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Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics
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Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Jan 03, 2016

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Cecil Austin
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Page 1: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore

An Introduction to Economics

Page 2: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally started his own business.

• Entrepreneur–Creation–Organization

–Risks–Responsibilities

Page 3: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally’s Seashell Store competed against a similar business named

Oliver’s Ocean Originals.

• Free Enterpise System–Motivated by Profit (money kept after

expenses)–Competition Helps the Consumer–Monopoly, Oligopoly, Perfect Competition

Page 4: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally sold collected shells andalso offered a guided tour to

collect your own shells.

• Goods – tangible or physical products• Services – intangible products• Need – required for survival• Want – like to have

Page 5: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally’s store was a small shack on the beach with tables and bookcases. He hired

two kids to collect shells. He also developed a way to locate quality

seashells.• Factors of Production– Land– Labor– Capital– Entrepreneurship

Page 6: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

During tourist season, Sally sells seashells for $2.00 each. He tried to sell them for

$3.00, but sales plummeted.• Scarcity – allocation of limited resources for

unlimited wants• Demand – the quantity of goods a consumer is

willing and able to buy• Elastic Demand – a change in price creates a

change in demand• Inelastic Demand – a change in price has little

effect on the demand for a product

Page 7: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally has noticed that he rarelyhas repeat customers.

• Diminishing Marginal Utility – people will not buy more than they can reasonably use, regardless of price

Page 8: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

Sally has seen prices rise during hurricane season when shells are hard to find. He also saw prices drop when a competitor imported shells from the Pacific ocean.

• Supply – the amount of a good that producers are willing to provide

• Surplus – more supply than needed• Shortage – less supply than needed• Equilibrium – where demand and supply meet

Page 9: Sally Sold Seashells By The Seashore An Introduction to Economics.

I don’t know how this applies to Sally.• Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – total market

value of goods and services produced nationwide during a given period of time

• Federal Reserve – government agency regulating lending to stimulate the economy

• Business Cycle – periodic pattern of expansion and contraction the economy goes through

• Inflation – a jump in prices that slow consumer spending

• Recession – slowing of spending; the Fed lowers the interest rate to promote spending