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Basics of Economics SS6E5 The student will analyze different economic systems (SS6E5a, b, SS6E6a, SSE7a-d)

Basics of Economics

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Basics of Economics. SS6E5 The student will analyze different economic systems (SS6E5a, b, SS6E6a, SSE7a-d). Essential Questions. What are the three different economic systems? How do quotas, tariffs, and embargos effect trade? What is the Gross Domestic Product?. What is Economics?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Basics of Economics

Basics of EconomicsSS6E5 The student will analyze different

economic systems(SS6E5a, b, SS6E6a, SSE7a-d)

Page 2: Basics of Economics

Essential QuestionsWhat are the three different economic

systems?How do quotas, tariffs, and embargos effect

trade?What is the Gross Domestic Product?

Page 3: Basics of Economics

What is Economics?Write down ANYTHING you know about

economics or economic systems. It can be in note form or written in full sentences. After

five minutes we will share our answers with the class.

Do the best you can!

Page 4: Basics of Economics

What is Economics?The study of how a society uses its resources

to satisfy its wants and needs.

3 Economic Questions1. What to produce?2. How to produce?3. For whom to produce?

Page 5: Basics of Economics

EconomicsEconomics is

what keeps a nation on its feet. It determines whether or not a nation’s people are educated, well-paid, fed, healthy, and living a good life.

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Let’s Take a Deeper LookTo decide how funds get allocated we need to

look at our wants and needs.Needs- our basic needs to survive, food,

clothes, and shelterWants- everything else and they are unlimitedEx. I need to eat I am hungryEx. I want a new car, new mp3 player etc…

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What is Scarcity?Scarcity- all resources are limited and

therefore are scarce. Everyone cannot have everything they want.There is not enough stuff to go around.

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What are the resources we have to use to satisfy our wants and needs?Land- natural resources we have to produce

goods and servicesGoods- a physical thing you can hold Service- some thing that gets used up right

after it is purchased

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Labor- the effort that individual people put into making a good or service

Ex. factory workers, medical personnel, and teachers.

Get paid a wageCapital- anything that is used to produce other

goods and services. Ex. If you make cars you need machines to

make the metal that is used in the cars. Also is the truck that drives the car to the dealer, and is the building that the cars are made in

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Human Capitalstock of skills and knowledge embodied in

the ability to perform labor so as to produce economic value

Many early economic theories refer to it simply as labor, one of three factors of production, and consider easily interchangeable.

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Why do we study it?We want to be good consumers.Consumers- people in an economy that

purchase goods and services

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What Is a Quota?

- a restriction on the amount of goods a country will let into another country to be sold.

- A quota may also refer to a total restriction on a particular good entering a country.

- For example, Japan may allow the importation of 5,000 U.S. cars at a reduced or waived duty rate. Once car number 5,001 enters, either no more can enter or a significantly increased duty rate will apply.

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What Is a Tariff?

is an additional price put upon an imported product from a particular country, essentially to make the product more expensive in the foreign market, which will discourage consumers from buying that foreign product.

The United States Customs Service imposes tariffs and quotas on products or services, which are imported into the United States.

Other countries impose tariffs and quotas on products or services, which are imported from the United States

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What is an Embargo?Government does not allow trade with

another country.

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Exchange RateWe need exchange rates because one nation's

currency is not always accepted in another. Example: You can't walk into a store in Japan and buy a

loaf of bread with Swiss francs. 

An exchange rate is the cost of one form of currency in another form of currency. Example: If you exchange 1 Swiss franc for 80

Japanese yen, you really just purchased a different form of money.

In other words, a currency is worth whatever buyers are willing to pay for it. This is determined by supply and demand.

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Gross Domestic Product• measures the national income and

output for a given country's economyMeasures the market value of all the goods and

services produced in the economy in a yearEconomists use GDP data to measure the

economy’s growthDisadvantages: GDP as a measure of economic

growth does not measure increases in leisure time and it measures only market activity

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Traditional EconomyResources are allocated by inheritancea strong social network and is based on primitive methods

and tools connected to subsistence farming, as well as herding

cattle and hunting and gathering often make their own clothing and toolsproduce more food than they need, they trade the surplus

for goods made by others.Most countries that have historically had a traditional

economy have replaced it with a command economy, market economy, or mixed economy

found today in underdeveloped, agricultural parts of South America, Asia, and Africa.

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Disadvantages:does not allow for much economic growth

depending on the economic needs of the countrychanges are very slow and little social mobilityA traditional economy does not take advantage

of technology and there is relatively little promotion of intellectual and scientific development again usually.

provides few incentives for entrepreneurslimiting choices for consumers and lowering

standards of living

Page 19: Basics of Economics

Command Economyan economic system in which the state or government

manages the economy.

government controls all major sectors of the economy and formulates all decisions about their use and about the distribution of income

The planners decide what should be produced and direct companies to produce those goods.

may consist of state-owned enterprises, private enterprises directed by the state, or a combination of both.

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Examples: China during its Great Leap Forward, and India, prior to its economic reforms in 1991 .

Command economies exist in some countries such as Cuba, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Iran, North Korea, and Burma.

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Market Economybased on the division of labor in which the prices of goods

and services are determined by supply and demand.

contrasted with a command economy in which a central government determines the price of goods and services using a fixed price system.

In the real world, market economies are regulated by society.

Entrepreneurs are willing to take a risk and invest their own money into a starting a company with hopes to make more money.

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Mixed Economyincorporates aspects of more than one economic

system

usually means an economy that contains both privately-owned and state-owned enterprises or that combines elements of capitalism and socialism, or a mix of market economy and planned economy characteristics

There is not one single definition for a mixed economy,

but relevant aspects include: a degree of private economic freedom, with centralized economic planning

Economies ranging from the United States to Cuba

have been termed mixed economies

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REMEMBER!!!!No country is pure command or pure market.

ALL COUNTRIES WILL BE “MIXED LEANING TOWARD MARKET”OR “MIXED LEANING TOWARD COMMAND”

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L6-8WHST1Which economic system do you think is best?

Why? (Write a 5-8 sentence paragraph)

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Advanced Literacy Standard L6-8WHST11. Write a paragraph (5-8 sentences) on which

economic system you think is the most effective and why?

2. How are quota, tariff and embargo related? How can they affect trade?