Economics Vocabulary.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The American Free Market System
Advertisements

Economic Systems SSEF4.
1 1 & 3. Business and the Economy Understanding Business and the Context in Which it Operates.
Unit One Marketing Principles
Know that Name Factors of What??? MY EconoMY Inflation or Bust.
Unit 6: Business, Factors, & Economies Chapters 18, 19, & 26.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2005 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Understanding the U.S. Business System.
Africa Economics.
Types of Economies.
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
Economic Systems Section 2.2 Scarcity of economic resources forces every country to develop an economic system that determines how resources will be used.
Principles of Economics
Marketing Ch. 4 World Economics.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2005 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Understanding the U.S. Business System.
The U.S. Business Environment
Ch. 3 The Economic Impact بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم.
Chapter 1 Business Principles. WHAT IS BUSINESS?
Political and Economic Analysis
Unit 6 Economics America’s Market Economy
The Economics System at work C HAPTER 17 S EC. 1.
Understanding Basic Economics
Economic Systems Additional Notes from Intro to Econ and Chapter 17 Packet.
Good Anything that can be grown or manufactured (made) Food Clothes Cars.
Unit 7a Economics.
Economic Decisions & Systems Chapter 1. Satisfying Needs & Wants Needs- things that are required in order to live. Can also include: education, safety,
ECONOMICS CE.9A-12E Chapters “Daddy’s Hands” (16)
GHSGT Review Economics. Unit 1 – Fundamental Concepts of Economics.
Part 5—Job Satisfaction
Economic Systems Civics Mrs. Kozlik Chapter 18 Section 3 CE 11b.
 Each economy has to answer three specific questions  How it answers these questions determines what kind of economy it is going to be.  The three.
3-1 Chapter Overview Economics—social science that analyzes the choices made by people and governments in allocating scarce resources.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Copyright © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. 1-1 # The U.S. Business Environment 1.
Marketing I Curriculum Guide. Objective To understand the role of business in the free enterprise system. Be able to define free enterprise system Understand.
What is Economics?  An economic system is a country’s way of using limited resources to provide goods and services.  Scarcity means that there is never.
International Business: Our Global Economy 1.  Scarcity –  Refers to the limited resources available to satisfy the unlimited needs of people  Economics.
Bell Ringer Activity Which economic system does the United States have? (Command, Market, or Mixed) Why do you think that?
 Traditional economy :  Economic decisions are based on custom and historical precedent.
Jeopardy True/False Economies Terms Q$100 Q$200 Q$300 Q$400 Q$500 Q$100 Q$200 Q$300 Q$400 Q$500 FinalFinal Jeopardy Measure Q$100 Q$200 Q$300 Q$400 Q$500.
ECONOMIC SYSTEM COMPONENTS Private Ownership l Control of productive resources land labor capital that are used to produce goods and services.
© SOUTH-WESTERN THOMSONINTERNATIONAL BUSINESS LESSON2-1 GOALS  Describe the basic economic problem.  List the steps of the decision-making process. ECONOMICS.
Business & Marketing Unit 2: Economics Chapter 3: Political and Economic Analysis.
STANDARD 1 – WORLD OF MARKETING WHAT YOU’LL LEARN Understand that marketing is all around us 2. Understand the concept of private enterprise 3. Understand.
THE AFFECTS OF ECONOMIC ISSUES AND GOVERNMENT ON BUSINESS Bus101.
What is Economics? Economics studies the Production, Consumption, and Distribution of _____________ goods and services for a society with __________ wants.
Begin $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 DemandSupply Key Economic AssumptionsFlowModelGDPUnemployment.
1. Understand that marketing is all around us 2. Understand the concept of private enterprise 3. Understand the marketing mix or 4P’s of marketing 4. Students.
Chapter 2 1 Basic Economics ChapterSkills for Success 2.
What goods and services should be produced? How should they be produced? For whom are they produced? How a society answers these questions determines.
Economic Systems. Identify the key characteristics of a – Traditional Economy – Command Economy – Communism – Socialism – Free Market Economy – Mixed.
Economic Systems. What is Economics? Basic questions of Economics: 1.What will be produced? 2.Who will produce it? 3.For whom will it be produced?
Unit 2: Economics 1.3 Understanding Economic Systems 1.4 Consumer’s Role in the Economy 17.3 Government and the Economy.
Unit 7a Economics.
Economic Systems.
Unit 2: Economics 1.3 Understanding Economic Systems
EOC Review Civics and Economics Economics Basics & Types of Economies
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
Read to Learn Describe the three basic economic questions each country must answer to make decisions about using their resources. Contrast the way a.
Economic Decisions and Systems
Economic Basics Unit 4 part 2.
2 Our Global Economy 2-1 Economics and Decision Making
Economics Vocab ppt.
Civics Mr. Collins and Mrs. Kozlik CE 11a
Economic Systems.
The United States Economy
Click here to advance to the next slide.
ECONOMICS SUPPLY AND DEMAND.
Semester II Exam Review
Economies.
Economics Vocab 1.
Good Anything that can be grown or manufactured (made) Food Clothes Cars.
Presentation transcript:

Economics Vocabulary

Types of Economies Traditional economy: Economic decisions are based on custom and historical precedent.

Types of Economies Free market economy: Characterized by private ownership of property/resources, profit motive, competition, consumer sovereignty, and individual choice Example: United Kingdom

Types of Economies Command economy: Characterized by central ownership of property/resources, centrally-planned economy, and lack of consumer choice Ex: People’s Republic of China-

Types of Economies Mixed economy Individuals and businesses make decisions for the private sector. Ex: Mexico-Market economy with government ownership of some major industries

Identify indicators of economic performance: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total dollar value of all final goods and services produced in a year. Consumer price index measures the monthly price changes of sample consumer goods and services. Unemployment rate is the percentage of the labor force without jobs.

Identify indicators of economic performance: Balance of trade is the difference in dollar value between imports and exports. Stock market averages are select groups of stocks whose performance is averaged, and over time, the averages serve as an indicator for the market. When the United States imports more goods and services than it exports, the difference is the trade deficit.

Productivity is the amount of output per unit of input over a period of time. Productivity and the standard of living are generally higher in economies that have limited governmental planning and limited control of the economy.

Entrepreneurship is the organizational abilities and risk-taking involved in starting a new business or introducing a new product.

Profit is the difference between the revenue received from the sale of a good or service and the costs of providing that good or service.

Business Principles The three basic ways that businesses organize to earn profits (the three types of profit-seeking business structures): Proprietorship: A form of business organization with one owner who takes all the risks and all the profits Partnership: A form of business organization with two or more owners who share the risks and the profits Corporation: A form of business organization that is authorized by law to act as a legal entity regardless of the number of owners

Production of goods and services depends on four factors of production (basic categories of resources), which are interdependent in the production process, as follows: Labor, also called human resources, is any form of human effort used in the production of goods and services. Capital is human-made resources (e.g., tools, buildings, equipment) used in the production of other goods and services.

Supply and Demand Law of Demand: Quantity demanded varies inversely to price. If all else remains equal, the lower the price, the higher the quantity demanded, and the higher the price, the lower the quantity demanded

Supply and Demand Law of Supply: Quantity supplied varies directly with price. If all else remains equal, the lower the price, the lower the quantity supplied, and the higher the price, the higher the quantity supplied.

Competition Competition allows for all goods and services to be produced at the lowest possible cost and allocated to those who are willing and able to pay for them.

Supply and Demand Economies of scale refers to the cost advantages that a business obtains due to expansion.

Economic Theory Keynesian Economics: advocates a mixed economy with active policy responses by the government to stabilize economic indicators. Hayek Hypothesis: Theory that a free market is the solution to economic health, as people individually have the ability to decide how a good or service should be distributed based on their dollar investment.