Who decides what products will be produced?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Foundations of Business In order to appreciate and make informed decisions in the world around them, students will need to establish a basic business/economic.
Advertisements

Foundations of Economics
Chapter 3: Demand, Supply and Equilibrium
3 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair Demand, Supply,
Economic Principles.  Economics:the study of how human beings allocate scarce resources to produce various commodities and how those commodities are.
3 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair Demand, Supply,
The Canadian Economy Basic Canadian Economic Principles.
Economic Resources and Systems
3. An improvement in the technology used in the production of automobiles will most likely cause the price and quantity of automobiles to change in which.
2.01 Economic Systems Objective 2.01 Compare different types of economic systems: traditional, free enterprise, command and mixed.
THE ENGINE THAT RUNS THE ECONOMY
Economic Systems Section 2.2 Scarcity of economic resources forces every country to develop an economic system that determines how resources will be used.
Comparative Economic Systems. Economic System  An economic system is the method used by a society to produce and distribute goods and services.
The Market System Demand, Supply and Price Determination.
Principles of Economics
3 Prepared by: Fernando Quijano and Yvonn Quijano © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair Demand, Supply,
© 2007 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Principles of Economics 8e by Case and Fair Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano 3 Chapter Demand, Supply, and.
Chapter 3 & 4 Demand and Supply
Introduction to Economics Chapter 17
CHAPTER 3 Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Principles of Macroeconomics 9e by Case, Fair.
Economics.
Warm Up I have one can of Coke that is up for grabs – How are we going to decide who gets it? – What will happen if I decide to auction it off? – Will.
Lesson 3.1 WHAT IS AN ECONOMY?
Economics. Economics What is Economics? is the study of how we produce and distribute our wealth.
Chapter 6.  Why does the market tend towards equilibrium?  Excess demand leads firms to raise prices, higher prices induce the quantity supplied to.
LOGO 2 DEMAND,SUPPLY, AND EQUILIBRIUM. BASIC CONSEPTS: 1.INTRODUCTION (TEN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS) 2.MICROECONOMICS: DEMAND, SUPPLY, AND MARKETS 3.FACTOR.
Good Anything that can be grown or manufactured (made) Food Clothes Cars.
Unit 7a Economics.
What is Economics? Think choices not money!. What is Economics? Economics – how people use their scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants.
Marketing I Curriculum Guide. Objective To understand the role of business in the free enterprise system. Be able to define free enterprise system Understand.
Factors of Production A shortage of resources is called scarcity. A basic economic problem for any society is how to manage its resources. To meet the.
Economics Review. Economic Systems Types of Economic Systems Traditional – people produce & distribute goods according to custom  Tribes in Africa Command.
Bell Ringer Activity Which economic system does the United States have? (Command, Market, or Mixed) Why do you think that?
1 The Classical Long-Run Model. 2 Classical Model A macroeconomic model that explains the long- run behavior of the economy Classical model was developed.
The Engine That Runs The Economy.  A consumer is anyone who buys or uses products  Consumer Economics is the study of the role consumers play in an.
Copyright 2006 – Biz/ed The Market System Demand, Supply and Price Determination.
3.1 Chapter 3: Demand, Supply and Equilibrium From Chapter 2: All societies must decide: What will be produced? How will it be produced? Who will get what.
10.Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium 1 Fundamentals of Management and Economics.
1 Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium Chapter 3.
Back to Table of Contents pp Chapter 2 Economic Resources and Systems.
1 of 46 Lecture 3 Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium Firms and Households: The Basic Decision-Making Units Input Markets and Output Markets: The Circular.
Economics. What is Economics? Economics: the branch of social science that deals with the production and distribution and consumption of goods and services.
Read to Learn Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to make decisions about using their resources. Contrast the way a.
  Scarcity is everywhere!  When a choice is made, the opportunity cost is the value of what is given up.  Therefore, all countries must make choices.
The Engine That Runs the Economy CHAPTER 1 – CONSUMERS.
Consumers – The Engine That Runs the Economy Personal Finance Chapter 1.
Econ 2301 Dr. Jacobson Mr. Stuckey Week 3 Class 3.
ECONOMIC BASICS.
Circular Flow of Income
Terrific Tuesday, December 1 OPENING ACTIVITY: Copy the following question and write out its complete answer. Which factor most contributed to improved.
Capitalism: A Market Economy Written by Ashley Hopkins and Frank Flanders, Ed.D. Resource Network 2010.
The Market System Demand, Supply and Price Determination.
Zuroni Md Jusoh Department of Resource Management and Consumer Studies Faculty of Human Ecology, UPM PSP 3000 Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium.
Economic Resources and Systems Chapter 2 pp
© Thomson/South-Western ECONOMIC EDUCATION FOR CONSUMERS Slide 1 Understanding Economic Systems Objectives: By the end of class, students will be able.
Intro To Microeconomics.  Cost is the money spent for the inputs used (e.g., labor, raw materials, transportation, energy) in producing a good or service.
Economics 1.3 Understanding Economic Systems
Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium
Overview of the U.S. Economy
Questions to think about!
Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium
Read to Learn Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to make decisions about using their resources. Contrast the way a.
MARKET EQUILIBRIUM.
UNDERSTANDING ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
Economics Basic Principles.
Click here to advance to the next slide.
Why does a country have to develop an economic system?
Economics Vocab 1.
Good Anything that can be grown or manufactured (made) Food Clothes Cars.
Economics (The Basics)
Presentation transcript:

Who decides what products will be produced? Warm Up Who decides what products will be produced?

Individuals What roles do you think individuals play in the economy? List!

Individual Roles in Economy Consumer Saver Investor Producer Earner Borrower Lender Taxpayer Recipient of government services

THE Conflict! The conflict between unlimited wants BUT limited resources forces both individuals and societies to make economic decisions What to produce How to produce For whom to produce

Productive Resources Land Labor Capital Entrepreneurs/management

Let’s Create Create a business and discuss what land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurs/management you will need

Economic Systems Every nation has an economic system An economic system is the way a nation uses resources to produce goods and services Production is the creation of goods and services Producing goods and services require resources Human Non-human Is the study of how economic systems work

Traditional Economy The ways to produce products are passed from one generation to the next Parents teach children how to produce goods and services Tribes in remote areas of the world still practice traditional economies

Command Economy The government owns most resources and made most economic decisions Each company receives a plan from the government that told it what to produce The government determines all prices, styles, colors, and the amounts produced Individuals have no say in production or their role in it Currently practiced: N.Korea and China

Market Economy The primary economic system in most industrialized economies Known as a market or capitalist economy People own the resources and run the businesses People make all the decisions (what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce) They set their own prices The purpose – to make a PROFIT $$$ Profit=price-cost

Mixed Economy Some government controls Some market controls Rate Limits on what businesses and individuals can do Some market controls The U.S. – with market economy dominat

Let’s Compare Compare a market economy to Traditional Command Mixed What are the similarities/differences?

What is Circular Flow of the Economy? Draw a circular flow model showing the roles of households, businesses, and government in a mixed capitalistic economy

Going to a Concert? Popular concert Sold out? Shortage of tickets? How many would buy for $25 More? Law of demand: consumers will demand more of a product at lower prices

Scarcity The basic problem facing every economy Consumer wants are greater than the resources available to satisfy those wants Resources are limited In a market economy, you choose what resources you will use to produce, how much, and the price You create market forces of demand and supply

Demand Law of Demand - the quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices during a given time period When the relationship between price and quantity demanded is shown on a graph, it is called a demand curve Downward from left to right (As price goes up, quantity demanded goes down)

Supply Supply is the quantity of a product that producers are willing and able to make available for sale at various prices over a given time period Law of supply: producers are willing to offer more of a product for sale at higher prices than at lower prices As the price rises, the quantity supplied increases The relationship between price and quantity supplied is shown in the supply curve

Equilibrium By combining the supply and demand curves on the same graph, you can see how supply and demand together determine how much of a product will be produced and the equilibrium price Equilibrium – price at which the quantity supplied exactly equals the quantity demanded In other words, consumers are willing and able to buy the same amount of the product as producers are willing and able to supply

Draw in Equilibrium

Surplus Excess quantity supplied Eventually will force producers to lower the price As price comes down, consumers will buy more until it returns to equilibrium

Shortage Consumers are willing and able to buy a lot at low prices They are willing to buy more than are available for sale Producers will start raising the price again until it reaches equilibrium

Challenges for the U.S/Market Economies Unemployment Income and wealth gaps Other: Environmental pollution, economic instability, discrimination

Using the Internet Employment data Family income distribution www.whitehouse.gov/fsbr/esbr/html Family income distribution www.census.gov/hhes/income/histinc/f02.htlm

Closure What factors determine what will be produced and at what prices in a market economy? Command economy?