Unit 2 - Economics - Holland Public Schools
Download
Report
Transcript Unit 2 - Economics - Holland Public Schools
Chapter 3 – Political and Economic Analysis
UNIT 2 - ECONOMICS
3.1 WHAT IS AN ECONOMY?
The organized way a nation provides for the
needs and wants of its people.
A nation chooses how to use its resources to
provide and distribute good and services
A country’s resources determine economic
activities such as manufacturing, buying,
selling, transporting, and investing.
RESOURCES
Resources
All
the things used in producing goods and services
Economists use the term Factors of Production
when they talk about resources
The factors of production comprise 4
categories:
Land,
Labor, Capital, and Entrepreneurship
LAND
Land includes everything contained in the earth
or found in the seas.
Ex.
Coal and Crude Oil are natural resources
Natural resources are used as raw material for
making goods and creating services that are
marketed to customers.
Climate
and geography can also be an example
LABOR
Labor refers to all the people who work.
It
includes:
Full/part
time
Managers
Professionals in both private and public sectors
Economies with well trained, well educated
labor have an advantage over other nations in
attracting business
CAPITAL
Includes money to start and operate a
business.
Also includes the goods in the production
process
INFRASTRUCTURE
Capital includes infrastructure
Which
is the physical development of a country
Includes
roads, ports, sanitation, facilities, and utilities,
especially telecommunications
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Refers to the skills of people who are willing to
invest their time and money to run a business
They organize factors of production to create
the goods and services that are part of an
economy
ECONOMICS AND THE SHOPPING MALL
The local shopping mall is a good place to
observe economic principals.
Labor
is represented by salespeople
Capital is the money that was invested in
manufacturing products and selling them
What are examples of the other 2 factors of
production (land and entrepreneurship)?
SCARCITY
The difference between wants and needs and
available resources
HOW DOES AN ECONOMY WORK?
Nations must answer three basic questions
when deciding how to use their limited
resources.
Which
goods and services should be produced?
How should the goods and services be produced?
For whom should the goods and services be
produced?
Dubai Example
Location
60
Minutes Video
Pictures
TRADITIONAL ECONOMIES
Traditions and rituals answer the basic
questions of what, how, and for whom.
Answers are also based on:
Cultural
Religious
practices
ideals (passed from one generation to the next)
MARKET ECONOMIES
There is no government involvement in
economic decisions
The government lets the market answer the
three basic economic questions
What
How
For
Whom
COMMAND ECONOMY
A country’s government makes economic
decisions and decides what, when, and how
much will be produced and distributed.
The government controls the factors of
productions and makes all decisions about
their use.
CAPITALISM
Marketplace competition and private ownership
of business
Government is concerned about
People
Cares
for those that cannot care for themselves
United States and Japan are examples
COMMUNISM
Government controls the factors of production
No private ownership of property or capital
The theory
Goods
owned in common are available to all as
needed
Very few left
Cuba, North Korea, and China are examples
SOCIALISM
Originally referred to a system that was on its
way to turning communist.
The main goal is to meet basic needs for all
and to provide employment for many
Canada, Germany, and Sweden
3.2 UNDERSTANDING THE ECONOMY
The Economy and Marketing
If
you are a marketer and you want to perform a
useful SWOT analysis you need to consider the
economic factors that will influence your marketing
plan.
WHEN IS AN ECONOMY SUCCESSFUL?
A healthy economy has three goals:
Increase
productivity
Decrease unemployment
Maintain stable prices
All nations analyze their economies to keep
track of how well they are doing
How is the US economy now?
PRODUCERS AND CONSUMERS
A nation's economy is the production and
consumption of goods (food, clothes, cars) and
services (repairs, lawn-mowing, haircuts) in that
nation
Anybody producing or consuming things in a
country plays some role in the economy.
Production and consumption are intertwined.
SUPPLY AND DEMAND
The ultimate goal of producers is to make
money
Consumers may want to satisfy their wants and
needs by buying products
Producers are the ones who actually set prices,
but they do so based on the behavior of
consumers.
SUPPLY AND DEMAND CONT.
If nobody buys a product at a particular price,
the producer knows the price is too high.
If some consumers buy it, but not enough to
buy everything produced, producers must
either decrease the price or decrease the
supply.
SUPPLY AND DEMAND CONT.
The willingness of consumers to pay for
products is known as demand.
Even if there is constant high demand for a
product (toilet paper, for example), individual
producers need to keep the price down or
consumers will just buy it from a competitor.
BUSINESS CYCLE
The recurring changes in economic activity
Expansion
When
the economy is flourishing, sometimes
referred to as a period of prosperity
Recession
A
period of economic slowdown that lasts for at 6
months
Depression
A
period of prolonged recession
RECESSION
A recession is a prolonged period of time when a
nation's economy is slowing down, or contracting. Such
a slow-down is characterized by a number of different
trends, including:
People buying less stuff
Decrease in factory production
Growing unemployment
Slump in personal income
An unhealthy stock market
By the conventional definition, this slow-down has to
continue for at least six months to be considered a
recession.
ASSIGNMENT
Page 69
#21-25
Page 70
#29-30
THE GREAT DEPRESSION
Video - American History: America's Economy:
Sorrow and Hope
Questions:
What
were some causes of the great depression?
What happened to the residents of the dust bowl?