3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
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Transcript 3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
Objectives
Explain how government can improve operation
of the private sector.
Distinguish between regulations that promote
competition and those that control natural
monopolies.
Describe how fiscal policy and monetary policy
try to control the business cycle.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
Key Terms
private property rights
antitrust laws
natural monopoly
fiscal policy
monetary policy
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
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Rules for a Market Economy
The effects of government regulation are
all around you.
Examples
Clothing labels
Speed limits
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
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Establishing Private
Property Rights
Private property rights guarantee
individuals the right to use their resources
as they choose or to charge others for the
use.
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3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
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Intellectual Property Rights
Patent
Copyright
Trademark
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Measurement and Safety
U.S. Bureau of Weights and Measures
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA)
The U.S. Department of Agriculture
The Consumer Product Safety
Commission
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
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Market Competition
and Natural Monopolies
Promoting market competition
Antitrust laws attempt to promote
competition and reduce anticompetitive
behavior.
Regulating natural monopolies
When it is cheaper for one firm to serve the
market than for two or more firms to do so,
that firm is called a natural monopoly.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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3.2 Regulating the Private Sector
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Growth and Stability
of the U.S. Economy
Fiscal policy uses taxing and public
spending to influence national economic
variables.
Monetary policy tries to supply the
appropriate amount of money to help
stabilize the business cycle and promote
healthy economic growth.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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