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Published byDrusilla Strickland Modified over 9 years ago
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Lesson 1
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Economics is the study of how things are bought and sold. When you go to the store and buy milk, you are participating in the local economy. When your parents buy a new house, they are participating in the national economy. When you buy something made outside of the U.S.A. (i.e. China), you are participating in the global economy. To be part of an economy, you must buy and sell goods or services.
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Goods and services are the products that satisfy our needs and wants. Goods are any items that can be bought or sold. Examples: Clothing, bicycles, breakfast cereals, and computers. A service is any action that one person or group does for another in exchange for payment. Examples: Teachers, cooks, lawyers, bankers, comedians, nurses, and doctors.
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Each region of the U.S. produces goods and services, depending on the available resources. A resource is anything used to produce goods and services. ▪ Renewable Resource: one that can be replaced, either naturally or by man. ▪ Nonrenewable Resource: one that cannot be replaced in a timely manner or at all by nature or by man
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RENEWABLE Wood Solar Energy Cotton NONRENEWABLE Crude Oil/Petroleum Coal Natural Gasses Methane Ethane
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For example, Washington is one of the top- ranked states in apple production. Its soil, a natural resource, is suitable for growing apples. Similarly, West Virginia is a region rich in coal Production is the process of changing raw materials into economic goods that can be used to satisfy the needs and wants of consumers
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Scarcity means we can never have all we want of every good and service. Desires and wants for goods and services are unlimited, while the resources needed to produce them are limited.
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Scarcity of resources includes money and time. Citizens, businesses, and governments make economic decisions based on the most effective use of their scarce resources. Countries rich in resources are better able to meet the needs and wants of their citizens.
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Think small!!! Small scale Microeconomics is the study of economic decisions made by consumers and producers that affect individuals in an economy
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Think big!!! Large scale Macroeconomics is the study of economic decisions that affect the economy of a nation.
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MicroeconomicsMacroeconomics A grocery store has a buy-one-get-one- free sale. The Federal Reserve lowers interest rates. A cell phone company offers a family rate plan. Congress tackles Social Security Issues. A youth organization seeks to recruit volunteers. The nation’s unemployment reaches a 20-year low. A local library extends its hours.The United States’ trade deficit widens with China. The city passes a $0.03 gas tax.OPEC raises the price per barrel of crude oil.
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Introduction to Economics, Part 1 Introduction to Economics, Part 1
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