1 00:00:00,206 --> 00:00:01,300 ♪ [music] ♪ 2 00:00:03,640 --> 00:00:04,768 - [Alex] In economics, 3 00:00:04,768 --> 00:00:07,780 you're likely to hear the word "marginal" a lot: 4 00:00:08,473 --> 00:00:09,720 marginal benefit, 5 00:00:09,720 --> 00:00:11,140 marginal cost, 6 00:00:11,140 --> 00:00:12,835 marginal revenue -- 7 00:00:12,835 --> 00:00:14,480 the list goes on and on. 8 00:00:14,760 --> 00:00:16,727 So what is thinking on the margin, 9 00:00:16,727 --> 00:00:18,177 and why is it important? 10 00:00:19,300 --> 00:00:20,938 Marginal just means 11 00:00:20,938 --> 00:00:23,300 a little bit more or a little bit less. 12 00:00:24,320 --> 00:00:26,317 Let's imagine that you're watching a movie, 13 00:00:27,228 --> 00:00:28,760 and you can't hear the dialogue. 14 00:00:29,060 --> 00:00:31,225 You increase the volume just a little bit. 15 00:00:31,225 --> 00:00:32,840 [voices coming from movie] 16 00:00:32,840 --> 00:00:34,056 How high should you go? 17 00:00:34,390 --> 00:00:37,511 Well, that's a question of comparing the marginal benefit 18 00:00:37,511 --> 00:00:40,060 to the marginal cost of increasing the volume. 19 00:00:42,380 --> 00:00:44,393 The first notch up sounds good. 20 00:00:44,640 --> 00:00:46,780 Now you can hear what the actors are saying. 21 00:00:46,780 --> 00:00:48,150 [slightly louder voices] 22 00:00:48,400 --> 00:00:49,980 You increase it another notch. 23 00:00:50,082 --> 00:00:51,550 [louder voices] 24 00:00:52,120 --> 00:00:54,700 Speakers are distorting a little, but you still prefer it. 25 00:00:54,987 --> 00:00:56,238 [louder voices] 26 00:00:57,900 --> 00:00:58,920 One more notch. 27 00:01:00,346 --> 00:01:01,457 [explosion] 28 00:01:01,457 --> 00:01:02,512 Uh-oh! 29 00:01:03,068 --> 00:01:04,720 Now there's an action scene. 30 00:01:04,720 --> 00:01:05,841 It's too loud! 31 00:01:05,841 --> 00:01:07,497 You don't want to wake up your roommates! 32 00:01:08,747 --> 00:01:10,300 So you decrease it a notch. 33 00:01:11,010 --> 00:01:12,010 [quieter voices] 34 00:01:12,720 --> 00:01:13,989 You keep doing this, 35 00:01:13,989 --> 00:01:16,680 making marginal adjustments up and down, 36 00:01:16,680 --> 00:01:19,822 comparing the marginal benefit to the marginal cost, 37 00:01:20,228 --> 00:01:21,620 each step of the way. 38 00:01:22,940 --> 00:01:24,043 Thinking on the margin 39 00:01:24,043 --> 00:01:28,084 just means comparing the benefit of the next decision to its cost. 40 00:01:29,108 --> 00:01:30,919 Notice that thinking on the margin -- 41 00:01:30,919 --> 00:01:33,840 it's a method or way of arriving 42 00:01:33,840 --> 00:01:36,020 at an optimal or best decision. 43 00:01:36,680 --> 00:01:39,820 If I asked you for the best volume to watch a movie, 44 00:01:39,820 --> 00:01:41,515 you might have trouble answering. 45 00:01:42,018 --> 00:01:44,700 But if you keep thinking and acting on the margin, 46 00:01:45,060 --> 00:01:46,333 you'll come to a point 47 00:01:46,333 --> 00:01:49,020 where the marginal benefits equal the marginal costs -- 48 00:01:49,640 --> 00:01:50,780 that's the optimum. 49 00:01:51,180 --> 00:01:52,604 So thinking on the margin 50 00:01:52,604 --> 00:01:55,839 is a way of searching for and finding an answer 51 00:01:55,839 --> 00:01:58,370 to a problem that might otherwise be quite difficult. 52 00:01:59,540 --> 00:02:01,121 Thinking on the margin 53 00:02:01,121 --> 00:02:03,180 also tells you something else of importance: 54 00:02:03,740 --> 00:02:05,580 what not to think about. 55 00:02:06,140 --> 00:02:08,540 Let's imagine you run a small clothing shop, 56 00:02:08,760 --> 00:02:12,920 and you think that the 1970s are about to have a renaissance. 57 00:02:13,680 --> 00:02:15,040 I remember those times! 58 00:02:15,040 --> 00:02:16,100 ♪ [music] ♪ 59 00:02:16,100 --> 00:02:19,940 So you load up on 100 pairs of bell-bottom jeans. 60 00:02:20,660 --> 00:02:23,260 Let's say you paid $75 a pair. 61 00:02:23,680 --> 00:02:25,670 You price the jeans at $100 -- 62 00:02:26,060 --> 00:02:30,080 a price that will cover your costs, including rent and wages. 63 00:02:31,120 --> 00:02:35,228 But unfortunately, the jeans -- they just don't sell. 64 00:02:35,228 --> 00:02:36,770 - [Funny voice] What? - What do you do? 65 00:02:37,180 --> 00:02:38,860 You think about lowering the price, 66 00:02:39,216 --> 00:02:40,476 but your accountant tells you 67 00:02:40,476 --> 00:02:42,720 that if you lower the price below $100, 68 00:02:42,720 --> 00:02:45,000 you're guaranteed to take a loss. 69 00:02:45,440 --> 00:02:46,612 [scream sound effect] 70 00:02:47,720 --> 00:02:49,986 Fortunately, you had a good Economics class 71 00:02:49,986 --> 00:02:51,454 in high school or college, 72 00:02:51,900 --> 00:02:54,577 so you remember that what you paid for the jeans 73 00:02:54,577 --> 00:02:55,593 is irrelevant. 74 00:02:56,040 --> 00:02:57,959 That cost is sunk. 75 00:02:58,923 --> 00:03:00,620 What matters now 76 00:03:00,620 --> 00:03:02,971 is to compare the marginal benefits 77 00:03:02,971 --> 00:03:05,788 and marginal costs of your options. 78 00:03:06,500 --> 00:03:10,058 One option would be to put the jeans in storage and hope, 79 00:03:10,058 --> 00:03:12,175 hope they'll come back in style. 80 00:03:12,520 --> 00:03:15,460 Maybe you can get $100 per pair in the future, 81 00:03:16,160 --> 00:03:18,255 but you get no money now, 82 00:03:18,255 --> 00:03:20,260 plus you have to pay for storage. 83 00:03:21,820 --> 00:03:24,584 Another option is to slash prices. 84 00:03:25,066 --> 00:03:27,407 Sell them all now for $50 each. 85 00:03:27,407 --> 00:03:29,583 That lets you clear out your inventory 86 00:03:29,583 --> 00:03:31,760 and invest in something else. 87 00:03:32,580 --> 00:03:34,243 You choose option two 88 00:03:34,243 --> 00:03:36,440 and invest in the next big thing: 89 00:03:36,846 --> 00:03:37,997 leg warmers! 90 00:03:39,020 --> 00:03:41,140 Now, I know this sounds simple, 91 00:03:41,526 --> 00:03:44,280 but actually, even experienced businesspeople -- 92 00:03:44,762 --> 00:03:48,660 they often focus too much on what they paid for an item 93 00:03:49,240 --> 00:03:52,960 and not enough on their best choices right now. 94 00:03:53,520 --> 00:03:56,360 It's called the sunk cost, or fixed cost fallacy. 95 00:03:57,280 --> 00:04:01,180 In fact, I snuck an example of the fallacy right past you. 96 00:04:01,560 --> 00:04:02,580 Did you catch it? 97 00:04:03,740 --> 00:04:06,956 Earlier, I said you price the jeans at $100 -- 98 00:04:07,440 --> 00:04:10,460 a price that will cover your costs, including rent and wages. 99 00:04:10,819 --> 00:04:12,436 But that's also wrong. 100 00:04:13,260 --> 00:04:16,660 If bell-bottom jeans turn out to be in huge demand, for example, 101 00:04:17,300 --> 00:04:19,596 then you should price them for more than $100. 102 00:04:20,600 --> 00:04:23,370 What you paid for the jeans is irrelevant -- 103 00:04:24,340 --> 00:04:27,840 whether your decision was a bad one or a good one. 104 00:04:28,980 --> 00:04:32,120 People fall prey to this kind of error all the time, 105 00:04:32,780 --> 00:04:35,418 especially holding on to past mistakes. 106 00:04:36,400 --> 00:04:39,102 Maybe you've been told, "Never give up!" 107 00:04:39,830 --> 00:04:41,800 Well, take the advice of an economist. 108 00:04:42,400 --> 00:04:45,460 Sometimes giving up is the smart thing to do. 109 00:04:46,340 --> 00:04:48,297 Is the movie you're watching boring? 110 00:04:48,788 --> 00:04:50,746 Well, buying the ticket was a bad decision. 111 00:04:51,580 --> 00:04:53,291 But that cost is sunk. 112 00:04:53,291 --> 00:04:55,140 Don't throw good time after bad. 113 00:04:55,859 --> 00:04:56,859 Walk out! 114 00:04:57,509 --> 00:05:00,860 No one likes to admit that they made a bad decision, 115 00:05:01,560 --> 00:05:03,724 and so they stay in bad relationships, 116 00:05:03,724 --> 00:05:05,987 bad businesses, and bad careers, 117 00:05:06,356 --> 00:05:08,940 hoping, hoping to turn things around 118 00:05:09,140 --> 00:05:13,600 and prove that their past decisions weren't so bad after all. 119 00:05:13,980 --> 00:05:18,080 An economist says, "Ignore what you can't change. 120 00:05:18,667 --> 00:05:22,046 Ignore the past. Focus on the future." 121 00:05:23,612 --> 00:05:25,740 Let's summarize thinking on the margin. 122 00:05:26,400 --> 00:05:29,061 First, think about a little bit more 123 00:05:29,061 --> 00:05:30,280 or a little bit less, 124 00:05:30,460 --> 00:05:33,100 and keep going until you'll arrive at a point 125 00:05:33,380 --> 00:05:36,546 where the marginal benefits equal the marginal costs. 126 00:05:37,117 --> 00:05:38,284 That's the optimum. 127 00:05:38,610 --> 00:05:40,940 Second, when making a choice, 128 00:05:41,455 --> 00:05:44,297 only think about the costs and benefits 129 00:05:44,297 --> 00:05:47,060 that change with that choice. 130 00:05:47,980 --> 00:05:49,700 Ignore sunk costs. 131 00:05:50,380 --> 00:05:51,633 Thinking on the margin -- 132 00:05:51,633 --> 00:05:52,641 it's useful, 133 00:05:53,051 --> 00:05:54,900 and not just for Economics classes. 134 00:05:55,840 --> 00:05:58,020 But if you are teaching an Economics class, 135 00:05:58,340 --> 00:06:01,520 check out our free unit plan that incorporates this video. 136 00:06:02,060 --> 00:06:05,720 I promise, the marginal benefit will exceed the marginal cost. 137 00:06:06,460 --> 00:06:08,588 And if you're ready to test yourself, 138 00:06:08,588 --> 00:06:10,220 check out our practice questions. 139 00:06:11,180 --> 00:06:14,301 Finally, if you're ready for more microeconomics, 140 00:06:14,954 --> 00:06:16,444 click for the next video. 141 00:06:16,444 --> 00:06:17,710 ♪ [music] ♪