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Warm-up 1. If you could buy one thing in the entire world – no matter cost – what would it be? Chapter 2 Section 3 Centrally Planned Economies • In a centrally planned economy, the central government rather than individual producers ___________, and consumers in markets, answers the key economic ___________ questions of production and consumption. bureaucracy • A central ____________ makes all the decisions what items to produce, _____ how about _____ to produce who gets them. them, and ____ • It is up to the bureaucrats to ensure that each materials workers firm has enough raw __________ and ________ to meet its production goal. Government Control land and capital • The government owns both_______________, labor and in a sense ________ too. where • Farmers are told _________ to plant, _____ to how plant and where to send their crop. The free self-interest and competition market forces of __________ absent are ________ from the system. consumer voice in production and • The lack of _________ distribution shows that under centrally planned _________ sovereignty economies, consumers do not have_________. Socialism AND political philosophy • Socialism is a social ____ based on the belief that democratic means distribute wealth evenly should be used to ___________________ only throughout a society. Real equality can _____ exist when political equality is coupled with economic equality. ________ democracies and • Socialist countries may be ___________ industries usually the government owns major _________. Karl Marx • A social philosopher who was critical of capitalist ________ employers for their emphasis on profit ______ and developed a plan for classless society a ________ which he called communism. Communism • Communism is a centrally planned ALL economic and economy with ____ power resting in the hands political ______ of the government. • Unlike socialists, communists authoritarian governments are___________. • Authoritarian governments require obedience from their citizens strict _________ freedom and do not allow individual ________ of judgment and action. The soviet union • In the early 1900’s the USSR was most concerned with national power and prestige. They allocated building _______ armed forces the best land, labor and capital to the_____________, capital goods They space program and production of____________. created large state-owned farms. Aggie workers were guaranteed employment and income…with ____ no ___________ incentives, individuals had few reasons to produce more or _______ better crops, thus before long the Soviets _____ could not feed all of its people. • The state also owned heavy industry. Again, once production ______ quota was met, there was no __________ incentive to produce more quality goods. In fact, it was illegal to exhibit entrepreneurial behavior. scarce and poor • Consumer goods were ______ quality. For example, a manufacturer assigned to produce a certain number of suits could loosely stitch the buttons and forget the buttonholes and mismatch coats and trousers…but still the state store had accept to ______ delivery of the suits and no alternatives consumers had_____________. hours Consumers would have to wait ______ in line for goods. Items such as housing and food was_________, yet rarely available affordable • The breakup of the soviet union in 1991 was partly due to the collapse of its centrally economy Mikhail planned_________. Gorbachev told the Soviet people that their economy was modernize in trouble and must ________ to help productivity. The economy grew worse, inflation soared, goods were scarce unrest leading to political________. Which of the following economic goals are difficult to achieve in a centrally planned economy? 1. 2. 3. 4. Economic efficiency Economic security and predictability Economic equity Economic growth and innovation Ch 2.4 Modern Economies How much would you be willing to pay if you had to buy a ticket to use roads and highways? Or to have your house saved from a fire? Or to send someone into outer space? Or for this economics class (be nice or to borrow a book from the library? Or to play on the jungle gym at the park? Or to have an officer help you when your wallet is stolen? mixed • Today most economies are _______ economic systems. 1 economic system can adequately • No ___ satisfy everyone’s wants and______. needs ______ The Limits of Laissez Faire • Adam Smith believed that left to its own devices, the free market __________ system would provide the greatest benefit for _________ consumers and raise the standard of living. laissez faire • They followed__________, government the doctrine that _________ generally should not intervene in the marketplace. However, most still believed the need limited for a certain _________ degree of government intervention in the economy • Some needs that markets meet fall to governments so ALL that _____ members of society can participate. Ex. Education protecting • Governments create laws ________ property rights and enforcing contracts. competition Without laws insisting on___________, many people fear some firms would dominate others. • This all depends on the opportunity cost of pursuing each goal. Are you willing to pay taxes to fund the army? To give money to people without jobs? To give all people an education? Circular Flow Model: Mixed Eco Circular Flow Model • The structure of most modern economies include__________. government 2.8 million • The government pays ___ billion employees 9.7 ______ dollars a year for their labor. goods • Governments also provide certain _____ and services. Ex. 4 million miles of roads transfer money. Ex. • Governments also _______ Social Security. Sweden • Sweden’s mixed economy has mixed benefits. The government redistributes more than _____ half social benefit of Sweden’s wealth through ______ programs. When a child is born, his or her parents are entitled to ____ 450 days of parental leave with __ ¾ of their salary paid by the government. Swedes _____ never pay more than ____ $170 a year for prescriptions. Your braces are 30 days vacation. Your _____, you get ___ free __________ is that it is the second-highest tax trade-off burden of any industrialized country. ____ 56% of thedir inome is taxed versus the U.S. 32%... _____ would you be willing to pay for these benefits for the 24% difference? Continuum of Mixed Economies • Centrally Planned Free Market » Hong Kong North Korea Canada France China United States Cuba Music Madness • Suppose you are opening a new music store in your town. What resources would you need? (list 3) What would you offer? (3 consumer goods) How would the government affect your business?(3) • North Korea v. Hong Kong Economic Planners • • • • North Korea and Hong Kong each have 5 idle factories that must be brought up to full production within a year. Answer the following and how you arrived at your answers. What will we produce? To whom will we sell our products? How will we find workers for the factories? How much will we charge for our products?