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What to produce? How to produce? For whom to produce?
ECONOMICS What to produce? How to produce? For whom to produce?
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Resources are things people use. MONEY is a resource!
Oil is a resource Timber, machines, and many other things… Resources are limited – not enough to meet every need It is all about the money – honey!
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ECONOMICS Is the study of how people, businesses, and countries use limited resources. There are different types of economic systems. TRADITIONAL COMMAND MARKET MIXED
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TRADITIONAL ECONOMIES
People usually produce just what they need to survive. Land is usually owned by a wealthy ruling class. People in a traditional economy inherit their position from their parents. They are not expected to advance. Farmers remain farmers, herders remain herders, etc. People are motivated to produce by the need to survive. In rural parts of Latin America, communities still depend to a certain degree on traditional economies.
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COMMAND ECONOMIES GOVERNMENT OWNS THE MEANS OF PRODUCTION!
Most businesses and property belong to the state rather than private businesses. The GOVERNMENT decides what will be produced and how much will be produced.
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President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela
controlling the economy. Command Economies The goal of command economies is economic equality – designed to keep people from being too rich or too poor. BUT – this rarely works! Command economies are inefficient. There is often not enough of the products people want (SHORTAGE) or too much of things people don’t want (SURPLUS)
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Command Economy Command economies often limit the amount of money people can make. Workers do not have the motivation of becoming wealthy or getting promoted if they work hard. Govt limits how much money a business can make. There is no financial reward for producing better products.
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MARKET ECONOMIES Allow for PRIVATE OWNERSHIP of businesses and property Often called “CAPITALIST” because they encourage capitalism. CAPITALISM supports private ownership and the pursuit of profit in business. Profit is the amount of money businesses make after they pay the cost of producing their product.
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MARKET Economies Market economies have very little gov’t regulation.
Market demand (what people want to buy) determines what will be produced rather than the gov’t.
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MARKET A MARKET is wherever buyers and sellers exchange money and goods. When you buy a new shirt or DVD, you are exchanging money in an economic market! In market economies – BUSINESSES are free to produce what they want. BUYERS are free to buy what they want.
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Market Economies vs. Command
Market economies operate more efficiently than command economies. Since, businesses want to make money – they produce only what the market demands. If people want shirts, then producers will make shirts. Shortages and surpluses usually don’t last very long in market economies.
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Market Economies produce INNOVATION!
Innovation – new and better ways of doing things Businesses are COMPETING with each other. They have to find ways to make products better or invent new things! They have to hire the most-qualified people to do this…they pay more $ to skilled workers. Workers have an incentive to work hard and get more training. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT occurs faster in market economies.
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?? Downside to Market Economies ??
They often produce “haves” and “have nots” Financial success depends on the ability to respond to market demands – market economies produce a few rich people, a large middle class, and a poor lower class. There is no guarantee of equality in a market economy.
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MIXED ECONOMIES In reality, most economies are MIXED economies!
They are not totally command or totally market. They are partly both.
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UNITED STATES United States – not totally market.
The gov’t places some regulations on the economy. But overall, the gov’t is supposed to let the market operate as freely as possible.
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CANADA Canada’s economy is MIXED.
Much of the economy is a free market. The government controls some areas, like healthcare. Canada’s main economic industries include, agriculture, energy resources, foresting, manufacturing and service industries. Canada is one of the world’s wealthiest and most-developed nations.
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CUBA Mostly COMMAND ECONOMY
RAUL CASTRO Mostly COMMAND ECONOMY The govt owns most property and controls production. The govt employs most of Cuba’s workers. Like in most command economies, Cuba’s is inefficient and less developed than free-market nations. Much of Cuba’s population is very poor.
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BRAZIL Economy is mixed – leans towards free market
It is very developed. Its GDP is second-highest in the world. Only the US is higher. Brazil’s key industries – agriculture, technology, automobile and aircraft production, chemicals, and steel It also has many businesses and financial institutions. It also exports many goods.
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TRADE International trade occurs when nations choose to exchange goods. Nations engage in trade because it is either impossible or inefficient to produce all that they need themselves.
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SPECIALIZATION Specialization encourages trade!
Nations specialize in producing certain things. Venezuela & Mexico produce large amounts of oil. Other countries produce other products. Trade allows countries to acquire the things they need and sell the things they produce.
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IMPORTS and EXPORTS IMPORTS – goods that a country buys from producers in another country EXPORTS – goods that producers in one country ship to another country
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TRADE BARRIERS Obstacles to trade Can be natural or human-produced
President John F. Kennedy Signed an EMBARGO against Cuba in early 1960 TRADE BARRIERS Obstacles to trade Can be natural or human-produced NATURAL – mountains, deserts, rainforests POLITICAL – rules passed by a govt to regulate trade Often intended to help a country’s own producers be more competitive in the market place May be aimed at punishing or putting economic pressure on another country
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Tariffs and Quotas TARIFF – tax on imported goods – Tariffs raise prices on foreign goods. This makes it less profitable for countries to sell their goods in foreign markets. QUOTA – limit on trade – Quotas restrict the amount of a foreign good that may be imported in a given amount of time.
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SANCTIONS & EMBARGOES POLITICAL BARRIERS to trade.
Sanctions are policies that restrict a country’s trade with another country – usually meant to force a country to change some policy EMBARGOES – more drastic – nations refuse to trade with a certain country at all – The United States has had an embargo against Cuba in place for almost fifty years.
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ENCOURAGING TRADE - NAFTA
North American Free Trade Agreement It is an agreement between United States Canada Mexico NAFTA removed tariffs and increased trade between these countries.
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CURRENCY Currency is something that is assigned value. It is used to buy goods and services in a market. EXCHANGE RATE – What the currency of one nation in worth in another nation One goal of the European Union was to establish a common currency – the EURO
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CAPITAL GOODS Goods used to produce things Factories Machinery
Computers Technology & Advanced Equipment The value of all the goods a nation produces in a year is called the GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP).
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NATURAL RESOURCES Affect economic development!
Nations rich in natural resources can produce revenue (money). Oil is a valuable resource Precious metals Others (timber, gas. …)
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HUMAN CAPITAL Refers to the investments in the welfare and training of human workers. Providing health care, education, programs to improve people’s job skills – These are investments in human capital. Investment in human capital usually produces a healthier, more satisfied, more productive workforce. More productivity results in higher GDP
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ENTREPRENEURS People who start and own private businesses.
Nations with free-market economies encourage entrepreneurship. Nations with socialist policies, like Cuba and Venezuela, limit what type of businesses may be privately owned.
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TEST PREP #1 When Canada sells goods in Mexico and the United States without having to pay tariffs, it is benefiting from Natural trade barriers Political trade barriers Canadian imports NAFTA
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TEST PREP #2 Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chavez, has supported more state control of major industries. Such state control would exist in a A. traditional economy B. market economy C. command economy D. free-trade economy
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TEST PREP #3 Which of the following describes a nation with high GDP?
Command economy Socialist state Entrepreneurship discouraged Large investments in capital goods
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TEST PREP #4 What answers the economic question “What to Produce” in a market economy? A. The state B. The government C. Buyer demand D. Democracy
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TEST PREP #5 Which of the following is closest to a command economy?
A. Brazil B. Cuba C. Mexico D. Canada
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TEST PREP #6 For almost fifty years, the United States has refused to trade with Cuba. Such a policy is best described as a/an A. Sanction B. Embargo C. Tariff D. Natural trade barrier
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TEST PREP #7 One look at the map reveals that Bolivia faces
A. the threat of war from Venezuela B. the challenges of a constitutional monarchy C. the natural trade barrier of being landlocked D. embargoes from Brazil
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TEST PREP #8 The shaded countries on the map belong to A. GDP B. NAFTA
C. North American Trading Partnership NCAA
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TEST PREP #9 When nations exchange goods, it is called
A. international trade B. international tariff C. international capital D. entrepreneurship
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TEST PREP # 10 What is GDP? A. the value of all the goods a nation produces in a year B. great domestic product C. the value of all the good imported in a year D. gross domestic producers
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