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Civics Economics Unit 1. The Basic Economic Problem a. How to meet unlimited wants with limited resources 2. The 3 Basic Economic Questions a. What to produce? b. How to produce it? c. For whom are we going to produce it? 3. The Four Factors of Production a. Land – Natural Resources b. Labor – human effort directed to producing g/s c. Capital – Money, machines, buildings, tools d. Management (Entrepreneur) – the person that combines the first 3 elements and takes the risk of business. 4. Choices a. “life is like a quarter” b. Scarcity – (not enough) forces us to make choices 5. Trade-off – choosing one thing over another 6. Opportunity Cost – the last best thing you didn’t buy 7. Specialization – trying to be better at something than anyone else 8. Division of Labor – breaking down of a job into separate smaller tasks 9. Assembly Line – (Ford) the use of DOL to produce a cheaper, better product 10. Human Capital – Human labor used in the workplace. 2 11. Diminishing returns – When the output declines as more labor or appliances are added. 12. Output v. Input – The concept trying to make sure that input doesn’t exceed output. We want to be productive, growing, not decline or stagnate. 13. Economic Systems – there are no PURE economic systems a. Traditional Economic System- answers the three BEQ’s “as we always have” – uncharted islands, Rain Forests, Desert Nomads b. Market Economic System- The consumers answer the BEQ’s. If they don’t like the product the producers won’t make the product. US, Japan c. Controlled Economic System- The gov’t answers the BEQ’s for the people. China, Korea, Cuba d. Mixed Economic System- Both the people and the gov’t answer the BEQ’s. Great Britain, Australia, Sweden 14. Gov’t v. Economic Systems – the ‘ism’s are not governments, they are economic systems. 15. 3 Important Characteristics of the American Economic System – a. Private Property – owning property for your own use b. Profit Motive – The desire to make money c. Competition – attracting consumers 16. Communism v. Socialism a. Communism – an economic system in which the central gov’t directs all major economic decisions b. Socialism – an economic system in which gov’t owns some of the factors of production and distributes the products and wages 3 17. Consumers v. Producers a. Consumers are the people that buy a product and use it. b. Producers are the makers of the products, not the user of it. 18. The Law of Demand – As price goes up, demand goes down; as price goes down, demand goes up. 19. The Law of Supply – As price goes up, supply goes up; as price goes down, supply goes down. 20. Shortage – not enough to go around (scarcity) 21. Surplus – more than enough to go around, leftovers 22. Elastic Demand – any products that are changed by price have an elastic demand. (LOD), the demand for that product will change (clothes, shoes). This product is easily substituted for. 23. Inelastic Demand – products where price doesn’t change demand. These products aren’t easily substituted for. (Milk, Diapers, Feminine Products) 24. Mergers – a combination of 2 or more companies to form a single business 25. Horizontal Mergers – Merger of 2 companies within the same field. (Banks, Airlines) 26. Vertical Mergers – Mergers of similar businesses who combine. (PepsiPizza Hut) 27. Conglomerates – Mergers of businesses that have little or nothing in common. (Coke) 28. Government Corporations – US Gov’t businesses that operate with in the business structure (US Postal Service, Amtrak, National Park Service) 29. Monopolies, Oligopolies, Pure Competition a. Monopolies – exclusive ownership or control of one business or resource 4 b. Oligopolies – where there are a few that control a business or resource c. Pure Competition – where there are many businesses that try to control a sector of the market 30. Types of Businesses a. Sole Proprietor – 1 owner of a business (unlimited liability) b. Partnership – 2 or more own a business (unlimited liability) c. Corporation – Many owners (stockholders) of a business (limited liability) d. Limited v. Unlimited Liability – Unlimited liability (responsibility) for debts of the business fall hard on SP’s and Partnerships. Stockholders are protected from this loss. 31. Labor Unions – Association of workers organized to improve wages and working conditions 32. Types of Investing a. Life Insurance – money paid to cover your death. Whole life is paid to cover you as long as you pay the premiums. Term life insurance only covers you for a period of time. b. Stocks – Investing in ownership of a company c. Bonds – Letting the Gov’t borrow your money with a promise to repay it over a period of time with interest d. Certificate of Deposit (CD) – letting a bank borrow your money for a period of time e. Mutual Funds – Combining money of many people to buy stocks 5 f. Money Markets – investing for retirement in 401k’s or IRA accounts 32. Credit a. Credit – using someone else’s money with the promise to pay later b. Credit Cards – evil plastic cards that are too easy to use c. Interest – what you pay to use someone’s money 33. Functions of Money – a. medium of exchange – b. units of measure – c. store of value – 34. Characteristics of money a. transportable b. divisible c. acceptable 35. The types of money a. Currency (paper) – different denominations of bills b. Currency (coins) – minted solid coins c. Checks – same power as currency d. Credit – different types; cards such as Visa, Mastercard, American Express, be careful of Credit. 6 36. The Federal Reserve System – a. The banks bank – They loan money to banks or hold the banks extra cash b. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation – Help to make sure that the persons money is protected 37. Forecasting the Economic Future a. Leading economic indicators – Unemployment, Housing Starts, House purchases, Car Sales, Stock Market, Inflation, Interest Rates b. Gross Domestic Product – the total dollar value of all-final goods and services produced in a country during a single year. c. Real GDP – shows the economy’s production after the distortions of price increases have been removed. 38. Production v Services a. Downsizing – to reduce the workforce b. Out-sourcing – sending jobs to other places to save money c. Comparative Advantage – the ability of a country (or state) to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another d. Trade Barriers/Tariffs – some countries will try to place taxes on certain products to protect their native products e. NAFTA- North American Free Trade Agreement f. Interdependence – Where countries depend on each other for products (coffee) 7 39. Taxes – Paid to cover the cost of Government a. Progressive Tax – a tax that takes a larger amount of your money that you earn b. Regressive Tax – takes a larger percentage from people with lower incomes c. Sales Tax – tax placed on items sold d. Excise Tax – tax placed on certain items to be paid my users e. Income Tax – tax placed on money earned f. Property Tax – tax placed on Real Property (house, car) g. County Manager – person in charge of the county, works with the Commissioners and the Mayors of the towns to set the property tax rates h. Mayor Council Form of Gov’t – appointed by the County Commissioners i. Use Tax – tax on products or services you use (toll roads) 40. Tight v. Loose Monetary Policy a. Tight – to try to increase the value of our money (scarcity) b. Loose – to let the money flow out, it lowers the value of money c. NIMBY- Not In MY Back Yard – American Protectionism d. Balanced Budget – sometimes we must increase taxes or cut programs to balance the National Budget. Always a cause for concern. e. Deficit – Owing money to other people or countries. Paying out more than we are bringing in. 41. Budget – a plan of income use 42. a. b. c. d. The Business Cycle – The ups and downs of the economy. Peak – the highest point Contraction – sometimes called Recession as the economy slows down Trough – the lowest point of the economy Expansion – where the economy starts to show growth