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9 min read•june 18, 2024
A Word About Micro Math:
This is the most asked question/concern about taking AP Micro. Most students are anxious about the level of mathematics needed to be successful in Micro. The AP Microeconomics Exam will not let you use a calculator, and you will need to turn fractions into decimals with the help of your mind and some scrap paper. An ideal time to take AP Microeconomics is to take it the same year you take AP Calculus AB/BC. Students learning calculus are surprised to find how much econ applies concepts of calculus into everyday decisions. A very big example of this is how much economists lean on the derivative (h/t Khan Academy). If you like economics and think you might take it at university, learn to love Issac Newton’s pandemic project. You made banana bread; he made calculus.
Congratulations! You’ve decided to take one of the most important and useful subjects of the AP offerings. In Microeconomics, you are going to learn how people make decisions. In other words, you are going to learn about choice. How you make choices, how businesses make choices, and what happens when there are unanticipated consequences from choices. From considering how many slices of pizza to consume to overproduction’s impact on the environment, Micro has you covered.
HOWEVER, YOU DO NOT NEED TO UNDERSTAND CALCULUS TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN AP MICROECONOMICS.
The numbers in front of the section titles are important to know because they mirror the Course & Exam Description (CED) standards. Get very familiar with the CED since it tends to get edited slightly every year and tells you what information AP can test you on. If you look below you will see “1.1 Scarcity”. The first 1 refers to Unit 1 and the .1 refers to the first learning standard. Scarcity is the title of the standard. So 1.1 means Unit 1, 1st standard, Scarcity. These numbers will become a review checklist for you later, so it’s good to become familiar with which ideas go with which unit. Your mind may go blank during the test, and remembering Unit standard titles will help bring it back!
Say it again for the people in the back!
YOU DO NOT NEED TO UNDERSTAND CALCULUS TO BE SUCCESSFUL IN AP MICROECONOMICS.
AP Micro uses sneaky calc by disguising some of the concepts in tricky and sometimes advanced algebra and geometry. There is more math in AP Micro than in AP Macro, but it’s approachable if you can work with fractions and formulas. The difference is you will need to memorize seemingly random formulas if you aren’t familiar with calc. Don’t worry about waiting a year and nailing down Algebra 1 and/or 2 before taking on AP Micro. You’ll be better prepared for it. On the other hand, if you are bound and determined to take this course without a firm mathematics foundation, it can still be done, but you must be willing to set aside time to practice and be able to memorize a bunch of formulas.
Still here?
Feeling ok?
Deep breath.
Here we go!
How this course is divided:
The numbers in front of the section titles are important to know because they mirror the Course & Exam Description (CED) standards. Get very familiar with the CED since it tends to get edited slightly every year and tells you what information AP can test you on. If you look below you will see “1.1 Scarcity”. The first 1 refers to Unit 1 and the .1 refers to the first learning standard. Scarcity is the title of the standard. So 1.1 means Unit 1, 1st standard, Scarcity. These numbers will become a review checklist for you later, so it’s good to become familiar with which ideas go with which unit. Your mind may go blank during the test, and remembering Unit standard titles will help bring it back!
This means that for every choice you make, you actually make two choices. By deciding to hit the snooze button a second time, you are also deciding not to pancakes for breakfast. You won’t have time, and you will have to shove a granola bar into your face while running to class. Economists call this a trade-off, meaning something given up to choose something else. The pancakes, the next best alternative choice, would be a specific trade-off called the opportunity cost.
This is your first graph and the graph you will forget if you don’t review it. It comes back to haunt you in later units and AP Macroeconomics. This section is also where you discover that economics is a laboratory of sorts. The environment is sterile and heavily controlled as we change a variable on a model and look to see what happens to the dependent variable. You may be thinking of how this is not what would happen in the real world. You’re right! Econ is going to test theories and hypotheses on models. In models, human behavior is predictable, but in the real world humans love to troll and mess up models (see the whole #GameStonk saga). If you want more of the messy side of things, you should look into Business courses, but we are now ride or die econ. Let’s lean into the limit lab model of the production possibilities curve (PPC) also known as the production possibilities frontier (PPF).
A note of warning for 1.4: Students can sometimes get too fixated on the numbers and forget to understand the concept. This little section is a potential iceberg looming in the darkness as you sail through the waters of micro. You must practice and review this section a few times before it will solidify in your mind. Make sure you carve out time to practice and review.
Think of this as an extension from learning about opportunity cost. If two nations (e.g. Mexico and Japan) only produce two goods (corn and soy), those nations could produce both items themselves or Mexico should specialize (intentionally decide to produce one thing and not another) in corn and Japan could specialize in soy, because Mexico has comparative advantage in one good and Japan will have comparative advantage in the other. They will then trade with each other so both will get the best possible deal with the least opportunity cost. Trade allows countries to consume more yet while still on the efficiency line of the PPC. Both countries benefit by specializing in one product where they have the lowest opportunity cost and importing the other product.
There’s that word marginal again! Some textbooks like to define it as “extra,” but “additional” is a better word for it than “extra”. You now know marginal cost and marginal benefit in 1.5. Now, marginal utility can enter your vocabulary! Utility can be defined as “satisfaction” or happiness. Satisfaction equals happiness in economics and we measure it in utils. Let’s put the whole unit together here in this situation:
You are at the concession stand during the football game. The booster club is selling hot dogs for 1. You have $10 in your pocket. What combination of hot dogs and chocolate bars will maximize your utility?
You didn’t think economics was useless, did you?
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