Unit 1: The Economy and You
Download
Report
Transcript Unit 1: The Economy and You
Unit 1: The Economy
and You
Chapter 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 2:Economic Resources and Systems
Chapter 3: Economic Activity in a Changing World
Chapter 4: Business Ethics and Social Responsibility
Unit 1 Essential questions
Describe economic activity and how it affects everyday life.
What is the difference between a “want” and a “need”?
How do businesses satisfy wants and needs?
Why must societies make decisions about what to produce?
How do societies choose what to produce?
How is economic activity measured?
What are the phases of the business cycle?
Why is it important for businesses to behave in an ethical manor?
What does it mean for a business to be socially responsible?
Chapter 1: Basic Economic Concepts
learning goals
State the difference between wants and needs
Describe how resources limit the number of wants people and businesses can
satisfy
Explain how to use the decision-making process to make the most of your
resources
Explain how profit and competition motivate business
List the activities businesses undertake when developing products and
services
Explain how business impacts your and how you impact business
Key Vocabulary
Wants
Market research
Needs
Consumer
Goods
Services
Resources
Business
Profit
Competition
This is going to be the beginning of
your business dictionary. This is a
year-long assignment which I can
check at any time, so make sure it
is up to date. Make sure that the
dictionary is in alphabetical order
and each word is labeled with the
chapter where the word was found
in, as well as the definition and
one example of the word.
Introduction to Business Math
Calculate cost to buy 100 shares of Apple inc., Bank of America, and Yahoo
Inc. as of today.
What is the value of a company’s stock called in the market?
Which company has the highest value in the market?
A Look at Wants and Needs
Businesses make money by offering goods and services to satisfy the wants
and needs of consumers and other businesses. In this way, wants and needs
drive the US economy.
Things I need to survive include _____________. Things I want include
____________
List 5 examples of each.
Compare your list with a partner’s to see any similarities and differences
A Look at Wants and Needs
You have $10 to buy something on Amazon.com, assume no shipping or taxes,
what would you buy?
Create a list at your table of the things you NEED then create a list of the things
you WANT
Next create a list for the wants and needs of a business in general.
Download- Anticipation Guide Principles of Finance
Circle whether you agree or disagree, and your reason as to why. We will go over
the I learned section together.
Public vs. private wants and needs
Public wants and similar to public utilities and services
Highways, schools, libraries, parks, etc.
Private wants are similar to the private sector businesses
Subsidy on foreign goods
Higher wages for the individual
Satisfying wants and needs
The business market place consists of goods and services used to meet the
wants and needs of the consumer
What companies produce goods?
What companies produce services?
Resources are used by businesses to supply these wants and needs
What are some resources needed to create a smart phone?
What are some resources needed to advertise a product?
Ethics in business
You work as an event planner for a local company. You are in charge of hiring
a caterer for the company’s 10th anniversary celebration. You have bids from
four caterers in town. One of the bids is from a caterer who is an old friend.
Their bid is higher than the other three.
Would your relationship with the caterer affect the company you would hire? Why?
Assignment
Confidentiality Agreements
A confidentiality agreement is a contract that requires the employee or contractor
not to reveal information that they acquire while working for an employer or
client.
Research several agreements online to compare and contrast. Write a 1 page
paper describing their features and purpose as well as their similarities and
differences.
Making the most of your resources
What term is used to maximize your outputs with the minimum amount of
inputs?
Use the following 5 steps to answer the following question:
You found a $50 on the ground. You go on a shopping spree to get anything you
want for $50. The day after you finish your best friend comes up to you in tears
describing how they lost a $50 bill from their birthday. What do you do?
1.
Identify the situation
2.
Identify possible course of action
3.
Determine the pros and cons
4.
Make a decision
5.
Evaluate your decision
Making the most of your resources
In making a house hold budget, you determine that your basic needs require
75% of your monthly income. The items you listed as “wants” cost another
15%. If your monthly income is $2,500, how much are you spending on wants?
How much do you have left to save?
Creating a Presentation
Presentation requirements:
Proper business casual attire to present information
Note cards to project your voice and not talk to the board
Use proper citations
Keep slides uncluttered, but use appropriate graphics, fonts, and colors
Needs and the Environment
We live in a very diverse climate with changing seasons and dynamic
temperatures that vary between 100o and 0o F. Pick a geographical area,
anywhere in the world. It could be a city, state, region, country, area as long
as it is defined. Now describe the wants and needs of the people in this
environment
5 slides (not including the title or citations)
Note cards
Business casual
Rubric-presentation
5 vocab words from the chapter are to be used during the presentation
Business Activities
Anticipation for business activities:
At your table come up with one product you would like to analyze
What resources are needed to create this product?
What goods?
What services?
How does it get to the store shelf?
Why do businesses produce overlapping products? For example, why do so many
stores sell bread?
How to define business
What defines business?
The ability to make a profit
What are some businesses that you patronize?
Why do you patronize these specific businesses?
What would motivate anyone to start or maintain a business?
The ability to make a profit
List 5 successful entrepreneurs who started a business and what their company is
called
The significance of competition
Companies can produce whatever they want, however they want
Specific advantages based on pricing, ideas, production, efficiency, quality,
service, etc.
Target market- a group of people identified as those most likely to become
customers
Why do the best athletes and most talented actors make the most money?
How come you can buy bread at so many locations?
Why are there so many different brands of smart phones?
Business Activities
Identify a need or want that needs to be satisfied
Evaluate demand of products or services
Acquire start-up money and capital
Manage production
Create a marketing plan
Maintain good records or the business
Assignment: Presentation
Research a unique product or service that you have never heard of
Who created the product or service?
What does the product or service do?
Is there a company associated with this product or service? Is it successful?
Can we buy this product/ how much does it cost?
What is the target market for the product?
Would you or your classmates be willing to buy this product?
How do you fit into business?
As of right now you are considered a consumer
Does business have a duty to supply your demands, or should a business
create a supply to help create your demand?
If you could purchase just 1 item in the world, that is for sale, what would you
buy?
Business careers
Go to the link: http://www.bls.gov/ooh/. Click on the “A-Z Index” and enter
the search term “tomorrow’s jobs”
Write a 1 page report about the topic. Conclude the paper with a list of
things that you can do now to prepare yourself for this occupation.
Chapter 1 Quiz
Vocab review
Chapter 2: Economic Resources and
Systems
Explain how scarcity requires individuals and nations to make decisions about
resources
Describe the four factors of production
Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to
make decisions about using its resources
Contrast the way a market economy and a command economy answer the
three economic questions
Key vocabulary
Scarcity
Economic systems
Factors of Production
Market economy
Natural resources
Price
Labor resources
Supply
Capital resources
Demand
Entrepreneurial resource
Equilibrium price
Entrepreneurship
Command economy
Entrepreneur
Mixed economy
economics
Economic Decision making
Main factor governing production is scarcity
What are some abundant resources? Scarce resources?
Consumers are considered to have unlimited wants mixed with a limited
supply
What are some decisions that you personally made that were governed by the
concept of scarcity
Factors of Production
Natural resources
Labor resources
Capital resources
Entrepreneurial resources
What are the factors of
production that go into cheese?
Factors of Production
What are some natural resources that are found in the US?
What type of labor is found in the US?
How are capital resources different from capital?
List 5 successful Entrepreneurs from other countries and what they did.
Economic Systems
Scarcity of economic resources forces every country to develop an economic
system that determines how resources will be used. Each system has
advantages and disadvantages.
Economics studies how individuals and groups of individuals strive to satisfy
their needs and wants by making choices.
Who, what, when, where, why, and how
Finding Natural Resources
http://glencoe.mcgrawhill.com/sites/0078747686/student_view0/science_tech_trends_webquest_lin
ks.html
Go to this link and go to the natural resources tab.
In your textbook and page 28 please read through the science/tech trends
List 3 companies that primarily specialize in natural resource extraction
What natural resources do they extract?
Write a ½ page article about one of the companies and their products/ services
Types of Economies
Market
Supply and demand
Range of prices
Equilibrium price
Shortage
Surplus
Competition
Command
Central authority makes key
economic decisions
Government dictates supply and
price
No competition
Low innovation
Low monetary motivation
Types of economies
Mixed economies
Combination of a market and command economy
Governments can pick and choose what features of each theory they will provide
Online assignment
Go to www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/index.html
Download- Comparative systems worksheet
Fill out the worksheet comparing the three countries
Answer the following questions using examples from your research.
How can the presence or absence of natural resources and arable land affect a
nation's economy, regardless of the type of economic system?
How can life expectancy and literacy rates affect the quality of labor in the
economy?
How can fertility rates affect the use of scarce resources?
Online assignment
How can GDP per capita and poverty rates indicate standards of living in each
system?
How can the size of the industrial/service sector and the agriculture
employment rate indicate the level of industrialization?
How can electricity, communication, and transportation facilities indicate the
potential for industrial growth?
Considering the lack of natural resources, the labor problems, and the lack of
capital and little industrialization of developing countries, how can developing
countries develop? (Hint: Look at Economy - Overview for Chad).
Presentation
You are starting your own country. Your limitations are 1 coastline available
to an ocean and 5 natural resources of your choosing.
You can tailor the rest of your country to suit your needs as a government
choosing an economic system.
What system would you install? Why?
What would you produce?
What would you keep under government control?
What would you allow to be a private enterprise?
Chapter 2 Quiz
Concentration game
Chapter 3: Economic Activity in a
Changing World
Describe the four types of economic shifts the United States has experienced
Describe what is shown by GDP, unemployment rate, rate of inflation, and
national debt.
Explain how individuals and the government influence the economy
Describe the four stages of the business cycle
Key vocab
Gross Domestic Product
Depression
Standard of living
Recovery
Inflation
Deflation
Stagflation
Budget deficit national debt
Budget surplus
Prosperity
Recession
Calculating interest
Price
Interest rate
$7,500
7%
$7,450
8%
$8,200
5%
Interest (Price x
Interest rate)
Total value ((price
x (1+interest
rate)
The Changing Us Economy
Throughout the years, the US economic system has changed. Each change
affected what was produced and how people were employed. To gauge the
health of our economic system, we use a variety of economic indicators
In the 1600’s we bartered goods and services
In the 1700’s farming revolutionized civilization and allowed for cities
In the mid-1850’s the Industrial Revolution started
In the 1900s information starts to move at a rapid pace to spur innovation
Today we are mostly technology based, what will be the change of the future?
Net or Newspapers
On page 39 of your textbook read the reader and case study then fill out the
worksheet
How has this shift changed the way we receive our news information??
How is our Economy Doing?
6 Key economic indicators
1.
Gross Domestic Product
2.
The Consumer price index
3.
Industrial production
4.
Interest rates
5.
Non-farm payroll
6.
Unemployment rate
How is our economy doing?
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)- measures the dollar value of all goods and services
produced in the U.S. economy in one year.
This is measured by the Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis
Add the spending in the consumer, investment (firms), government, and foreign (exports
minus imports) sectors
We must remove the effects of inflation from current GDP to compare the current
figures to GDP numbers from other years.
Real GDP is the current GDP divided by the GDP price deflator.
The real GDP is one of the most important indicators of economic performance.
A rise in real GDP indicates economic growth, while a fall in real GDP indicates
economic decline
How is our Economy Doing?
Industrial Production measures the output of American industry.
The Federal Reserve Board of Governors measures Industrial Production by
calculating the manufacturing output in the consumer goods, business
equipment, construction supplies, materials, manufacturing, mining, and
utility industries.
Production is calculated in each sector monthly, and the percentage change in
output is reported as Industrial Production.
Durable goods, such as cars, appliances, and furniture, as well as construction
supplies, tend to be more sensitive to economic changes than are other
manufacturing products.
Generally, Industrial Production increases during economic growth and falls
during periods of economic decline
How is our Economy Doing?
The Ten-Year Treasury Interest Rate measures the percentage return investors
receive on U.S. Treasury bonds.
The Federal Reserve Board of Governors measures Ten-Year Treasury Interest
Rates, as determined daily in the bond market.
Treasury Interest Rates can be indicative of changes in other long-term
interest rates such as mortgages and long-term business loans.
A decline in interest rates can precede increased investment spending to
promote economic growth; high interest rates can lead to lower levels of
investment and a decline in the rate of growth
How is our Economy Doing?
The Change in Non-farm Payroll measures the number of people employed by
companies and government.
The Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics surveys approximately
390,000 establishments to count the number of people employed each month,
and the change from the previous month in the number of employed people is
reported as the Change in Non-farm Payrolls.
Non-farm Payroll generally rises during economic growth and falls during
economic decline.
How is our Economy Doing?
The Unemployment Rate measures the percentage of people in the labor
force who were not working during the week of the survey, but had
specifically looked for work within the previous four weeks (unless they were
waiting to be recalled from layoff, in which case they need not have been
looking for work to be counted as unemployed).
The Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics surveys thousands of
Americans each month to calculate the size of the labor force (those working
plus those not working, but seeking work) and the unemployment rate (the
unemployed divided by the labor force).
The number of people unemployed as a percentage of the labor force is
reported each month as the Unemployment Rate.
The Unemployment Rate generally falls during economic growth and rises
during economic decline
Answer the following
1.
Explain what Real Gross Domestic Product growth statistics measure.
2.
Explain what Consumer Price Index statistics measure.
3.
Explain what Industrial Production statistics measure.
4.
Explain what Interest Rate statistics measure
5.
Explain what Change in Non-farm payroll statistics measure
6.
Explain what Unemployment Rate statistics measure
7.
How does knowledge of these statistics help us to understand how the
economy is doing?
8.
Looking at the current data, determine if we are experiencing growth or
decline.
Assignments
Write a report on unemployment including explanations of frictional,
seasonal, structural, and cyclical unemployment
Write a report on the New Jersey’s and the United States unemployment
levels of the last 10 years. Draw some conclusions as to why the levels are
the way they are and how NJ’s compares to the US over time. Finally
compare these rates to the rates of unemployment in Japan.
Ethics in business
You are the purchasing agent for a large furniture manufacturer. You have
received several bids from lumber companies for a supply of teak, a very
dense and decay resistant type of wood. The lowest bid comes from a lumber
company that has been known for not placing a strong emphasis on local
environmental concerns, especially resource depletion, when it cuts down
trees.
How would the lumber company’s reputation affect your decision?
The Business Cycle
In a market economy, there is an economic cycle, which includes four stages:
prosperity, recession, depression, recovery. There are also the four stages in
the business cycle.
The government and congress enact laws to influence fiscal policy
How would this cycle work in sports?
Spending tax payer’s money and creating a “balanced” budget
The Federal Reserve (The Fed) regulates the amount of money in circulation,
controlling interest rates, and controlling how much money banks can loan
out.
The Business Cycle
Prosperity- low unemployment, high production of goods and services, high levels
of investment,
Recession- 2 consecutive quarters of negative growth in the economy
Recovery- the economy starts to grow, unemployment lowers, and production
increases
Depression- high unemployment, and low production of goods and services
October 29, 1929 “Black Tuesday” Beginning of the Great Depression
1929-1933 GDP fell $103B to $55B
Unemployment went from 1.6M to 12.8M
Wages went from $.55 to $.05
In March 1933 a bank holiday was declared to prevent a panic
Where are we right now???
Assignment
Research the Tennessee Valley Authority
What is it?
How did it come about?
What purpose does it serve in society today.
Assignment
Find unemployment statistics for 1933, 1944, 1955, 1966, 1977, 1988, 1999,
2010. Present this information in an Excel graph. Explain the shape and
levels of unemployment over time and what events may have shaped our
economy
On the Occupational Handbook web site search for the job of economist.
Write a report on possible jobs for an economist as well as salary, and future
employment opportunities. How can you prepare yourself for this occupation.
Chapter 3 Quiz
Fill-in-the-blank
Chapter 4: Business ethics and Social
Responsibility
Define ethics and business ethics
Describe why ethical behavior is good for business
List the steps for dealing with an ethical dilemma
Define what is meant by the social responsibility of business
Key vocab
Ethics
Business ethics
Code of ethics
Sweatshop
Conflict of interest
Business Math
Calculating the Future value of money
You made $4,000 one summer working various jobs. You have two options:
one spend all the money or save and invest the money.
What are the benefits of spending all $4,000?
What about saving and investing?
Calculate the future value of your money assuming a 5% annually compounding
interest rate after 50 years.
FV=PV(1+interest rate)^time
The Nature of Ethics
What would you do if you found a copy of your final exam in the hallway?
What would you do if you found a diamond ring in a restaurant?
Ethics are moral principles by which people conduct themselves personally,
socially, and professionally. Business ethics are rules that guide the behavior
of a business and its employees.
Some cultures have different ideas for ethics. In the United States, bribery is
highly illegal and unethical. In India bribery in encouraged
Laws and Ethics
Ethics involve moral principles that govern conduct
Laws involve rules for conduct that may be used to punish violators
March 25, 1911 the Triangle Shirtwaist factory Company in NYC had a fire
which killed 146 workers- mostly young immigrant female workers
Termed a sweatshop
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) which is a division of
the US Department of Labor now oversees workplace safety and rules.
Assignment
Look up how business practices and ethics expected in the US business world
Now go to another country and see how the same business practices are set
up
Some things to compare or timeliness, meeting etiquette, dress, meeting format,
and finally negotiating a deal or contract (bribe, incentives, strictly good business
practices, nepotism)
Prepare a presentation going over the different practices and how they
compare and contrast.
Include where you think it is easier to conduct business as well as where would
YOU personally like to conduct your business
Internet research
Look up a code of ethics for your favorite company
Compare and contrast the code with some one at your table.
What do you notice is in both codes?
What are some of the differences in the code of ethics between companies?
Based on the code of ethics, which company would you rather work for?
Ethical Decision Making
1.
Identify the ethical dilemma
2.
Discover alternative actions
3.
Decide who might be affected
4.
List the probable effects of the alternatives
5.
Select the best alternative
Social Responsibility
Is the duty to do what is best for the good of society. Producing goods and
services that are beneficial to society and providing jobs for people are not
sufficient for a business to be considered socially responsible. They are
expected to do more.
Some examples are that the LA times uses recycled paper and Automakers are
starting to make hybrid cars that create less emissions
Why are businesses held to such a standard? Does the government do this? Or even
individuals?
The Equal Pay act of 1964 requires that men and women be paid the same
wages for doing equal work
The Americans with Disabilities Act bans discrimination against people with
physical and mental disabilities
Social Responsibility
Employers owe it to their employees to take care of them financially and at
the work site
At the end of the day you will always have people work for you and happiness is
directly related to retention and productivity.
Businesses are usually based in a community and have a responsibility to help
out with the local area since it is mutually beneficial
The real owner of the business is the shareholders, creditors, and out right
owners.
The whole point of investing in a company is to see it get better and create value
Companies represent their financial performance to the public so they can choose
to invest or not
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
Thematic Project
Research trends that are affecting businesses and careers and write a report
about them. These trends include the rise of globalization, the evolution of
technology, and the increasing importance of cultural diversity.
Choose a business or career that interests you
Preview business trends that are effecting the business or career
Interview a person over 30 years old to determine how the business world has
changed while they were growing up (hiring, job availability, communication,
education skills, etc.)
Research different business trends
Develop your report and presentation
Pages 70 and 71 of your book.
Chapter 4 Quiz
Concentration game
Unit 1 Essential questions
Describe economic activity and how it affects everyday life.
What is the difference between a “want” and a “need”?
How do businesses satisfy wants and needs?
Why must societies make decisions about what to produce?
How do societies choose what to produce?
How is economic activity measured?
What are the phases of the business cycle?
Why is it important for businesses to behave in an ethical manor?
What does it mean for a business to be socially responsible?