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FOUNDATIONS OF ECONOMICS WHAT COMES TO YOUR MIND WHEN YOU HEAR THE WORD SCARCE?

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Presentation on theme: "FOUNDATIONS OF ECONOMICS WHAT COMES TO YOUR MIND WHEN YOU HEAR THE WORD SCARCE?"— Presentation transcript:

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2 FOUNDATIONS OF ECONOMICS WHAT COMES TO YOUR MIND WHEN YOU HEAR THE WORD SCARCE?

3 WHAT IS ECONOMICS? So then the big two concepts are that: Resources are scarce! Society has unlimited needs and wants! Economics decides the “best” way of providing one to the other

4 VOCABULARY: Economics Goods Services Scarcity

5 VOCABULARY Need Want

6 … MORE VOCABULARY Shortage Factors of Production Land Labor

7 VOCABULARY… Capital-Resources Physical Capital Human Capital

8 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION There are 4 factors that must all be used to produce anything 1) Natural Resources (also referred to as “land”)

9 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION There are 4 factors that must all be used to produce anything 2) Labor – effort of a person for which they are paid

10 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION There are 4 factors that must all be used to produce anything 3) Capital – human-made resources used to create other goods

11 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION A) Physical Capital – Also called Capital Goods, objects that are used to produce other goods

12 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION B) Human Capital – knowledge or skills workers get from education and experience

13 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION There are 4 factors that must all be used to produce anything 4) Entrepreneurship – person who takes a risk in combining the other 3 factors to create a new good

14 VOCABULARY CONTINUED… Entrepreneur

15 1.1 QUIZ – GET A PARTNER! NUMBER YOUR PAPER 1 - 6 1. Which of the following are factors of production? a. Capital and Land b. Scarcity and shortages c. Technology and productivity d. economics and business decisions

16 ANSWER IS … a. capital and land

17 NEXT QUESTION … 2. Which of the following is an example of using physical capital to save time and money? a. hiring more workers to do a job? b. building extra space in a factory to simplify production c. switching from oil to coal to make production cheaper d. lowering workers’ wages to increase profits

18 ANSWER IS … b. building extra space in a factory to simplify production

19 NEXT QUESTION … 3. To what part of an industry does a worker’s education contribute? a. technology b. physical capital c. human capital d. scarce resources

20 ANSWER IS … c. human capital

21 NEXT QUESTION … 4. Which of the following is an entrepreneur? a. a person who earns a lot of money as a singer or dancer b. a person who creates a game and sells it to a game manufacturer c. a person who starts an all-organic cleaning supplies business that employs others d. a person who works as a highly paid computer programmer

22 ANSWER IS … c. a person who starts an all-organic cleaning supplies business that employs others

23 NEXT … 5. What is the difference between a shortage and scarcity? a. A shortage can be temporary or long-term, but scarcity always exists. b. A shortage results from rising prices; scarcity results from falling prices. c. A shortage is a lack of all goods and services; scarcity concerns a single item. d. There is no real difference between a shortage and scarcity

24 ANSWER … a. A shortage can be temporary or long-term, but scarcity always exists!

25 NEXT…. 6. What does an economist mean by the term LAND? a. farmland only b. food crops grown on farmland as well as the farmland itself c. goods and services that are produced form the land d. all natural resources used to produce goods and services

26 ANSWER … d. all natural resources used to produce goods and services!

27 FIVE APPEALING VACATION DESTINATIONS… HawaiiParis Dunns River Falls, Jamaica Alaska Ireland What is your first choice? What is your second choice? Section 1.2 – Opportunity Cost

28 MAKING ECONOMIC DECISIONS The most desirable of the options you pass up is called the Opportunity Cost Rank sleep, studying, and playing video games 1 st, 2 nd, and 3 rd on a list for what you value the most

29 MAKING ECONOMIC DECISIONS Every decision we make involves trade-offs – alternatives that we must give up when we make a choice Example – “I could stay up for 3 hours playing Halo, study, or sleep.”

30 MAKING ECONOMIC DECISIONS 1 st Place is what you would choose to do 2 nd Place is your opportunity cost (you give it up to do option 1)

31 MAKING ECONOMIC DECISIONS What other option do you have other than using 3 hours for one task? You could split your time among multiple activities! Thinking at the Margin – decision involving adding one unit and subtracting one unit, rather than all or nothing

32 MAKING ECONOMIC DECISIONS OptionsBenefit Opportunity Cost 0 hours studying, 3 hours sleeping F on Test None 1 hours studying, 2 hours sleeping C on Test 1 hour of sleep 2 hours studying, 1 hour sleeping B on Test 2 hours of sleep 3 hours studying B+ on Test 3 hours of sleep

33 MAKING ECONOMIC DECISIONS There is a point at which you are paying the same increase in cost, but seeing lower benefits You must make the decision as to whether the cost is worth it This same process is used by businesses and consumers to make decisions

34 QUIZ TIME… 1. If a person who wants to buy a compact disc (CD) has just enough money to buy one, and chooses CD A instead of CD B, then CD B is the a. trade-off b. opportunity cost c. decision at the margin d. opportunity at the margin

35 ANSWER IS … b. opportunity cost

36 NEXT… 2. A decision-making grid is a visual way of: a. examining opportunity costs b. selling goods or services c. making marginal decisions d. identifying shortages

37 ANSWER IS.. a. examining opportunity costs!

38 NEXT … 3. A decision is made at the margin when each alternative considers a. a different trade-off than the others b. where the most costly alternative will be. c. what the “all or nothing” alternative will be. d. cost and benefit ranked in progressive units.

39 ANSWER … c. d. cost and benefit ranked in progressive units

40 GRAPHS…. WHY do graphs sometimes show information more clearly than text or tables? Section 1.3 – Production Possibilities Curves

41 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Production Possibilities Graph – shows alternatives to what an economy can produce Let’s say we can produce 2 things: Guns and Butter

42 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

43 Production Possibilities Graph – shows alternatives to what an economy can produce The outer red line shows the maximum possible output with any given combination This is the Production Possibilities Frontier (or Curve)

44 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES To move from one point to another, the economy must make trade-offs

45 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Any point along the line shows the economy operating at maximum efficiency Any point below the line is underutilization – they are not getting all that they could Any point above the line is presently impossible, until new resources are available

46 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Why does the graph curve instead of making a straight line? Law of Increasing Costs – as production increases for one item, more and more resources are necessary to increase production of the second item! The OPPORTUNITY COST increases…

47 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Every resource is best suited for certain types of goods Farmland and cows make butter Metals and factories make guns and many times you hear about butter vs. guns due to military spending on weaponry using resources … To convert butter production to guns, you must sell the cows and build new factories on the land

48 QUIZ TIME … 1. The economic concept of guns or butter means that … a. a person can spend extra money either on sports equipment or food. b. a company must decide whether to manufacture guns or butter c. a government must decide whether to produce more or less military or consumer goods d. a government can buy unlimited military and civilian goods if it is rich enough

49 ANSWER … c. a government must decide whether to produce more or less military or consumer goods … trade off …. due to scarcity!

50 2. A production possibilities curve shows the relationship between the production of: a. farm goods and factory goods b. two types of farm goods c. two types of factory goods d. any two categories of goods

51 ANSWER d. any two categories of goods.

52 NEXT … 3. The line on a production possibilities curve showing the relative amounts of two types of goods produced using all resources is called the a. production possibilities frontier b. opportunity cost line c. utilization of resources d. maximum possible production line

53 ANSWER … a. production possibilities frontier

54 QUESTION … 4. The law of increasing costs means that as production shifts from one item to another, a. the cost of production gets cheaper and cheaper. b. the cost of producing an item stays the same no matter how many are produced. c. more and more resources are necessary to increase production of the second item d. the land costs of increasing production rise much more steeply than do the labor costs

55 ANSWER IS … c. more and more resources are necessary to increase production of the second item

56 AND LAST QUESTION … 5. The curve usually seen in a production possibilities frontier can be explained by: a. growth in the economy b. underutilization of resources c. increasing an economy’s efficiency d. the law of increasing costs

57 FINAL ANSWER IS … d. the law of increasing costs!

58 AN ECONOMY THAT IS EFFICIENT IS … Producing the maximum amount of goods and services.. now that’s efficient!


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