Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
GEORGIA PERFORMANCE STANDARDS Fundamental Domain Page 1 of 7 Fundamental Economic Concepts *Explain why limited productive resources and unlimited wants result in scarcity, opportunity costs and trade offs for individuals, businesses and governments. Wants are unlimited, the total resources of a society including natural resources, human resources, capital goods and entrepreneurship are limited resulting in scarcity. All wants cannot be filled, trade-offs are inevitable when deciding what to produce. Define scarcity as a basic condition which exists when unlimited wants exceed limited productive resources Scarcity exists because human wants exceed the capacity of available resources. This basic problem of scarcity is faced by all individuals, organizations, businesses and governments. Define and give examples of productive resources (Factors of Production) as land (natural), labor (human), capital (capital goods), entrepreneurship Land = natural resources; Labor = people with their education, skills and abilities; Capital = the goods and services used to make other consumer goods and services; Entrepreneurs = individuals who take the risk and combine the productive resources (factors of production) to produce goods and services and profit by selling these to consumers. Identify strategies for allocating scarce resources See Chart. The different strategies include, price, contests, force, sharing, lottery, command, 1st come 1st served, personal characteristics. Define opportunity cost as the next best alternative given up when individuals, businesses and governments confront scarcity by making choices. Opportunity cost is what you give up to obtain something else, one good or service for another. Governments often have to decide on one good or service at the expense of another. Trade-off is giving up one benefit or advantage in order to gain another one that may be better. Page 2 of 7 *Provide examples of how rational decision making entails comparing the marginal benefits and the marginal costs of an action. We make choices to satisfy needs or to seek happiness! We look at the options, compare costs, benefits, and the trade-offs involved with each choice and reach a decision. Marginal Cost = the additional cost of producing one more unit. Marginal Benefit = the additional satisfaction or utility of consuming one more unit. Illustrate by means of a production possibilities curve the trade offs between two options Production Possibilities Curve A table or graph that shows the full employment capacity of an economy in the form of possible combinations of two goods, or two bundles of goods, that could be produced with a given amount of productive resources and level of technology. Moving from point B to C indicates that this society now prefers to build more consumer goods and less capital goods. This is the trade-off when choosing a different combination of goods Explain that rational decisions occur when the marginal benefits of an action equal or exceed the marginal costs. Economic decisions are made on the basis of comparing marginal costs and marginal benefits. There are not many all or none decisions. Almost all decisions are marginal, we don’t typically make a decision between studying all day or watching TV all day, we choose between studying a little more and watching a little less TV or vice versa. Page 3 of 7 * Explain how specialization and voluntary exchange between buyers and sellers increase the satisfaction of both parties. Provide examples of how individuals and businesses specialize Division of Labor refers to the practice of dividing the work to make something into separate tasks. Workers become specialized in different tasks. We earn a living by doing tasks, taking our wages to purchase goods and services from other workers. Division of Labor and Specialization is the basis for an economy to exist. 3 benefits are doing it better, no time required to switch tasks, create more effective ways to do the task. Explain that both parties gain as a result of voluntary, non-fraudulent exchange. We don’t make all of our electronic devices, countries do not make all of the goods and services they need. Specialization is the basis of trade and interdependence among individuals, businesses, cities, regions and countries. Wisconsin = dairy Florida = oranges. * Compare and contrast different economic systems, and explain how they answer the three basic economic questions of what to produce, how to produce and for whom to produce. Every society must contend with the problem of scarcity. Every society, regardless of its political structure, must develop an economic system to determine how to use its limited productive resources to answer the three basic economic questions. What goods and services will be produced? How will goods and services be produced? Who will consume the goods and services? The way a society answers these questions determines its economic system. Three types of economic systems exist to answer these questions. Traditional – In a traditional economy, economic decisions are based on custom and historical precedent. Command – In a centralized command economy, government planning groups make the basic economic decisions. They determine such things as which goods and services to produce, their prices, and wage rates. Market – In a decentralized market economy, economic decisions are guided by the changes in prices that occur as individual buyers and sellers interact in the market place (which it is also referred to as a price system). Other names for market systems are free enterprise, capitalism, and laissez-faire. Compare command, market, and mixed economic systems with regard to private ownership, profit motive, consumer sovereignty, competition, government regulation Economic systems are characterized by how they answer the three basic economic questions Page 4 of 7 Command (centralized) Economy - the issues of production and distribution are resolved through central planning and control Market (decentralized) Economy - market prices are determined by consumers and producers, all pursuing their own self-interest. Mixed Economy - there are no pure market or command economies, most economies today contain both command and market characteristics Profit Motive - the desire to make money causes people to work hard to produce goods and services. Consumer Sovereignty - people are free to choose without government interference or regulation Competition - consumers compete with other consumers for goods and services, producers compete with other producers for consumers. Governmental Regulation - the government intervention in the decisions of consumer and producers in the market. Evaluate how well each type of system answers the three economic questions and meets the broad social and economic goals of freedom, security, equity, growth, efficiency and stability Economic Freedom - freedom of choice by consumers and producers. Economic Security - protection against some risks as consumers and producers Economic Equity - Fairness? Right or wrong? Equal opportunity? Equal distribution of wealth and income? Economic Growth - an increase in the production of goods and services over time, measured by real GDP, 3 to 4 % is a reasonable and sustainable yearly growth rate. Economic Efficiency - allocation of resources so that no one is hurt at the expense of someone else gaining, lower costs to produce. Economic Stability - maintain stable prices, full employment and economic growth * Describe the roles of government in a market economy. Government establishes the rules of the game, gov’t involved in the market, public goods, gov’t as a business (national defense), environmental concerns, monetary system. Page 5 of 7 Explain why government provides public goods and services, redistributes income, protects property rights and resolves market failures. Public Goods and Services - Those goods and services that cannot be easily be restricted to those who pay for them. Shared consumption and non-exclusion determine what a public good is. Income Redistribution – The re-allocation of wealth and income, 3/4ths of national income is wages. Property Rights – legal ownership of resources, government’s role is to protect property rights. Market Failures – private police or military, imperfect information in the market, pollution costs. Provide examples of government regulation and deregulation and their effects on consumers and producers. Comparing the expected costs of a new policy or a change in an existing policy to the expected benefits. * Explain how productivity, economic growth and future standards of living are influenced by investment in factories, machinery, new technology and the health, education and training of people. Define productivity as the relationship of inputs to outputs The quantity of output per unit of input, an increase in productivity can be more goods and services created with the same amount of resources or the same amount of goods and services with less resources. More productive workers lead to a higher standard of living. Provide illustrations of investment in equipment and technology and explain their relationship to economic growth Improvements in education, experience, skill level of the workforce (human capital), greater amounts of physical capital, improved technology. Provide examples of how investment in education can lead to a higher standard of living High investments in education, physical and human capital equals higher productivity, low inflation, political stability and free trade. Page 6 of 7 Sample Resource Allocation Strategies Strategy Description Advantage Disadvantage Price resource goes to those who use market mechanisms such as trade, barter, or price great for those who have money or a job with income not good for those who have little or no income majority rule resource goes to those who win an election; voting; consensus; largest number of people are satisfied great for those who are popular and those who have many members not good for the unpopular; those who don’t have the skills to form alliances contests resource goes to the most competitive – winner of a race or arm wrestle; survival of the fittest great for those who are talented and skillful not good for those who aren’t competitive; unskilled Force resource goes to the one who is strongest (physical, mental, political); most forceful great for those who are strong, powerful, bullish not good for those who are weak, small, easily intimidated Sharing resource goes to multiple parties by dividing the resource great in that everyone gets an equal part; no one is left out not good in that some resources can’t be divided; no party may get enough; not everyone wants some of every resource Lottery resource goes to the luckiest; random; fair great for those who are lucky and win things; everyone has an equal chance; random winners not good for those who are unlucky or who “never win anything” command resource goes where directed, ordered, told by another person great for those who are liked by the commander or if the planner is always fair not good if the planner isn’t fair first-come, first-served resource goes to the early bird; first in line great for those who are quick, willing to get ahead of the crowd not good for the procrastinator; those who are late in planning/ preparing personal characteristics resource goes to the one with the greatest tenure, the longest hair, the oldest, the youngest, the bluest eyes, etc. great for those who are able to set the personal characteristic to be awarded the resource not good for those unable to influence the selection of the characteristic category Page 7 of 7