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What is Economics?
Economics is the study of how people produce, distribute, and use
goods and services.
An economic system is a country’s way of using limited
resources to provide goods and services.
Scarcity means that there is never enough of everything to
satisfy everyone completely.
Opportunity cost is the next best choice that you give up
in order to do something else.
Economics classifies resources as land, labor, and capital.
Producers are the companies or individuals who make or
provide goods and services. The people who purchase and
use goods and services are consumers.
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
1
Measuring the Economy
Economists use many mathematical tools and equations, or
indicators, to measure the health of the economy.
The total value of all goods and services produced in a country is
called the gross domestic product (GDP).
The consumer price index (CPI) is used to measure changes
in the prices of goods and services.
When the average price of goods goes up sharply, it’s called
inflation.
When the unemployment rate is high, people cut back
their spending, which can lead to a slower economy.
When statistics show unemployment to be rising, investments
falling, and GDP decreasing over a long period of time, it
often indicates an economic downturn, or recession.
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
2
Analyzing Supply
and Demand
Supply is the quantity of goods and services a business is
willing to sell at a specific price and a specific time. Demand
is the quantity of goods and services consumers are willing to
buy at a specific price and a specific time.
Supply and demand have a direct impact on the price of
goods and services.
When the supply is greater than the demand, the price goes down.
When the demand is greater than the supply, the price goes up.
In a market economy, the price of a particular good or service
is determined by supply and demand.
A surplus exists when the quantity supplied is greater than the
demand.
A shortage exists when the quantity supplied can’t meet demand.
Chapter
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Basic Economics
3
Visualizing Supply
and Demand
A supply curve shows
the quantity of a product
or service a supplier is
willing to sell across a
range of prices. Here the
supplier is willing to
provide more product as
the price increases.
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
A demand curve shows
the quantity that
consumers are willing to
buy across a range of
prices. Here the
consumer is willing to buy
more as the price
decreases.
4
Supply and Demand Curve
A supply and demand curve
shows the relationship between
price and quantity.
The equilibrium point is where the
supply curve and the demand curve
meet and supply and demand are
balanced. It also represents the
quantity that a business should
produce of a given item (the
equilibrium quantity) and how
much the business should charge
for it (the equilibrium price).
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
Equilibrium
Price
5
Analyzing Economic Systems
In a command economy, the government owns or
manages the nation’s resources and businesses.
In a market economy, suppliers produce whatever
goods and services they wish and set prices based on
what consumers are willing to pay.
In a free enterprise system, individuals or businesses
operate with little government interference.
Free enterprise systems share the same five
characteristics.
Private property
Freedom of choice
Voluntary exchange
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
Economic incentive
Competition
6
The Free Enterprise System
In a free enterprise economy, competition is a driving force.
Competition has many benefits.
Competition between businesses results in bigger and better
selection, lower prices, and better service.
Competition between businesses encourages innovation.
Competition between individuals can lead to higher earnings as
businesses compete for talented workers.
If a business has no competition, then it controls all of the
supply and demand for the product or service it sells it is
called a monopoly.
A business makes a profit when the amount of money
coming in from sales is greater than the business’s expenses.
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
7
Taking Part in a
Global Economy
Globalization refers to the growing integration of the world’s
economies.
Some of the benefits of
globalization include:
Increased trade
Increased prosperity
Increased cultural
exchange
Globalization presents the
following problems:
Exports are goods or
services that are sent from
one country and sold to
foreign consumers.
Imports are goods and
services that are brought
into a country from foreign
suppliers.
Increased interdependence
Loss of jobs
Chapter
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Basic Economics
8
International Trade
A trade barrier is a governmental restriction on
international trade.
A tariff is a fee, similar to a tax, that importers must pay on
goods they import.
A quota is a limit on the quantity of a product that can be
imported into a country.
Advances in technology provide much of the driving force
behind globalization
Culture includes a people’s language, beliefs, attitudes,
customs, manners, and habits.
Businesspeople in most societies follow particular social
rules and customs called etiquette.
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
9
Chapter Review
Economics is the study of how people produce,
distribute, and use goods and services.
Supply is the quantity of goods and services a business
is willing to sell at a specific price and a specific time.
Demand is the quantity of goods and services
consumers are willing to buy at a specific price and a
specific time.
A supply curve shows the quantity of a product or service
a supplier is willing to sell across a range of prices.
A demand curve shows the quantity that consumers are
willing to buy across a range of prices.
Chapter
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Basic Economics
10
Chapter Review (continued)
In a command economy, the government owns or
manages the nation’s resources and businesses.
In a market economy, suppliers produce whatever goods
and services they wish and set prices based on what
consumers are willing to pay.
In a free enterprise system, individuals or businesses
operate with little government interference.
Globalization refers to the growing integration of the
world’s economies.
Culture includes a people’s language, beliefs, attitudes,
customs, manners, and habits.
Chapter
2
Basic Economics
11