Economics Final Review
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Transcript Economics Final Review
ECONOMICS FINAL
REVIEW
FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
• Land, labor, and capital: all the
resources that are used to make all
goods and services
ECONOMICS
• The study of how people seek to
satisfy their needs and wants by
making choices
TRADEOFFS
• An alternative we sacrifice when we
make a decision
• ie: more time at work less time to
watch tv
PHYSICAL CAPITAL
• Capital-All human made goods that
are used to produce other goods and
services,
• tools and buildings are physical capital
HUMAN CAPITAL
• The skills and knowledge gained by a
worker through education and
experience
• Human and physical capital needed
in an economy
BASIC ECONOMIC DECISION
• What to produce?
• How to produce?
• How to Finance?
GUNS OR BUTTER
• The phrase that refers to the tradeoff
that a nation makes when choosing to
produce more military supplies or
consumer goods
PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES FRONTIER
• The line on a production
possibilities graph that shows the
maximum level of output
WHAT IS DEMAND?
The law states that
all other factors being equal, as the price of a
good or service increases, consumer
demand for the good or service
will decrease.
• A table that lists the quantity of a good that a
person will purchase at each price in a market.
• Shows the quantities demanded
at each price by all consumers in
the market.
• A small change in price buy much less
of a good.
• Elastic determines if a change in price will
affect your demand for the product.
• A consumer with highly elastic demand
for a good is very responsive to price
changes.
• Demand for a good that you will keep buying
despite a price increase.
• Inelastic determines if a change in price does
not affect your demand for the product.
• A consumer with highly inelastic demand for a
good relatively unresponsive to price changes.
LAW OF SUPPLY
• Supply- the amount of goods available
• According to the law of Supply the higher the
price, the larger the quantity produced
• Quantity Produced- economic term to describe
how much of a good is offered at a specific price
•
Elasticity of supply is a measure of the way quantity
supplied reacts to a change in price.
• If supply is not very responsive
to changes in price, it is
considered inelastic.
• An elastic supply is very
sensitive to changes in price.
WHAT AFFECTS ELASTICITY OF
SUPPLY?
Time
In the short run, a firm
cannot easily change
its output level, so
supply is inelastic.
• In the long run, firms are
more flexible, so supply
can become more elastic.
THE SUPPLY SCHEDULE
• Supply schedule shows the relationship between
price and quantity supplied for a certain good
• Like a demand schedule a supply schedule lists
supply for a very specific set of conditions
• A rise or fall in the price will change the quantity
supplied but not the schedule
MARKET SUPPLY SCHEDULES
• The relationship between price and the total quantity
supplied by all suppliers in market
Market Supply Schedule
Price per slice of pizza
Slices supplied per day
$.50
$1.00
1,000
1,500
$1.50
2,000
$2.00
2,500
$2.50
3,000
$3.00
3,500
NYSE
• New York Stock Exchange
• The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE): handles the
most powerful and established companies
THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
• Stock performance is reported in the Dow Jones
Industrial Average.
• The Dow Jones Industrial Average is usually referred to
as the Dow.
• The Dow monitors and reports generally on the trading
activities of thirty of the most powerful companies.
BULL AND BEAR MARKETS
• A bull market occurs when the stock market rises
steadily over a period of time.
• A bear market occurs when the stock market falls over a
period of time.
• Stock indexes, like the Dow, allow investors to track the
progress of the stock market.
SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP
• A sole proprietorship is a business owned and
operated by an individual.
• Most businesses in the United States are sole
proprietorships.
• However, sole proprietorships account for a small
percentage of total sales in the U.S.A.
CORPORATION
• A corporation is a legal entity owned by individual
stockholders.
• A corporation is considered a separate entity apart from
its owners.
• As such, the corporation can be sued but individual
stockholders cannot be sued.
A business cycle is a period of macroeconomic
expansion followed by a period of contraction.
THE FOUR PHASES OF A BUSINESS CYCLE
There are four phases in a business cycle:
Expansion: a period of economic growth
Peak: the height of the expansion
Contraction: a period of economic decline
Trough: the lowest point of the contraction
RECESSIONS AND DEPRESSIONS
• Each phase of the business cycle is determined by
monitoring Gross Domestic Product.
• A contraction that lasts for at least six months is
called a recession.
• A particularly severe and long contraction is called
a depression.
THE EFFECT OF RISING PRICES
• Inflation- is a general increase in prices
• Over the years prices rise and fall, but
in the American economy they have
mostly risen
• Purchasing Power- the ability to
purchase goods and services
BONDS
• Bonds are loans.
• An investor loans money to a corporation or a
government.
• The corporation or government must repay the loan with
interest.
RISK AND PROFIT
• Investors risk their money hoping to make more money.
• High-risk investments are investments that are more
likely to fail.
• However, higher risk leads to greater profits.
Remember, trade-offs!
CHARACTERISTICS OF A GOOD TAX
• A good tax has the following characteristics:
• Simplicity
• Tax laws should be simple and easily understood.
• Economy
• Government administrators should be able to collect
taxes without spending too much time or money.
• Certainty
• It should be clear to the taxpayer when the tax is due,
how much is due, and how it should be paid.
• Equity
• The tax system should be fair, so that no one bears too
much or too little of the tax burden.
THREE USES OF MONEY
Money is a medium of exchange, a unit of
account, and a store of value.
As a medium of exchange, money measures
value during the exchange of goods and
services.
What is the value of a sweater?
MEDIUM OF EXCHANGE
• Anything used to determine value during the
exchange of goods or services
• Barter- the direct exchange of one set of goods
or services for another
MONEY, AGAIN
As a unit of account, money is a way to
compare the value of goods and services.
A more expensive sweater is considered
more valuable than a cheaper sweater.
Finally, money is a store of value. Money
holds its value even if it is not used though
inflation affects money.
SIX CHARACTERISTICS OF MONEY
Do we use pigs as money or paper as money?
How does a society decide?
There are six characteristics of good money.
Money should be portable, divisible, durable,
uniform, accepted, and have a limited supply.
Too much money in circulation means less
value.
• Inferior Goods- Goods for which
demand falls when income rises
• Durable Goods= goods that last for a
relatively long time(used car)
• Non-Durable Goods -that last a
relatively short period( paperback
book)
MARKET ECONOMY
• Economic system where decisions are based on
voluntary exchanges of the market
• U.S. is a market economy
CETERIS PARIBUS
• All other things being equal, only takes
price into account
• Fringe Benefits- a payment other than
wages or salaries
• Bank Run- more customers withdraw
money than the bank has on hand
REPRESENTATIVE MONEY
•
objects that have value and can be
exchanged for something else of value
• Example: IOU
FEDERAL RESERVE
• If the Fed wants to encourage banks
to loan out more of their money, it may
reduce the discount rate, making it
easier
• Federal Reserve Districts- !2
FDIC
• To make sure customers do not lose
money if a bank fails
VERTICAL MERGER
• A joining of two or more businesses involved in
different stages of producing the same good or
service
POSSIBLE SHORT ESSAY TOPICS
• Characteristics of Money
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Durability- must withstand wear and tear over time
Portability-can be easily transferred
Divisibility-must be easily divided into smaller denominations
Uniformity-must be easy to count and measure accurately
Limited- the right amount must be in supply
Accepted – people will accept for goods and services
• Functions of the Federal Reserve
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Serves Gov’t as nations banker
Serves banks by lending money
Regulates banking system
Regulates the money supply
POSSIBLE
• Functions of Money
• Medium of Exchange- determines value during exchange
of goods and services
• Unit of Account- provides a means of comparing values
• Store of Value- keeps its value over time
Characteristics of a Good Tax
Simplicity- should be easily understood
Efficiency- gov’t should be able to collect taxes easily
Certainty- clear when tax is due, and how it will be paid
Equity-tax system should be fair