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Economics Review Ms. Gray. The fundamental economic problem in any society is to provide a set of rules for allocating resources and/or consumption among.

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Presentation on theme: "Economics Review Ms. Gray. The fundamental economic problem in any society is to provide a set of rules for allocating resources and/or consumption among."— Presentation transcript:

1 Economics Review Ms. Gray

2 The fundamental economic problem in any society is to provide a set of rules for allocating resources and/or consumption among individuals who can't satisfy their wants, given limited resources.

3 Three basic Economic Questions 1. What and how much will be produced? 2. How will it be produced? 3. For whom will it be produced?

4 Market Economy Individuals own and operate factors of production. Based on Supply and Demand. – AKA: Free enterprise, Capitalism Examples: United States, Great Britain, Japan

5 Command Economy Government controls all factors of production and government makes decisions. – AKA: Socialism, Communism Examples: Cuba, China, Laos, North Korea

6 Traditional Economy Based on agriculture, customs and traditions, and the main job is farming or hunting. – found today in underdeveloped, agricultural parts of South America, Asia, and Africa. Examples: Chad, Haiti, Rwanda

7 Mixed Economy A combination of two economies. – usually means an economy that contains both privately-owned and state-owned enterprises or that combines elements of capitalism and socialism, or a mix of market economy and planned economy characteristics – Most effective economy for providing goods and services Examples: USA and China

8 Gross Domestic Product AKA- GDP Measures the economic income and output of a given country’s economy. – Economists use GDP data to measure the economy’s growth

9 5 Factors of Production 1.Land-Natural occurring resources which supply is fixed. Used to produce goods and services. Example: Mineral Deposits 2. Labor-measure of work done by a human being. Example: factory workers, medical personnel, and teachers. 3. Capital- Anything used to produce a good or service. Not naturally occurring. Example: If you make cars you need machines to make the metal that is used in the cars. 4. Entrepreneurs- Person who is a risk-taker and owns and operates a business.

10 5. Resources Renewable- A resource that can be replaced. – Example: trees Non-renewable- A resource that cannot be replaced. – Example: diamonds

11 Human Capital People working. Skills and knowledge used to perform a task. – Example: College Degree

12 Trade Barriers A trade barrier is a general term that describes any government policy or regulation that restricts international trade. Quota- a physical limit set on the quantity of a good that can be imported. Embargo- Prohibition of trade. Tariff- A tax placed on goods imported into a country.

13 Specialization When a country focuses on producing a main product. Why? Each person specializes in one occupation, to become the best at that job as possible, while others do the same with other occupations.

14 Currency Currency- Shells Precious Metals – Silver – Gold Bills or Notes – Paper $ (Dollars, Peso, Euro, and so on) Plastic – Debit and Credit Cards Currency Exchange- Different countries use different currencies. Different currencies are not equal and are worth different amounts. Generally, exporters prefer to be paid in their country’s currency (or in U.S. dollars, which are accepted all over the world).


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