Economics Isc Class 12

ISC Class 12 Economics Notes

ISC Class 12 Economics Notes

1. Micro Economic Theory

  • Demand and Law of Demand: Understanding the relationship between price and quantity demanded.
  • Elasticity of Demand: Measurement of responsiveness of demand to changes in price.
  • Consumer’s Equilibrium: Conditions under Cardinal and Ordinal approaches.
  • Production and Cost: Concepts of production function, total, average, and marginal cost.
  • Market Structures: Characteristics and equilibrium under Perfect Competition, Monopoly, Monopolistic Competition, and Oligopoly.

2. Macro Economic Theory

  • National Income: Concepts, methods of measurement, and problems in measurement.
  • Money and Banking: Functions of money, commercial banks, and central bank.
  • Government Budget: Components and types of budget, fiscal policy.
  • Balance of Payments: Structure and components, disequilibrium and measures to correct it.

3. Public Finance

  • Public Revenue: Sources of revenue, taxation, and non-tax revenues.
  • Public Expenditure: Classification and effects of public expenditure.
  • Public Debt: Types, sources, and effects of public debt.
  • Fiscal Policy: Objectives, instruments, and role in economic development.
Micro Economic Theory – ISC Economics

Micro Economic Theory

1. Demand and Law of Demand

  • Demand: Quantity of a good or service that a consumer is willing and able to buy at various prices.
  • Law of Demand: Other things being equal, as price falls, quantity demanded rises and vice versa.
  • Demand Curve: Downward sloping due to substitution effect and income effect.

2. Elasticity of Demand

  • Price Elasticity: % change in quantity demanded Ă· % change in price.
  • Types: Elastic (>1), Inelastic (<1), Unitary (=1), Perfectly Elastic, Perfectly Inelastic.
  • Factors: Availability of substitutes, nature of good, income level, time period.

3. Consumer’s Equilibrium

  • Cardinal Utility Approach: Marginal Utility per Rupee should be equal across goods.
  • Ordinal Utility Approach: Indifference curve and budget line determine equilibrium.
  • Conditions: Tangency of indifference curve and budget line, MRS = Price Ratio.

4. Production and Cost

  • Production Function: Relationship between inputs and output.
  • Total Product (TP), Marginal Product (MP), Average Product (AP): Concepts of returns to scale.
  • Cost Concepts: Fixed Cost, Variable Cost, Total Cost, Marginal Cost, Average Cost.

5. Market Structures

  • Perfect Competition: Many buyers and sellers, homogeneous product, free entry/exit.
  • Monopoly: Single seller, no close substitutes, price maker.
  • Monopolistic Competition: Many sellers, product differentiation, some price control.
  • Oligopoly: Few sellers, interdependence, may show collusive or non-collusive behavior.
Macro Economic Theory – ISC Economics

Macro Economic Theory

1. National Income

  • Concepts: GDP, GNP, NDP, NNP, Personal Income, Disposable Income.
  • Methods of Measurement:
    • Product Method (Value Added)
    • Income Method
    • Expenditure Method
  • Problems: Double counting, non-monetary transactions, underground economy, etc.

2. Money and Banking

  • Functions of Money: Medium of exchange, measure of value, store of value, standard of deferred payment.
  • Commercial Banks: Accept deposits, provide loans, create credit.
  • Central Bank (RBI): Issues currency, controls credit, manages foreign exchange, acts as government’s banker.

3. Government Budget

  • Components: Revenue budget and capital budget.
  • Types of Budget: Balanced, surplus, and deficit budget.
  • Fiscal Policy: Government policy regarding taxation and expenditure to influence the economy.

4. Balance of Payments (BoP)

  • Structure: Current Account (trade, services, income, transfers) and Capital Account (loans, investments).
  • Diseasequilibrium: Deficit in current account or capital account.
  • Measures to Correct BoP Disequilibrium: Import control, export promotion, devaluation, exchange control.
Public Finance – ISC Economics

Public Finance

1. Public Revenue

  • Sources of Revenue: Includes tax and non-tax sources.
  • Taxation: Direct (income tax, corporate tax) and Indirect (GST, customs duties).
  • Non-Tax Revenues: Fees, fines, interest receipts, dividends from public enterprises.

2. Public Expenditure

  • Classification: Revenue and capital expenditure, developmental and non-developmental.
  • Effects: Can stimulate economic growth, reduce inequality, provide public goods and services.

3. Public Debt

  • Types: Internal debt (borrowed within country), External debt (borrowed from foreign sources).
  • Sources: Market borrowings, loans from RBI, bilateral and multilateral institutions.
  • Effects: Debt can help development but may cause inflation or burden future generations if excessive.

4. Fiscal Policy

  • Objectives: Economic stability, growth, reducing inequality, employment generation.
  • Instruments: Government spending and taxation.
  • Role in Economic Development: Encourages investment, improves infrastructure, reduces poverty and unemployment.

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