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© 2007 Thomson South-Western
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Economic Systems
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western What is an Economic System? It’s the method used by society to produce goods and services
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western The Four Economic Systems Traditional Economy Market Economy Planned/Command Economy Mixed Economy
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Traditional Economy Relies on habit, custom, or ritual to make economic decision
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Market Economy Consumers and producers make the economic decisions
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Planned/Command Economy The government makes all of the economic decisions “We’ll fulfill five-year plan in four years!”
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Mixed Economy Economic decisions are made by both the government and consumers/producers.
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Economic Models
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Economic Models Economists use models to simplify reality in order to improve our understanding of the world. Two of the most basic economic models are: The Circular Flow Diagram The Production Possibilities Frontier
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Our First Model: The Circular-Flow Diagram The circular-flow diagram is a visual model of the economy that shows how dollars and resources flow through markets among households and firms.
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western
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Figure 1 The Circular Flow Model Spending Goods and services received Revenue Produced goods and services Labor, land, and capital Income = Flow of inputs and outputs = Flow of dollars Factors of production Wages, rent, and profit FIRMS HOUSEHOLDS Households sell Firms buy MARKETS FOR FACTORS OF PRODUCTION Firms sell Households buy MARKETS FOR GOODS AND SERVICES
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Our Second Model: The Production Possibilities Frontier The production possibilities frontier is a graph that shows the combinations of output that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production (resources) and the available production technology.
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western The Production Possibilities Frontier Production Possibilities Frontier A Quantity of Cars Produced 2,200 600 0 3,000 1,000 Quantity of Computers Produced The PPF shows you the maximum amount of resources you have for production If all resources were used, you can make 3,000 computers and 0 Cars. Or, you can make 1,000 cars and 0 computers
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western The Production Possibilities Frontier B A Quantity of Cars Produced 2,200 600 1,000 300 0 700 2,000 3,000 1,000 Quantity of Computers Produced C A= B= C= D= E= Production Efficiency Not possible! Underutilization E Efficiency & specialization in car production Brain Busta!!! D
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western Our Second Model: The Production Possibilities Frontier Concepts illustrated by the production possibilities frontier Allocation of resources Opportunity cost Economic growth
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western PPF Questions… B A Quantity of Cars Produced 2,200 600 1,000 300 0 700 2,000 3,000 1,000 Quantity of Computers Produced D 1.What is the opportunity cost of moving production from point A to point B? 2.What is the opportunity cost of moving production from point D to point B? What can cause the PPF to shift?
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© 2007 Thomson South-Western A Shift in the Production Possibilities Frontier Quantity of Cars Produced 2,200 600 2,300 650 0 4,000 3,000 1,000 Quantity of Computers Produced A G What do you think would cause the PPF to shift this particular way? Something changed that caused there to be more resources in computer production.
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