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Economics Chapter 2
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Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Jan 04, 2016

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Page 1: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

EconomicsChapter 2

Page 2: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

The Three Economic Questions

Every society must answer three questions:– What goods and services

should be produced? – How should these goods and

services be produced? – Who consumes these goods

and services?

Page 3: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

What are Society’s Economic

Goals?

Page 4: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic efficiency:

Making the most of resources

Page 5: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic freedom:

Freedom from government intervention in the production and distribution of goods and services

Page 6: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic equity:

Fair distribution of wealth

Page 7: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic security and

predictability:Assurance that goods and services will be available, payments will be made on time, and a safety net will protect individuals in times of economic disaster

Page 8: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic growth and innovation

Innovation leads to economic growth, and economic growth leads to a higher standard of living.

Page 9: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Other goals

Societies pursue additional goals, such as environmental protection.

Page 10: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Four Economic SystemsAn economic system is

the method used by a society to produce and distribute goods and services.

Page 11: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Traditional economies rely on habit, custom, or ritual to decide what to produce, how to produce it, and to whom to distribute it.

Page 12: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

In a market economy economic decisions are made by individuals and are based on exchange, or trade.

Page 13: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

In a centrally planned economy the central government makes all decisions about the production and consumption of goods and services.

Page 14: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Mixed economies are systems that combine tradition and the free market with limited government intervention.

Page 15: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

The Free MarketWhy Do Markets Exist?

Page 16: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Markets exist because none of us produces

all the goods and services we require to satisfy our needs

and wants.

Page 17: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

A market is an arrangement that allows buyers and sellers to exchange goods and services.

Page 18: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Specialization is the concentration of the productive efforts of

individuals and firms on a limited number of activities.

Page 19: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

The Free Market Economy

• In a free market economy, households and business firms use markets to exchange money and products. Households own the factors of production and consume goods and services.

Page 20: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

The Market’s Self-Regulating Nature

• In every transaction, the buyer and seller consider only their self-interest, or their own personal gain. Self-interest is the motivating force in the free market.

Page 21: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

• Producers in a free market struggle for the dollars of consumers. This is known as competition, and is the regulating force of the free market.

Page 22: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

• The interaction of buyers and sellers, motivated by self-interest and regulated by competition, all happens without a central plan. This phenomenon is called “the invisible hand of the marketplace.”

Page 23: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Advantages of the Free Market

Page 24: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic Efficiency•As a self-regulating system, a free market economy is efficient.

Page 25: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic GrowthBecause

competition encourages

innovation, free markets encourage

growth.

Page 26: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Economic FreedomFree market

economies have the highest degree of

economic freedom of any economic

system.

Page 27: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Additional GoalsFree markets offer a wider

variety of goods and services than any other economic system.

Page 28: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Organization of Centrally Planned

Economies

Page 29: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

In a centrally planned economy, the government

owns both land and capital. The government

decides what to produce, how much to

produce, and how much to

charge.

Page 30: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Karl Marx

Page 31: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Socialism is a social and political philosophy based on the belief

that democratic means should be used to distribute wealth evenly

throughout a society.

Page 32: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.
Page 33: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Communism is a political system

characterized by a centrally planned economy with all

economic and political power resting in the

hands of the government.

Page 34: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Problems of a Centrally Planned EconomyCentrally planned

economies face problems of poor-quality

goods, shortages, and diminishing production.

Page 35: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

The Rise of Mixed

Economies

Page 36: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Government’s Role in a Mixed Economy

• The government purchases land, labor, and capital from households in the factor market, and

• Purchases goods and services in the product market.

Page 37: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.
Page 38: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Comparing Mixed Economies

• An economic system that permits the conduct of business with minimal government intervention is called free enterprise. The degree of government involvement in the economy varies among nations.

Page 39: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Things to think about…

Page 40: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Why aren’t all people paid the same

amount in factor payments for the resources they

provide? Provide an example of two unequal factor

payments.

Page 41: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

You and your friends decide to earn money by washing

cars. How are the three economic questions

answered in this market?

Page 42: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

How does specialization make us more efficient?

Page 43: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

What is the connection between incentives and consumer sovereignty

in a free market economy?

Page 44: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Why is economic equity difficult to achieve in a free market economy?

Page 45: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Provide at least 3 real world examples to illustrate the circular flow model of a market economy.

Page 46: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

How do socialism and communism differ?

Page 47: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Why do centrally planned economies have difficulty meeting consumer

needs?

Page 48: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Why is it good for the US to send foreign aid to other countries?

Page 49: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

What benefits might citizens of a centrally planned economy derive

from a move toward a market-based system?

Page 50: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Within this classroom mini-economy, how are the 3 economic

questions answered?

Page 51: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

How would your life change if the US transitioned to a pure free

market?

Page 52: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

How would your life change if the US transitioned to a pure centrally

planned system?

Page 53: Economics Chapter 2 The Three Economic Questions Every society must answer three questions: –What goods and services should be produced? –How should.

Pretend you are opening a new ice cream shop in Sugar Land. What

resources would you need from the factor market? What would you offer in the product market? How would

the government affect your business?