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ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7
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ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Dec 15, 2015

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Page 1: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

ECONOMY VOCABULARY

Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6,

SS6E7

Page 2: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Economy

• the production, consumption, and distribution of goods and services

Page 3: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Private vs. Public Businesses

• Public means it is owned by the government

• Private means it is owned by citizens

Page 4: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Market Economy

• An economy where private citizens or groups of citizens own businesses.

• Citizens are free to develop many different types of businesses, so people have a wide variety of jobs, goods, and services

• Because people in a market economy are free to choose how to make and spend their money

Page 5: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Command Economy

• An economy where the government owns the country’s resources and businesses.

• The government decides what goods should be produced and what services will be available.

• Seriously limits citizen’s choices of jobs, goods, and services.

Page 6: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Traditional Economy

• An economy where people use the same work methods and tools generation after generation.

• Citizens do not have enough goods to have a surplus (more than they need), so they cannot earn extra money to buy better equipment.

• Without better equipment, they continue to work in the same way, never changing their methods.

Page 7: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Mixed Economy

• A mix of different economic systems

• Some businesses are government owned and others are privately owned by citizens

Page 8: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Trade Barrier

• Barrier=wall

• Something that prevents trade

• Examples:– Tariff– Quota– Embargo– Geography (geography that prevents

easy trade, like mountains, oceans, etc.)

Page 9: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Embargo

• A government order prohibiting the movement of merchant ships/planes/trading into or out of its ports.

• A government restriction on trade with a foreign nation.

Page 10: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Quota

• The amount of something that is allowed or admitted

• Examples:– A restriction on the quantity (number) of a good that

can be imported during a specific time period would be called an “import quota”.

– If the United States government only allows 50 tons of corn to be imported into the US each year, this would also be called an “import quota”.

– If your teacher has given you 20 minutes to work on an assignment, your “time quota” is 20 minutes.

Page 11: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

More QUOTA examples

• Money Quota: Your parents give you $20 a week to spend. Once you spend all $20, you have met your “money quota”. You will not receive any more money until next week.

• Paper Quota: Your job only allows you to use 1,000 sheets of paper per year. If you use all 1,000 sheets, then you have met your “paper quota”. You will not receive any more paper until next year.

Page 12: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Tariff

• a tax that the government puts on imported or exported goods.

Page 13: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Entrepreneur/Entrepreneurship

• When a person organizes and manages a business.

• Are willing to risk everything for the possibility of gaining a profit

Page 14: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Capital Good/Resource

• The things needed to make other goods

• Examples:• Machines

– Ice machine– Coin press

• Factories– A car manufacturing plant

• Technology– Computers– Software

Page 15: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Human Capital/Resource

• The skills that humans have to build things or perform services.

• Examples:– A worker in a factory– A hair stylist– An actor– Waiter/waitress– A person who mows lawns

Page 16: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

International Trade

• The sale of goods or services across country borders

• Trade between different countries

Page 17: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Voluntary Trade

• Same as international trade, but the countries both benefit from trade and they voluntarily decide to trade with one another

Page 18: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Currency

• Something you exchange for goods or services

• The money in circulation in any country

Page 19: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

• The total value of all the goods and services produced in a country in a year.

• Often an indicator of Standard of Living (just like the literacy rate)– …it’s like a big (imaginary) calculator that

keeps track of all the money spent in a country in a year.

Page 20: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Top 5 highest GDPs on Earth

YEAR 2010

1 European Union $14,820,000,000,000

2 United States $14,660,000,000,000

3 China $10,090,000,000,000

4 Japan $4,310,000,000,000

5 India $4,060,000,000,000

Page 21: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Bottom 5 lowest GDPs on Earth

YEAR 2010

223 Tuvalu $36,000,000

224 Montserrat $29,000,000

225 Tristan da Cunha $18,000,000

226 Niue $10,010,000

227 Tokelau $1,500,000

Page 22: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

GDP per capita

• When you take the GDP and divide it by the population of that country.

• Is a more accurate picture of how much $$ a country has compared to the GDP

Page 23: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Top 5 highest GDPs per capita

YEAR 2010

1 Qatar $179,000

2 Liechtenstein $141,100

3 Luxembourg $82,600

4 Bermuda $69,900

5 Singapore $62,100

*USA is # 47 with $47,200

Page 24: ECONOMY VOCABULARY Standards SS6E1, SS6E2, SS6E3, SS6E5, SS6E6, SS6E7.

Bottom 5 lowest GDPs per capita

YEAR 2010

223 Eritrea $600

224 Zimbabwe $500

225 Liberia $500

226 Democratic Republic of the Congo $300

227 Burundi $300

*All in Africa