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Economics – Mr. Schubmehl. Scarcity the fundamental economic problem. Not having enough resources to produce all the things ppl would like to have. Scarcity -. Allocation of limited resources (applies to business and personal lives). What’s the difference?.
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Scarcity the fundamental economic problem Not having enough resources to produce all the things ppl would like to have Scarcity - Allocation of limited resources (applies to business and personal lives)
What’s the difference? What do you think? What are wants and what are needs?
A want can be a way of expressing a need A need is a basic requirement for survival Or a want can be something completely unnecessary for survival Food, clothing, shelter Want Need Too many things To want less
Three basic economic questions 1. What to produce? 2. How to produce? 3. For whom to produce?
Consumer goods Examples – food, clothing, computers, cell phones, tvs, ipods, etc
Capital goods – manufactured good used to produce other goods and/or services
Durable goods – any good that is meant to last three or more years
Services Examples?
Value, Utility, and Wealth Value – worth expressed in monetary form
Paradox of Value Contradiction between necessities and value
Utility Utility – capacity to be useful and provide satisfaction Not measurable Varies from person to person Does not have to have utility for everyone
Wealth Tangible Useful Transferable
Factor Markets The markets where people sell their resources to the businesses (You participate in factor markets whenever you go to work and sell your labor to an employer)
Product Markets The markets where producers sell their goods and services to consumers (You participate in product markets whenever you buy goods and/or services)
Productivity Measure of the amt of output produced by a given amt of input in a specific time Goes up when more output can be produced with same amount of inputs in same amt of time
“A previously unreleased analysis prepared by the U.S. Department of Treasury says the total in new taxes would be between $100 billion to $200 billion a year. At the upper end of the administration’s estimate, the cost per American household would be an extra $1,761 a year.”
Opportunity Cost and Trade-offs Trade-off – alternative choices when you make an economic decision The choice to buy concert tickets or jeans Opportunity cost – the cost of the alternative use of money, time, resources, etc when one choice is made over the other Applies to businesses and individuals
Economic and Social Goals • Economic Freedom • Economic Efficiency • Economic Equity • Economic Security • Full Employment • Price Stability • Economic Growth
Economic and Social Goals • Economic Freedom – freedom to make your own business decisions. Cornerstone of American society (for now anyways) • Choose your own occupation • Choose where you live, work, etc • Choose who you work for
Economic and Social Goals • Economic Efficiency – resources are scarce and factors of production need to be used wisely. If factors of production are wasted, fewer goods and services can be produced . . . . . . . . and business may end up kaput!
Economic and Social Goals • Economic Equity – sense of justice, impartiality, and fairness. It is illegal to discriminate on the basis of age, sex, race, religion, or disability in employment. Always been like that? Balancing act
Economic and Social Goals • Economic Security – protection from adverse economic events such as layoffs and illnesses. Includes Social Security, Medicare, Worker’s Compensation, Unemployment Insurance.
Economic and Social Goals • Full Employment • Price Stability • Economic Growth