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WELCOME TO AP MACROECONOMICS! Mrs. Brouda, CB South High School 2012-2013 Real Life Economics 5 minutes Play as many games of Rock-Paper-Scissors Winner earns candy of choice Continue playing into you have the desired candy (or none at all) Why did we do this? Introductions Find your matching “Brouda-fact” Interview your partner Name Best thing about being a senior Post high school plans Preferred superpower—Fly OR Be invisible Return to Your Seat Introduce Your Partner to the Class Contact Information Mrs. Brouda http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZI152QbNwI Email Phone Website Courses Taught: 1st Block 2nd Block 4th Block [email protected] (preferred method) 267-893-3000 x 3178 www.moourl.com/brouda Global Relations AP Macroeconomics AP Macroeconomics Seating Chart Course Website You are encouraged to check the course site. http://moourl.com/brouda OR http://www1.cbsd.org/sites/teachers/hs/tbrouda A calendar of assignments can be found on the course website. Note guides for nightly readings and copies of class handouts are available as well Course Highlights 18 week course satisfies senior Social Studies requirement Use college text and supplemental resources to prepare for May 16, 2013 exam Course topics include basic economic principles, national income and price level determination, fiscal and monetary policy, and international finance and trade. Units of Study 1 2 3 4 • Basic Economic Principles (3 weeks) • National Income & Price Level Determination (6 weeks) • Fiscal & Monetary Policy (6 weeks) • International Finance & Trade (3 weeks) Classroom Expectations RESPECT! Academic Integrity All school policies regarding cell phones, electronics, tardy are in effect Students are responsible for making up missed assignments. Daily handouts are available on the Sharepoint site. Students have 1 day to make up assignments for each day absent (3 for major assignments) Long term projects and writing assignments receive a 10% deduction for each day late. Grading Policies The district grading scale will be followed. Marking Period Grade: Tests 60% Quizzes 10% Group Research Podcasts 10% Core Assignments 10% Blackboard Discussions 10% Final Course Grade: 80% comes from marking period grade (see above). 20% comes from the district-wide final exam. Cumulative Exam: 30pt essay and 70pt multiple choice. Upcoming Assignments Unit Tests approximately every 2 weeks. Unit 1 Test is February 15th Defining Economics Complete the pre-test (5 minutes) Work with a partner to complete definition on reverse side (5 minutes) Why Economics? Did you know? 3.0 Knew, New & a Question 1 thing you knew 1 thing that was new (and interesting) 1 question AN ECONOMIC WAY OF THINKING Ch. 1 You Can’t Always Get What You Want… “And you can’t always get what you want, Honey, you can’t always get what you want You can’t always get what you want But if you try sometime, yeah, You just might find you get what you need!” -Mick Jagger and Keith Richards 1969 Simply stated, this chorus explains why everyone has to make choices… Essential Question Why can’t you always get what you want? We will explore this question in Unit I… What do we do when resources are scarce? SCARCITY SIMULATION Faced with the fundamental economic problem… THE BEST DECISIONS ARE PACED PACED Decision Making ? • P-What is the PROBLEM? • A-What are the ALTERNATIVES • C-What CRITERIA are important to the decision? • E-EVALUATE each alternative with the criteria • D-DECIDE among alternatives Scarcity Simulation • Divide into groups of 4 OR 5 (your choice!) • Consider the scarce resource • Complete the PACED model in your group – Everyone must submit a copy to receive credit PACED Decision Making ? • P-What is the PROBLEM? • A-What are the ALTERNATIVES • C-What CRITERIA are important to the decision? • E-EVALUATE each alternative with the criteria • D-DECIDE among alternatives PACED Decision Making Process • 5 Minutes: Brainstorm for alternative ways of resolving the problem you group faces. Rule nothing out. • 10 Minutes: Complete the balance of the chart with your group – Criteria – Evaluation – Decision • Appoint one representative to report your decision Criterion Criterion Criterion Rank Rank Rank Alternative 1 Alternative 2 Alternative 3 Alternative Criterion Rank Scarcity Debriefing (5 minutes) • On the reverse side of your handout briefly respond to the following: – Define scarcity in your own words – What was the scarce good in our simulation? – Why was it scarce? – How criteria help you decide among alternative allocations for the good? – Do you agree with your group’s decision for the good? Explain why or why not. Economics: The Core Issues Chapter 1 Economics • Economics is the study of how best to allocate scarce resources among competing uses. • Define this in your own words To solve economic problems, 3 core issues must be resolved: • WHAT to produce with our limited resources. • HOW to produce the goods and services we select. • FOR WHOM goods and services are produced; that is, who should get them. LO2 Why is what we want scarce? • Scarcity: the lack of enough resources to satisfy all desired uses of those resources Why does this condition arise? • Wants > Resources • Goods and services are scarce because the resources needed to produce them are scarce! Everything is Scarce! Activity…Why is what we want scarce? Look around the classroom… 1. List 3 goods that you see in the classroom and 2 services that exist in this school. 2. Explain why these goods/services are scarce. How did the goods/services get here? Nothing appears magically… These goods/services were produced to satisfy our wants… Essential Question: How do we satisfy our economic wants? • Factors of production are resource inputs used to produce goods and services. Factors of Production • Land refers to all natural resources such as crude oil, water, air, and minerals. Labor refers to the skills and abilities to produce goods and services. If the production at South is student achievement, What land is used? What labor is needed? Factors of Production • Capital includes the final goods produced for use in the production of other goods, e.g., equipment, structures. Entrepreneurship is the assembling of resources to produce new or improved products and technologies. If the production at South is student achievement, What capital is used? What entrepreneurship is needed? Check Up: Factors of Production Which factor of production is each of the following? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Trees in a forest Cook in a restaurant Tractor used to plow fields Ice cream store owner Freezer in the ice cream store 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Rocks Lumber sitting at Home Depot Iron ore Fish in the ocean An economics teacher at South Visualizing the Relationship… Limited Resources & Unlimited Wants Scarcity Trade-offs (choices) Opportunity Costs Trade-offs • Definition: alternative choices • Choices must be made to satisfy our wants and needs (scarcity … wants > resources) • Each choice in a trade-off has advantages and disadvantages. Examples… • Some choices are easy to make… – Hmm… Should I have pizza or a hoagie for lunch today? • Other decisions are agonizing… – Should I get out of bed and go to school today or should I sleep in? Today’s Simulation • Groups had to decide among alternatives – Easy choice? Difficult? – Value of criteria in making decisions? • What trade offs did you experience? – Fairness vs. Equality – A chance a whole candy bar vs. just a taste Reflecting on Personal Trade-offs… Write down three examples of a trade-offs you made in the last week… Be prepared to share! Opportunity Cost • When comparing the top 2 choices, it is the BENEFIT of the next best alternative that must be sacrificed to satisfy a want. – Not all possible things given up. The best thing we give up to get what we want. Considering the Opportunity Cost of Personal Trade-offs… Revisit ONE trade-off listed above… What was the opportunity cost? Be prepared to share! Reviewing Opportunity Cost… What opportunity cost arises from each of the following trade-offs? I packed my lunch rather than buying it so I would have money to go out to dinner on Friday. I went to work on Thursday night to earn money rather than studying for a test I had on Friday. I did not go to the movies with my friends so I would have money to buy gas. I turned down an offer to Goucher College [on full scholarship] so I could go to Bryn Mawr. ESSENTIAL QUESTION How can we measure what we are gaining and losing when making choices? Measuring Opportunity Cost Graphically… Production Possibility Curves Production Possibility Frontier [PPC]: • Represents ALL combinations of total output that could be produced when ALL resources are fully employed and used efficiently. Why is the PPC curve downward sloping? • Trade-offs – We are always making a choice and giving something up Young Mrs. Brouda had a farm… • 100 acres – Grow 100 apple trees and 0 pear trees – Grow 50 pear trees and 0 apple trees Young Mrs. Brouda had a farm… • 100 acres – How would an economist describe 20 apple trees and 5 pear trees? – How would an economist describe 50 apple trees and 50 pear trees? Young Mrs. Brouda had a farm… • 100 acres – What is the opportunity cost of growing an apple tree? – What is the opportunity cost of growing a pear tree? Production Possibilities Illustrates Two Essential Principles • Scarce resources – there’s a limit to the amount we can produce in a given time period with available resources and technology. • Opportunity costs – we can obtain additional quantities of any desired good only by reducing the potential production of another good. LO1 Law of Increasing Opportunity Costs • Resources do not transfer perfectly from the production of one good to another. • Increasing quantities of any good can be obtained only by sacrificing ever-increasing quantities of other goods. • Resources used to produce trucks aren’t ideally suited for producing tanks. Law of Increasing Opportunity Costs OUTPUT OF TRUCKS 5 A Step 1: give up one truck B 4 3 2 Step 2: get two tanks Step 3: give up another truck C Step 4: get one more tank D E 1 0 1 2 3 OUTPUT OF TANKS 4 5 F Guns & Butter vs. Apples & Pears • Tanks and Trucks –curved PPC – Resources not interchangeable in trade off from one to another – Guns-Butter trade off points to decisions countries face • i.e. North Korea vs. Finland • Apples & Pears—a straight line PPC – Resources needed are interchangeable – Opportunity cost of one item to another fixed Efficiency • Efficiency means getting the maximum output of a good from the resources used in production. • Every point on a production possibilities curves is efficient. Inefficiency • A production possibilities curves shows potential output, not necessarily actual output. • If we are inefficient, actual output will be less than the potential output. Inefficiency • Countries may end up inside their production possibilities curve if resources are inefficiently combined. Such inefficiencies plagued centrally planned economies. Unemployment • Countries may end up inside their production possibilities curve if all available resources are not used. Unemployment OUTPUT OF TRUCKS 5 A 4 B 3 Y 2 C Unemployment 1 0 1 2 3 OUTPUT OF TANKS 4 5 Economic Growth • A point outside the production possibilities curve suggests that we could get more goods than we are capable of producing! • Economic growth is an increase in output (real GDP) – an expansion of production possibilities. Economic Growth OUTPUT OF TRUCKS 5 A X Currently not attainable B 4 C 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 OUTPUT OF TANKS 4 5 Problem Set # 1 • A society can make either guns or butter • Put guns on the x-axis and butter on the y-axis • Label the following points: Point A Guns 5 Butter 3 B 3 9 C 1 15 X 5 5 Y 1 1 Problem Set # 2 • A society can make either Jeeps (x-axis) or Cars (y-axis) • If the economy makes 100 cars, it can’t make any jeeps • If the economy makes 200 jeeps, it can’t make any cars Problem Set #3 - Exploring the Essential Question • Imagine that a new society, Paternoville, produces only two items: Footballs and Peachy Paterno Ice Cream. • Use the information on the table below to construct a Production Possibilities Frontier with Footballs on the x-axis and Peachy Paterno Ice Cream on the y-axis. Footballs Peachy Paterno Ice Cream (gallons) 100 0 90 4 75 8 50 12 0 16 1. If the economy is currently producing 90 footballs, what is the opportunity cost of producing 10 additional footballs? 2. What is the opportunity cost of increasing the annual output of Peachy Paterno Ice Cream from 8 to 12 gallons? 3. If there were a labor shortage or some other event that effects production, where would the output of Paternoville production appear on the graph? 4. What would happen to Paternoville’s PPF if a technological advancement improved production across the board? The Mechanism of Choice • An economy is largely defined by how it answers the WHAT, HOW and FOR WHOM questions. LO3 A Theoretic Continuum Smith Keynes Marx Conservative Government Intervention Government Coordination Laissez Faire A Mixed Economy • A mixed economy is one that uses both market signals and government directives to allocate goods and resources. • Most economies use a combination of market signals and government directives to select economic outcomes. LO3 Market Failure • Market failure: allocation of goods and services (answers to the 3 questions) under a free market are inefficient • Can you think of an example of a market failure? A market failure… • Coal fired power plants may provide electricity at the lowest price (most efficiently), but who bears the cost? Government Failure • Government intervention may move us closer to our economic goals or it may fail. • A government failure is government intervention that fails to improve economic outcomes. • Can you think of an example of a government failure? A government failure… • Centrally planned economies could not keep up with the modern world… Seeking Balance • The challenge for society is to minimize failures by selecting the appropriate balance of market signals and government directives. • Which economist would agree most? Macro Versus Micro • Macroeconomics is the study of aggregate economic behavior, of the economy as a whole. • Microeconomics is the study of individual behavior in the economy, of the components of the larger economy. Theory Versus Reality • The economy is much too vast and complex to describe and explain in one course (or one lifetime). • Economists use theories, or models, of economic behavior to evaluate and design economic policy. Theory Versus Reality • In these theories, we typically ignore the possibility that many things can change at one time. Ceteris paribus is the assumption that nothing else is changing. Smith, Marx and Keynes A GREAT DEBATE 3 men walk in… • Divide into 3 groups – A: Notes and Web Search on Smith – B: Notes and Web Search on Marx – C: Notes and Web Search on Keynes • How would each respond to the questions of WHAT, HOW, and for WHOM? – Identify a country who’s economic policies mirror your theortist – Complete chart summarizing position & critique – Create poster for sharing with the class The Fight! • Opening Statements (3 min per economist) • Rebuttal (5 min per economist) – Includes 2 questions directed at each economist & response • Closing Statements (2 min) • Debrief—why this matters Roles • Opening Statement: 3 ppl (one per economist) • Rebuttal: 2 ppl—one ? to each economist • Response: anyone, as needed • Closing Statement: 3 ppl (one per economist)