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Impact of Human, Capital, Productive, and Natural Resources on Investment (7.05) J. Worley Civics
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Resources for Investment ► 4 Major Resources For Investment ► Human Capital The money made by individuals and put back into the market in hopes of making more ► Capital The investment in the productivity of a business or firm ► Natural Resources The investment in resources to help boost their cause or make it easier to access ► Productive The investment in the numbers of products made or sold
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Resources for Investment (cont.) ► Capital Goods Products used to make other goods or provide services EX- Bolts used in car engines, Vans used by delivery services ► Consumer Goods Items produced for final use by individuals EX- Bottle of Cola, Toaster, Pair of Skis
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Resources for Investment (cont.) ► Producer Price Index (PPI) Producer Price Index (PPI) Producer Price Index (PPI) Used to estimate the costs of goods that producers might purchase or sell Measures the average change in prices of different goods As it pertains to investment, it not only looks at the amount of money a producer spends on capital goods but also the opportunity costs of not using that money to produce more goods to be sold
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Productivity ► Output vs. Input Input is all of the factors of production that go into making a good or service Output is simple the amount of goods or services being made This is how the opportunity cost of lost production can be found Producers have to be aware of the Law of Diminishing Return
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Productivity (cont.) ► Law of Diminishing Return As more and more of a variable input (Chefs) is combined with a fixed input (Kitchen Space), the amount of output per input decreases This is also true for customers ► EX- Your first bowl of peppermint ice cream may be great. Your second bowl may be good. Chances are you will loss enjoyment as you keep eating bowl- after-bowl of it.
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Productivity (cont.) ► Recycling When a good is reprocessed or reused EX- Paper, Aluminum, Plastic ► Education and Training People increase their knowledge, skills, and value workers Some employers are willing to pay for people to go back to school & learn more about their trade
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How do Economic Systems Address Key Economic Factors (7.06)
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Economic Systems ► Market Economy (Free Market Economy) Producers are free to produce what they choose to produce and consumers are free to consume what they choose to consume ► Command Economy Economy where prices and production are controlled by the government ► Mixed Economy (Mixed Market Economy) Elements of both a Market and Command Economies are present Represents more of what the US economy is
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Market Economy ► Market is the organized exchange of goods, services and resources within a given region at a given time ► Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations Is one of the most comprehensive defenses of a free market economy Argues the market is led by incentive on both sides ► Laissez-Faire French term meaning to leave alone, hands-off Implies that government should not attempt to manipulate nor regulate the market
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Market Economy (cont.) ► “Invisible Hand” This is the unseen force that Smith said would direct the economy Relies on 3 Conditions ► Competition- Many buyers and sellers competing ► Capitalism- Ownership of capital by producing firms ► Free Enterprise- Freedom to buy/sell what one wishes
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Market Economy (cont.) ► Profit Motive Producers have an incentive to produce what consumers want because to do so will make them money ► Incentives Influence choices made within an economy EX- Low prices encourage people to buy more ► Private Property Property and capital that belongs to a person
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Market Economy (cont.) ► Traditional Society The basic economic decisions that are made according to long-established patterns of behavior that are unlikely to change ► Keynesian Theory Advocates an aggressive governmental fiscal policy Fiscal Policy ► Govt’s strategy for using changes in public spending Deficit Spending ► Practice of govts spending more than they have in revenue
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Command Economy ► Can also be called Communism ► Communism Society in which everyone does their best to contribute to the common good This is socialism at its ideal stage Socialism ► Gov’t controls all capital and owns all property
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Command Economy (cont.) ► Karl Marx’s Communist Manifesto Attacked capitalism as an unjust system that privileged the rich and exploited the poor working class Foundation for the Socialist/Communist System Believed that profit motive and incentive were unnecessary because people would produce just as much through cooperation
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Economies of the World ► Mixed Economy USA (Gov’t runs some areas) ► Command Economy Cuba ► Market Economy England (USA is still considered in this) ► CIA World Fact Book CIA World Fact Book CIA World Fact Book
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