190 likes | 310 Views
Session 2 Economic Systems. Disclaimer : The views expressed are those of the presenters and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System. TEKS.
E N D
Session 2Economic Systems Disclaimer: The views expressed are those of the presenters and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
TEKS • Economics. The student understands the concepts of scarcity and opportunity costs. The student is expected to: (B) describe how societies answer the basic economic questions;
TEKS (5) Economics. The student understands free enterprise, socialist, and communist economic systems. The student is expected to: (A) describe the basic characteristics of economic systems, including property rights, incentives, economic freedom, competition, and the role of government; (B) compare the free enterprise system, socialism, and communism using the basic characteristics of economic systems; (C) examine current examples of free enterprise, socialist, and communist economic systems; (D) understand that the terms free enterprise, free market, and capitalism are synonymous terms to describe the U.S. economic system
TEKS (6) Economics. The student understands the basic characteristics and benefits of a free enterprise system. The student is expected to: (A) explain the basic characteristics of the U.S. free enterprise system, including private property, incentives, economic freedom, competition, and the limited role of government; (B) explain the benefits of the U.S. free enterprise system, including individual freedom of consumers and producers, variety of goods, responsive prices, investment opportunities, and the creation of wealth (D) analyze the costs and benefits of U.S. economic policies related to the economic goals of economic growth, stability, full employment, freedom, security, equity (equal opportunity versus equal outcome), and efficiency.
Teaching the Terms • Free enterprise • Communism • Socialism • Incentives • Property rights • Competition • Prices • Consumers • Producers • Resource allocation • Economic freedom • Role of government
Economic and Social Goals • Freedom • Growth • Stability • Equity • Efficiency
Economic Freedom • Consumers decide how to spend or save their incomes • Workers are free to choose a career or change jobs • People are free to establish new businesses or close old ones
Economic Growth • An increase in the production of goods and services over time • Affects the standard of living in a society
Economic Stability • Price stability • Avoiding inflation, a rise in the average price level • Avoiding deflation, a fall in the average price level • Full employment – using all of an economy's scarce resources (e.g. labor)
Economic Equity • Fairness in economic dealings • Evaluating transactions in the marketplace • Overall distribution of income • Criteria for judging equity • Equal opportunity • Equal outcomes
Economic Efficiency • Not wasting scarce resources • Two goals • Produce the goods and services people want most • Economize resources in the production of goods and services to minimize the real costs of production
Activity • Rank the economic and social goals from least important to most important. • As an individual • As a group • As a class • Discuss how command and market economies would address each goal.
Benefits of the Free Enterprise System • Individual freedom of consumers and producers • Variety of goods • Responsive prices • Investment opportunities • Creation of wealth