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Fall 2007 Course Bulletin |
Spring 2008 Course Bulletin
What is
Economics?
Have you ever
wondered why some are so rich
and some so poor? Or why is it
so hard to maintain high
economic growth and levels of
employment with price stability?
Or why politicians do not
deliver the good things they
promise? If you struggle with
the answers, you should take an
economics course at The King’s
College. The first thing you
will learn here is that there
are no free lunches. Such a
revelation may earn our
economics faculty the reputation
of party poopers, but it may
also be the most valuable lesson
you will take away from your
college education.
When a recession
hits, people are invariably
surprised—because they and their
leaders never seem to learn that
there is “No Free Lunch.” We
learn as children to abide by
the laws of nature. If we ignore
gravity, gravity reminds us with
bumps and bruises. When
policy-makers design programs
that ignore greed and
selfishness, then those sad
qualities of our fallen nature
likewise leave us with economic
bumps and bruises. When a
politician offers “Free
Lunches,” the laws of economics
teach us that, before long,
people will be starving.
Economics is about cause and
effect.
Meaning well does
not get anyone an exemption from
economics. Benevolent but
economically ignorant leaders
often bring devastation. The
public would be better served by
selfish but economically savvy
leaders, if that were the only
choice. Managing the economy
without understanding market
forces is like designing a
spaceship without knowing
mathematics or performing
surgery without knowing anatomy.
We cannot make sense of the
world without the social
sciences, and economics provides
some of the most powerful social
scientific tools.
Economics
considers the trade-offs in
every choice and how best to
make decisions in a world of
scarcity. Economics shows that
market exchange is not a
zero-sum game where one party
benefits at the expense of the
other. It tells us why
allocation of resources and
goods through market prices is
better for the poor than
bureaucratic control. Economics
teaches that market integration
without government interference
is the short cut for the
developing countries to catch up
with the rich. Finally, it
explains why an economic system
based on Marxist or any other
ungodly principles is doomed to
collapse.
Are economics
courses at The King’s College
taught in a distinct way? Does
God have anything to do with
economics? Yes and yes! Our
students are delighted to
discover that the Word of God is
full of directions for Christ’s
disciples on what is good and
just and fair in our economic
lives. Thus the debate over
policy issues does not revolve
so much around the differences
between the “left” and the
“right” but between right and
wrong.
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