Dundina L.
PhD
Zhukova O.S.
PhD
Petrachkova O.S.
Donetsk State
University of Management
MAIN TYPES
OF CHOICE AT RESOURCE USAGE DECISION
People have limited means to satisfy unlimited
wants so they are forced to choose. The problems of choice are essentially
problems of allocation. People must decide how to allocate resources to
different uses and then how to allocate the goods and services produced to the
individual members of society. There are three fundamental choices to be made.
Which goods shall be produced and what
quantities? This problem concerns the composition of total output. The
community must decide which goods it is going to produced and hence-which goods
it is not going to produced. Having
decided the range of goods to be produced, the community must then decide how
much of each good should be produced. In reality the choices before a community
are rarely of’all or nothing’ variety. They usually take the form: more of one thing and less of another. The
firs and major function of any economic system is to determine in some way the
actual quantities and varieties of goods and services which will best meet the
wants of its citizens.
How should the various goods and services be
produced? Most goods can be produced by a variety of methods. Wheat can be grown by making use of much
labour and little capital, or by using vast amounts of capital and very little
labour. Electrical appliances can be made by using large and complex machines
operated by relatively few semi- or unskilled workers. Alternatively they might
be produced in hosts of small workshops by highly skilled technicians using
relatively little machinery. Different methods of production can be
distinguished from one another by the differences in the quantities of
resources used in producing them. Economists use the term capital intensive to
describe the alternative methods just outlined. The total output of the
community depends not only on the total supply of recourses are combined
together. A community must make decisions on the methods of production to be
adopted.
How should the goods and services be
distributed? This is the third function which an economic system has to
perform. The total output has to be shared out among the members of the
community. The economic system has to determine the relative sizes of the
shares going to each household. Should everyone be given an equal share? Should
the output be shared out in accordance with peoples’ ability to pay the price,
or should the shares be decide according to tradition and custom?
These basic problems are common to all
societies no matter what level of economic development they have reached. The
methods of solving them will be different from one society to another but the
problems are common in all societies.
References:
1.
Musgrave R.A. Public finance
in theory and practice. McGraw-Hill Book Company,1984;
2.
Charles Robert McCann, Jr., 2003. The Elgar Dictionary of Economic Quotations,
Edward Elgar;
3.
Arthur M. Diamond, Jr. (2008). "science,
economics of," The New
Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition,
Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan;
4.
Aumann, R.J. (1987). "game theory", The New
Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 2, pp. 460–82;
5.
Groenewegen, Peter (2008). "'political
economy'," The New Palgrave
Dictionary of Economics;
6.
Blaug,
Mark (2007). "The Social Sciences: Economics" (Postwar developments,
Methodological considerations in contemporary economics), The New Encyclopædia Britannica,
v. 27, pp. 346–47;
7.
Usher,
D. (1987), "real income", The
New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics, v. 4, p. 104;
8.
Hicks, J.R. (1937). "Mr. Keynes and the
'Classics': A Suggested Interpretation," Econometrica, 5(2), p p. 147–159;
9.
Screpanti,
Ernesto, and Stefano Zamagni (2005). An Outline of the History of
Economic thought.
Oxford University Press. p.2. ISBN
0-19-927914-4;
10.
Davis,
John B. (2006). "Heterodox Economics, the Fragmentation of the Mainstream,
and Embedded Individual Analysis,” in Future
Directions in Heterodox Economics.