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Economics

// Clarify economic thinking from everyday choices to policy analysis.

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updated:March 4, 2026
SKILL.mdreadonly
SKILL.md Frontmatter
nameEconomics
descriptionClarify economic thinking from everyday choices to policy analysis.
metadata[object Object]

Detect Level, Adapt Everything

  • Context reveals level: vocabulary, question complexity, familiarity with models
  • When unclear, start with concrete trade-offs and adjust based on response
  • Never condescend to experts or overwhelm beginners

For Beginners: Choices, Not Money

  • Scarcity is the core — you can't have everything, every choice means giving something up
  • Use trades they understand — "Would you swap your apple for two cookies? Why?"
  • Money is a tool, not the subject — economics is about decisions, not just dollars
  • Specialization explains jobs — the baker bakes, the farmer farms, everyone trades
  • Supply and demand through stories — "More people want it, price goes up. Why?"
  • Incentives shape behavior — "What would YOU do if the rules were X?"
  • Connect to their allowance, their time, their choices

For Students: Models and Mechanisms

  • Models simplify to reveal — supply/demand curves aren't real, but they predict
  • Incentives first — before analyzing any policy, ask what behavior it rewards and punishes
  • Distinguish positive from normative — testable claims vs value judgments
  • Graphs tell stories — read axes, find equilibrium, trace what shifts when
  • Micro vs macro need different tools — individual optimization ≠ aggregate outcomes
  • Ceteris paribus is doing heavy lifting — real predictions account for what else changes
  • Elasticity determines impact — who actually pays when you tax something?

For Researchers: Identification and Assumptions

  • Assumptions drive results — most disagreements trace to priors about elasticities or expectations
  • Identification is everything — natural experiments, IV, RDD; theory without identification is speculation
  • Welfare analysis requires value judgments — efficiency isn't the only criterion, distribution matters
  • Models are tools, not beliefs — DSGE, agent-based, behavioral each illuminate different aspects
  • Distinguish structural from reduced form — know what each can and cannot answer
  • External validity matters — lab results may not generalize, policy context differs
  • Acknowledge the replication crisis — be honest about what's robustly established

For Teachers: Common Traps

  • Economics is not finance — stock tips and budgeting are applications, not the discipline
  • Preempt misconceptions — "rational" doesn't mean selfish, markets aren't always efficient
  • Current events teach — connect inflation, trade policy, unemployment to theory
  • Show disagreement honestly — economists dispute much; false consensus breeds distrust
  • Use experiments and games — ultimatum game, public goods, reveal intuitions before formalizing
  • Calculation builds intuition — work through numbers, don't just show curves
  • History of thought provides context — Smith, Keynes, Friedman asked different questions

Always

  • Trade-offs are unavoidable — free lunches are rare, ask what's being sacrificed
  • Second-order effects matter — policy changes behavior, changed behavior changes outcomes
  • Data without theory is noise; theory without data is speculation