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Economics
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Economics Economic system – part of society that deals with production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services Tools used to produce Relationship of tools to people and people to eachother in the process of producing, distributing, and consuming goods
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Economics Society and economics are interdependent Culture shapes goals of the people and how they achieve those goals Organization of production has consequences for family structure and political system
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Economic behavior Economics is the study of the decisions people and societies make about how to use scarce resources to produce and distribute goods and services Based on the idea of scarcity – unlimited wants, limited resources
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Economic behavior People will do what gives them the greatest benefit = economizing behavior Greatest benefit depends on your motivation…money, grades, time with family and friends, … Prestige varies Consumption, display of goods Generosity, giving away of goods
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Production Allocation of resources Organization of resources
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Production- Allocation of Resources Productive resources – things you need to participate in the economy Land, water, tool making materials, fishing boats, knowledge As population and social complexity increase, more resources controlled by fewer people
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Production- Allocation of Resources Foragers Productive resources = hunting weapons, food gathering tools, knowledge Live in small groups that share land with flexible boundaries that change as food availability changes and the group moves
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Production- Allocation of Resources Pastoralists Productive resources = land, water, and livestock Kinship groups share access to pasture Head of household owns livestock Animals require a lot of care Negotiate access to pasture surrounding villages they pass through
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Production- Allocation of Resources Horticulturalists Productive resources = land, tools, knowledge, storage facilities Land owned by kin group, members given permission to use plots Clearing land requires labor Where land scarce or population high, competition for land may lead to war
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Production- Allocation of Resources Agriculturalists Productive resources = Complex tools, land, water, Surplus of food supports more people Individual landowners and laborers who work fields Leads to more complex society with ruling elite
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Production – Organization of Labor Nonindustrial societies Household is the unit of production/consumption Goals are often social or religious Labor is part of membership in kin group Industrial societies Business firm is unit of production Goal is economic growth Labor is commodity, bought and sold on market
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Production – Organization of Labor Division of Labor by Sex Women give birth, nurse, care for children Foraging – women forage, men hunt Horticulture – women grow staple foods, men grow trade foods Agriculture – women spend more time in childcare, men grow trade crops and have capital in marketplace; women more dependent
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Production – Organization of Labor Specialization of Labor Complex agriculture of storable foods (grain), increased population of specialists Specialists produce goods, arts, religion, services
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Distribution Exchange of goods Reciprocity Redistribution Market exchange
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Distribution Reciprocity Mutual give and take among people of equal status Generalized reciprocity Balanced reciprocity Negative reciprocity
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Distribution Reciprocity Generalized reciprocity Distribution of goods with no immediate or specific return expected Successful hunter distributes meat to community Gains credit for future return, prestige, satisfaction Balanced reciprocity Negative reciprocity
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Distribution Reciprocity Generalized reciprocity Balanced reciprocity Clear obligation to return, within time limit, goods of equal value Gift giving, trading partners Negative reciprocity
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Distribution Reciprocity Generalized reciprocity Balanced reciprocity Negative reciprocity When trade is conducted for material advantage, desire to get something for nothing or to get the better end of a bargain Gambling, theft, cheating, haggling Large societies where exchange is between strangers
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Distribution Redistribution Goods are collected from the group then given out in a new pattern, like taxes Involves social center Potlatch- Pacific Northwest Native American redistribution system where chiefs who gave away or destroyed goods gained prestige Leveling mechanisms
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Distribution Redistribution Leveling mechanisms – practices, values or forms of social organization that even out the distribution of wealth Force accumulated resources to be used in ways that reduce economic differences Cargo systems – wealthy community members are elected to offices that require them to provide food and drink during festivals
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Distribution Market Exchange – goods and services are bought and sold for money, value determined by supply and demand Social and political roles not important Main goal is maximizing material gain Productive resources become capital when used to increase owner’s financial wealth Capitalism
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Distribution Market Exchange Capitalism - people work for wages, land and capital goods are privately owned, capital is invested for individual profit Capital owned by small portion of population Most people’s primary resource is their labor Value of worker’s contribution to production is always greater than compensation they receive
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