Economics
what are some elements of command and tradition in the US economy
fed state and local government, national defense, elementary school teachers usually female, children will typically follow in parents foot steps
what are three broad categories of unemployment
frictional, structural, and cyclical
who owns resources in a command economy
government central planning unit
inflation
a hurt economy
2 roles of banks in the economy
accept deposits make loans
characteristics of money
acceptable durable divisible relatively scarce portable
what is a market
anywhere consumers and producers meet to buy and sell goods services and resources
four broad categories of productive resources
capital(interest), human(salary), natural(rent), entrepreneurial ability(profit)
what is the federal reserves mission
conduct monetary policy
constraint
constraint on our ability to attain our goals example: time
how are inflation and deflation measured
consumer price index
what is a market system(price)
consumers and producers that meet anywhere to buy and sell goods services and resources
federal reserve system
controls how much banks can lend so there is a stable store of value acts as the nations central bank helps us meet economic goals
tool students can use to implement PACED model
decision making grid
command system
decisions made by central planning unit
deflation
decrease in overall level of prices
PACED decision making model
defines problem, lists alternatives, states criteria, evaluates alternatives, makes decision
what is a barter?
direct trade of goods services and resources
what is coincidence of wants
divisibility when both traders meet need of another
what is full employment
economy available resources are fully utilized
what are the tools of the fed to combat recession?
fed offers higher price which can effect lowering interest rates people better off selling securities to fed at higher price than they paid=extractionary policy
why is the us economy mixed but primarily market
has traditional elements but more market bc goods services and resources are sold in market place, changing prices, and coordinates transactions with consumer and producer
what determines the type of economic system a society has?
how a society answers the 3 basic economic ?s (what and how much g/s to prod. how to produce, for whom)
what is the money supply
how we measure the amount of money in an economy: money supply(M1) coins bills checks and travelers checks
what is price stability
increase in average price level of g/s = no inflation
what are income payments earned for providing resources in resource markets
interest or divid end
economic growth
long run economic goal concerned about the future health of the economy (urban congestion, pollution, rapidly depleted natural resources)
what is commodity money
medium of exchange money is an actual product that i generally acceptable bc of its intrinsic value
what are the functions of money
medium of exchange, standard of value, store value
fiat money
money declared by a government as valid exchange purposes fiat= standard of value
there is no such thing as a free lunch TINSTAAFL
opportunity cost / real cost
circular flow model
overview of the g/s and resources in market place businesses-producers households-individuals
what are productive resources
provide means for satisfying wants
what is a discouraged worker?
quit looking for job
what social goals are most likely to be emphasized in a command economy
security stability and equity
what are intermediate goods
type of capital resource, goods that have been produced and then used up in production of another good.
2 things that happen when an economy produces below pp frontier
unemployment and inefficient resources
opportunity cost/real cost/ trade off
value of highest foregone alternatives
what are the basic questions every society must ask?
what and how much goods and services to produce? how will goods and services be produced? for whom will they be produced?
? you ask when completing the decision making model?
what is the opportunity cost?
how the federal reserve is organized
3 parts board of governors, 12 district banks, and the FOMC (federal open market committee)
what percent of US economic activity takes place in market
70%
chairman of the fed
Ben Bernanke
what are the tools of the fed to combat inflation?
sell securities so they increase inerest rates that financial institutions and businesses would receive to attract higher bids for the securities=contractionary policy
how does the federal government provide economic security
social welfare programs social security unemployment compensation farm loans and food stamps
what are the broad social goals?
stability, growth, freedom, tariff, security, equity, efficiency
criteria
standards upon which a decision is based-goals you hope to achieve
what is an underemployed worker
takes a job under education level
3 ways economy can produce beyond production possibilities frontier
technology, capital investment, increase resources (new discoveries, population growth)
alternatives
the choices available to decision maker
what is scarcity
the reason why we must answer the three basic economic questions (what and how much g/s to produce, how will they be produced, and for whom will they be produced) occurs when wants are greater than resources available.
economic system
the way society organizes the production distribution of goods and services
what is the federal reserves responsibilities
to control the amount of money in economy by supervising money and banking system