic study. Mamalakis claims that
mesoeconomics "unifies and reconciles the macro and micro approaches and
is a "richer" way of studying the dynamics of economics than the two
traditional models.
Recent developments
closer to microeconomics include behavioral economics and experimental
economics. Fields bordering on other social sciences include economic history,
law and economics, public choice, economic sociology, and cultural economics.
Financial economics has
traditionally been considered a part of economics, as its body of results
emerges naturally from microeconomics. Today, however, finance has established
itself as a separate, though closely related, discipline.
Economics can also be
divided into numerous sub-disciplines including: development economics,
economic geography,environmental economics, industrial organization,
information economics, institutional economics, international economics, labor
economics, and public finance.
Another division of the
subject distinguishes positive economics, which seeks to predict and explain
economic phenomena ("what is"), from normative economics ("what
ought to be"), which orders choices and actions by some criterion; such
orderings necessarily involve value judgments, including selection from
criteria.
Separate from mainstream
or neoclassical economics, which underlies most of the assumptions and
techniques described in this entry, is heterodox economics. Heterodox economics
refers to approaches or schools of economic thought that do not conform to
mainstream economics, which has largely developed from neoclassical economics
in the late 19th century. While mainstream economics may be defined in terms of
the "rationality-individualism-equilibrium nexus", heterodox
economics may be defined in terms of a "institutions-history-social
structure nexus".
4.Techniques.
Specialized techniques
may be used in the subject. These include the following:
mathematical economics
for representing economic theories with simplicity, generality, and precision.
econometrics, which
applies statistical methods to analyze economic data for the purpose of drawing
fact-based generalizations and testing theories as to acceptance, rejection, or
refinement.[4]
computational economics,
which encompasses both computational economic modeling and the computational
solution of analytically and statistically formulated economic problems.
Another important
technique is national (or social) accounting, which summarizes economic
activity for a nation (or other geographic area). The national accounts are
double-entry accounting systems that provide detailed underlying measures of
such information. These include national income and product accounts, balance
sheets, accounts of capital accumulation and finance, and input-output tables.
5.Language and reasoning.
Economics relies on
rigorous styles of argument. Economic method has several interacting parts:
Formulation of testable
models of economic relationships, for example, the relationship between the
general level of prices and the general level of employment. This includes
observable forms of economic activity, such as money, consumption, buying,
selling, and prices.
Collection of economic
data. The data may include values of commodity prices and quantities, for
example, the cost to hire a worker for a week, or the quantity purchased of a
particular service.
Production of economic
statistics. Taking the data collected, and applying the model being used to
produce a representation of economic activity. For example, the "general
price level" is a theoretical idea common to macroeconomic models. The
specific inflation rate involves taking measurable prices, and a model of how
people consume, and calculating what the "general price level" is
from the data within the model. For example, suppose that diesel fuel costs 1
euro a litre: to calculate the price level would require a model of how much
diesel an average person uses, and what fraction of their income is devoted to
this, but it also requires having a model of how people use diesel, and what
other goods they might substitute for it.
Reasoning within economic
models. This process of reasoning (see the articles on informal logic, logical
argument, fallacy) sometimes involves advanced mathematics. For instance, an
established (though possibly unexamined) tradition among economists is to
reason about economic variables in two-dimensional graphs in which curves
representing relations between the axis variables are parameterized by various
indices. A good example of this type of reasoning in Keynesian macroeconomics
is the still commonly-used IS/LM model. Paul Samuelson's treatise Foundations
of Economic Analysis examines the class of assertions called operationally
meaningful theorems in economics, which are those that can be conceivably
refuted by empirical data.[6] As usual in science, the conclusions obtained by
reasoning have a predictive as well as confirmative (or dismissive) value. An
example of the predictive value of economic theory is a prediction as to the
effect of current deficits on interest rates 10 years into the future. An
example of the confirmative value of economic theory would be confirmation (or
dismissal) of theories concerning the relation between marginal tax rates and
the deficit.
Economics typically
employs two types of equations:
(1) Identity equations
are used for defining how certain economic variables are calculated or related
to each other. Identity equations are tautological in that the purpose is to
define rather than to explain. An example is the value of national output, the
price level times the quantity of output P•Q. Another example is Irving
Fisher's equation of exchange P•Q = M•V. This relates the value of national
output to the money supply and velocity of money. Given values of the other
three terms in the equation, velocity V can be calculated.
(2) Descriptive equations
are used to explain the behaviour of the economic agent(s) examined. For
example, in the quantity theory of money, velocity in the equation of exchange
is hypothesized to give a positive qualitative relation between the money
supply M and value of output or the price level. The point is not that V is a
constant but that it is stable enough for changes in the money supply to help
explain changes in the value of output or the price level.
Economists often
formulate very simple models in order to isolate the impact of just one
variable changing, for example, the ceteris paribus ("other things
equal") assumption, meaning that all other things are assumed not to
change during the period of observation: for example, "If the price of
movie tickets rises, ceteris paribus the demand for popcorn falls." It is,
however, possible with the use of econometric methods to determine one
relationship while removing much of the noise caused by other variables.
Formal modeling has been
adapted to some extent by all branches of economics. It is motivated by general
principles of consistency and completeness. It is not identical to what is
often referred to as mathematical economics; this includes, but is not limited
to, an attempt to set microeconomics, in particular general equilibrium, on
solid mathematical foundations.
Some reject mathematical
economics. The Austrian School of economics believes that anything beyond
simple logic is likely unnecessary and inappropriate for economic analysis. In
fact, the entire empirical-deductive method sketched in this section may be
rejected outright by that school.
Still, much of modern
economics employs the hypothetico-deductive method to explain real-world
phenomena. Towards this end, economics has undergone a massive formalization of
its concepts and methods. This has included extension of microeconomic methods
to analysis of seemingly non-economic areas, sometimes called economic
imperialism.
6.Development of economic thought.
Adam Smith, generally
regarded as the Father of Economics, author of An Inquiry into the Nature and
Causes of the Wealth of Nations, commonly known as The Wealth of Nations.
The term economics was
coined around 1870 and popularized by influential "neoclassical"
economists such as Alfred Marshall (Welfare definition), as a substitute for
the earlier term political economy, which referred to "the economy of
polities" – competing states.[citation needed] The term political economy
was used through the 18th and 19th centuries, with Adam Smith, David Ricardo
and Thomas Malthus as its main thinkers and which today is frequently referred
to as the "classical" economic theory. Both "economy" and
"economics" are derived from the Greek oikos- for "house"
or "settlement", and nomos for "laws" or "norms".
Economic thought may be
roughly divided into three phases: premodern (Greek, Roman, Arab), early modern
(mercantilist, physiocrats) and modern (since Adam Smith in the late 18th
century). Systematic economic theory has been developed mainly since the birth
of the modern era. Joseph Schumpeter specifically credits the development of
the scientific study of economics to the Late Scholastics, particularly those
of 15th and 16th century Spain (see his History of Economic Analysis).
There have been different
and competing schools of economic thought pertaining to capitalism from the
late 18th Century to the present day. Important schools of thought include
Mercantilism, Kameralism, physiocracy, classical economics, Manchester school,
Austrian school, Marxian economics, and Chicago school.
Within macroeconomics
there is, in general order of their appearance in the literature; classical
economics, Keynesian economics, neo-classical synthesis, post-Keynesian
economics, monetarism, new classical economics, and supply-side economics. New
alternative developments include evolutionary economics, dependency theory, and
world systems theory.
7. The
system of economic relations.
Economics relations are divided
into 2 blocs:
1. Organizational - economic
relations
2. Socioeconomic
relations (the relations of property).
1. The
forms of organizational-economic relations:
-Division of labour, the
specialization of a maker;
-The cooperation of labor
- such form of organising of labor, in which a few persons participate in one
or different processes connected between them. The labor cooperation generates
new manufacturing force.
-The concentration of
manufacturing and it centralization. Concentration - this increasing of the
scale of enterprise at expense own resources. Centralization is a banding of
enterprises.
-Organising of social
economy - this natural and commodity economy.
-Control. The forms of
control by economics: spontaneous-market planned.
2.
Socioeconomics relations (the relations of property).
Socioeconomic relations –
is a relations between people in the process of manufacturing, distributions,
of exchange and consumption. Socioeconomics relations – it is relations between
people in society apropos of material blessings and services, of their
distribution and consumption between classes and social groups, between
countries, enterprises or firms, indoor of enterprises, between shallow and
large proprietors in city to and village. All system of economics relations is
considered into relations, in their unity. The system of economics relations
must correspond the development of manufacturing, in order to provide it
development and efficient operation. Material manufacturing is the material
basis of economic relations. Also is necessary to say that main factor of
manufacturing is employee.
Conclusion.
The peculiarities of
moderns world development inseparably are connected with processes arising in
developed countries embracing the most of the states of world. Last two decades
showed great differences in the economic development of two main subsystems.
Breach in the levels of economic development industrial and developed
countries increased. In its turn the processes of deepening of differentiation
arise in the subsystem of developed world. The main accession of treating
industry, of the export of finished articles was provided the small group of
new industrial countries (NIC). The increase of their role not only result of
differences in factors and the conditions of the development of this countries
but also influence ons them exterior circumstances.
Enormous gaps in the
levels of economic development in worlds economics system does not contribute
its structural development, to the gain in performance of world manufacturing
to and the support of the tempoes of economics development. This problems
accord serious influence on international economic life and require its
deciding.
Bibliography.
1. Makkonnell K., Briu S., «Ekonomix:
Principles, problems and politics», Tallin, 1995.
2. Volkov F., Borisov E. «The bases
of economics theory», Moscow, 1993 г.
3. World economics. Under the
editorship V.A.Lomakins, Moscow, 1995.
Active
vocabulary.
creation -
Создание
obtaining -
Приобретение
consumption -
Потребление
exchange - Обмен
activitiy - Деятельность
knowledge -
Знание
essence -
Сущность
formation -
Формирование
capitalism -
Капитализм
directions -
Направления
determined -
Определенный
thought - Мысль
ancientness -
Древность
mercantilismes - Меркантилизм
physiocratismes –
Физиократизм
bourgeoisly - Буржуазно
proletarian - Пролетарий
row of scientific -
развитие науки
imperialism - Империализм
dying - Умирая
utility - Полезность
maintained – Поддержанный
limitedness - Ограниченность
fetch - Принoсить
added up - Суммированный
efficiency - Производительность
abstention - Воздержание
Handled - Регулировать
growth - Увеличение
passes - Пропуски
payments – Платежи
perform - Произведить
situates – Располагать
blessings – блага
Industrial – развитые (индустриальная)
Developed - развивающаяся
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