It is always too easy to assume that "other people" are irrational. This idea should be viewed with great suspicion.
Conversely, it is a lot easier for people to say that they have the public interest at heart than to act that way -- so we should be cautious about believing that, too.
A model (of a particular subsystem of the economic system) is a description of these interdependencies in terms of mathematics, pictures, a computer programming language, or some similar descriptive language, together with a theory of the dynamics of the subsystem.
For an example, let's explore a model basic to neoclassical economics and all modern microeconomics.
Productive resources are always scarce, since we cannot increase the output of one kind of product without decreasing that of another.
Of course, our economy produces many kinds of goods and services, so that we may be able to understand that better if we think in terms of a model.
For our model, let us think of an economy that produces just two kinds of goods: "gadgets" and food.
Table 1 below shows a PPF for the model country.
| Machines | food |
|---|---|
| 0 | 2000 |
| 1000 | 1980 |
| 2000 | 1920 |
| 3000 | 1820 |
| 4000 | 1680 |
| 5000 | 1500 |
| 6000 | 1280 |
| 7000 | 1020 |
| 8000 | 720 |
| 9000 | 380 |
| 10000 | 0 |
Definition: The "opportunity cost" of any good or service as the value of all the other goods or services that we must give up in order to produce it.
The opportunity cost of the decision to increase the output of gadgets in the model economy consists of the food the model economy must give up as a result.
In "Distributed Computation as an Economic System," they write "it may surprise even professional economists to learn that economics is of help in allocating computational resources to programs that run in these systems. ... The reason is that computer networks can be regarded as a community of concurrent processes, [and] face the same issues as people in a market. ... Some of the best-known programs already using these ideas include computational resource allocation and thermal markets for controlling building environments, which have shown increased performance when compared to the traditional operating systems."
As grandmother told me, nothing you learn is ever wasted and you never know when it will come in handy.