Central Problems of an Economy
Notes Prepared by Mrs. Pooja Jain (UGC-NET Qualified)
Resource Allocation
Class 11 CBSE Economics
π― Key Structural Focus Areas
Economic Problem
Scarcity
Choice
Allocation
Growth
Welfare
π Table of Contents
What Will You Learn in This Chapter?
This chapter forms the foundation of Economics because almost every economic issue originates from scarcity of resources. The concepts learned here help in understanding:
- β’ Resource allocation
- β’ Production decisions
- β’ Employment generation
- β’ Economic growth
- β’ Income distribution
- β’ Government policies
A clear understanding of this chapter will make later topics such as demand, supply, production, consumer behaviour and market systems much easier to understand.
Learning Outcomes
After studying this chapter, students will be able to:
1. What is an Economic Problem?
Human wants are unlimited, but the means (resources) to satisfy these wants are scarce. Because no economy possesses unlimited resources, it is impossible to produce everything for each individual. Therefore, every economy must make a choice regarding the efficient use of available resources (like land, labour, capital, etc.).
β’ Definition: An economic problem is essentially the problem of choice or the problem of the economical use of scarce resources.
β What Causes the Economic Problem?
The economic problem arises due to three main causes:
Unlimited Wants
Human wants are never-ending and cannot be fully satisfied at a given time. They increase day by day (e.g., shifting demand from basic phones to smartphones or costly cars).
Limited or Scarce Means
Resources to satisfy wants are limited. Goods are called scarce because their demand is greater than their supply, regardless of the price.
According to McConnell: "Scarcity is a situation in which there is not enough of resources to meet all human wants."
Alternative Uses
Limited resources have multiple uses. For example, milk is a scarce commodity that can be used to make cheese, ice cream, or rasgullah. This creates the problem of choice: society must decide which wants to satisfy first.
2. Central Problems of an Economy
Every economy, whether rich or poor, faces three central problems of allocation:
(1) What to Produce?
Since resources are scarce, an economy must choose which wants to satisfy and which to forgo. This problem involves two-fold decisions:
β’ What goods to produce: Choosing between consumer goods (sugar, cloth, wheat) and capital goods (machines, tractors), or between peace-time goods (bread, butter) and war-time goods (rifles, tanks).
β’ How much to produce: Once the goods are decided, the economy must decide their quantity. Producing more of one good (e.g., cloth) means producing less of another (e.g., machines) due to limited means.
(2) How to Produce?
This problem relates to the choice of technique of production. The goal is the efficient use of resources, implying more production at less cost. There are broadly two techniques:
β’ Labour Intensive Technique (LIT): Uses more labour than capital. Leads to higher employment.
β’ Capital Intensive Technique (CIT): Uses more capital (machines) than labour. Leads to higher efficiency and growth.
Conflict: In countries like India, there is a conflict between choosing employment (LIT) and efficiency/growth (CIT).
(3) For Whom to Produce?
An economy cannot satisfy all sections of society equally. Broadly, society has two sections: the rich and the poor.
β’ Producing more for the poor promotes social justice and equality but leads to low profits for producers. Low profits mean low investment, resulting in low GDP growth.
β’ Producing for the rich generates high profits and high GDP growth but increases social inequality.
The Choice: The economy faces a trade-off between social equality and GDP growth.
Add-on Problems (Specific to Underdeveloped Economies)
Underdeveloped economies like India face two additional problems:
How to Achieve Fuller Utilisation of Resources:
Resources (especially labour) are underutilised or unemployed. Here, Actual Output < Potential Output (Maximum Possible Output), leading to a low level of GDP.
How to Achieve Growth of Resources:
Relates to untapped/unexploited resources (like natural gas, minerals) due to a lack of technology, keeping the resource base low and resulting in a low GDP.
3. Solution of Central Problems in Different Economies
Different economic systems solve these central problems differently:
Market Economy:
A free economy driven by the market forces of supply and demand. The main motive is profit maximisation. Producers choose to produce goods that fetch high prices, use low-cost production techniques, and sell to buyers willing to pay the most.
Centrally Planned Economy:
Decisions are taken by a central authority (the government). The main motive is social welfare. The government decides what is most useful for society (e.g., choosing Labour Intensive Technology to reduce mass unemployment, even if it brings lower revenue).
Mixed Economy:
Combines merits of both systems. Decisions are based on both market forces (profit maximisation) and social considerations (social welfare). Example: In India, private producers are free to maximise profits, but the government runs the railways at nominal rates so the poor can afford them.
Economic Systems Comparison Matrix
| System Name | Decision Maker | Main Objective | Resource Allocation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Market Economy | Private Producers / Market | Profit Maximisation | By supply and demand forces | USA, UK |
| Centrally Planned | Central Govt. Authority | Social Welfare | By Government planning | China, Cuba, North Korea |
| Mixed Economy | Private & Government | Profit + Welfare Both | Balanced forces + state limits | India |
Key Takeaway
"Resources are limited, but human wants are unlimited."
Because of this scarcity, individuals, firms and governments must make choices. Economics studies these choices and seeks the most efficient use of scarce resources to maximise satisfaction and welfare. Understanding the economic problem and the central problems of an economy is the first step towards understanding how economies function and how societies utilise their scarce resources for growth and development.
Quick Summary
Unlimited Wants + Scarce Resources + Alternative Uses = Economic Problem Economic Problem β Choice β Central Problems of an Economy Understanding these concepts helps us understand how individuals, businesses and governments make decisions regarding the use of scarce resources.
Economic Progression Pipeline
HOTS (Higher Order Thinking Skills) Questions
5 Important MCQs (CBSE Class 11)
1. The basic cause of an economic problem is:
2. Which of the following is NOT a central problem of an economy?
3. A Labour Intensive Technique uses:
4. The problem of "For Whom to Produce" is related to:
5. India follows which type of economic system?
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Mrs. Pooja Jain
UGC-NET QualifiedEconomics Educator
Academically distinguished economics teacher dedicated to simplifying foundational concepts for high school and pre-university students, with structured pathways and analytical methodologies.