Economics Chapter 1
land
"gifts of nature" or natural resources not created by humans. includes deserts, fertile fields, forests, mineral deposits, livestock, sunshine, and the climate necessary to grow crops. (limited supply)
what is the difference between a durable good and a non durable good
durable good is an item that lasts three years or more when used on a regular basis they include both capital goods and consumer goods nondurable good is an item that lasts for less than three years when used on a regular basis such as food, writing paper, and most clothing items
discuss the relationship among scarcity value, utility, and wealth
for something to have value, economists decided it must be scarce and have utility and to afford the greater value you must have wealth
economic product
goods and services that are useful, relatively scarce (economic sense so require a price), and transferable to others
how does scarcity affect your life? provide several examples of items you had to do without because of limited resources. explain how you adjusted to this situation. for example, were you able to substitute other times for those you could not have?
in California we are in a drought, which means I cannot wash my car or use the sprinklers so we have placed turf in parks and lawns to compensate.
describe the circular flow of economic activity
individuals earn their incomes in factor markets, after individuals receive their income from the resources they sell, they spend it in product markets, the money individuals receive from business in the factor markets returns to businesses in the product markets, businesses then use this money to produce more goods and services.
consumer good
intended for final use by individuals
explain why the study of economics is important to the america free enterprise system
it will provide a working knowledge of property rights, competition, supply and demand, the pricy system, and the economic incentives that make the American economy function. unemployment, the business cycle, inflation, productivity, and economic growth will be covered. the role of business, labor and government in the American economy are studied as well as the relationship of the United States economy to the international community
good
item that is economically useful or satisfies an economic want (book, car, cd player)
describe the factors of production
land-includes the gifts of nature or natural resources not created by human effort capitol-includes the tools, equipment, and factories used in production labor-includes people with all their efforts and abilities entrepreneurs-are individuals who start a new business or bring a product to market
opportunity cost
the cost of the next best alternative use of money, time, or resources when one choice is made rather than another
factor market
the markets where productive resources ar bought and sold
financial capital
the money used to buy the tools and equipment used in production
production
the process of creating goods and services. takes place when all factors of production are present
standard of living
the quality of life based on the possession of the necessities and luxuries that make life easier.
paradox of value
the situation where some necessities, (water) have little monetary value, where as some non-necessities (diamonds) have a much higher value
economics
the study of how people try to satisfy what appears to be seemingly unlimited and competing wants through the careful use of relatively scarce resources.
capital
the tools, equipment, machinery, and factories used in the production of goods and services (result of production-bulldozer, cash register, computers)
explain what people try to achieve when they make decisions or trade-offs
they want to consider all their alternatives and if using a grid you can compare durability, approval, future expenses, and utility
want
way of expressing a need
provide at least three examples each of specialized workers and capital that are used in your school to provide the service of education. would productivity go up or down if these specialized capitals goods and workers were not available to your school. explain
we have specialized teachers for each subject which costs more due to the more faculty
economic growth
when a nation's total output of goods and services increases over time
capital good
when manufactured goods are used to produce other goods and services (oven in a bakery, computer in a high school, robot welder in a factory)
service
work that is performed for someone (haircuts, home repairs, forms of entertainments, doctors, lawyers, teachers)
utility
the capacity to be useful and provide satisfaction (can vary from one person to next)
scarcity
the condition that results from society not having enough resources to produce all the things people would like to have
identify several possible uses of your time that will be available to you after school today. what will you actually do, and what will be the opportunity cost of your decision? explain how your decision will not affect your friends and members of you family.
I could sit on my phone or watch tv and be unproductive, I could do homework, I could relax, I could get ready for dance early, I could skip dance or I could go to dance, I could cook a meal at home, or go out. I will actually eat at home and be productive and it will cost me nothing except time.
list the three basic economic questions every society must answer
WHAT to produce HOW to produce FOR WHOM to produce
market
a location or other mechanism that allows buyers and sellers to exchange a certain economic product (local, regional, national, or global, or cyber)
productivity
a measure of the amount of output produced by a given amount of inputs in a specific period of time
WHAT to produce
a society cannot have everything its people want, so it must decide WHAT to produce
describe the relationship between trade-offs and opportunity costs
a trade-off are all your alternative choices where the opportunity cost is the next best alternative you did not choose that you missed out on
cost-benefit analysis
a way of thinking about a problem that compares the costs of an action to the benefits received
value
a worth that can be expressed in dollars and cents
gross domestic product (GDP)
dollar value of all final goods and services, and structures produced within a country's borders in a 12 month period.
wealth
accumulation of those products that are tangible, scarce, useful, and transferable from one person to another
trade-offs
alternative choices to an economic decision
need
basic requirement for survival and includes food, clothing, and shelter
list the decision making strategies that economists use
cost-benefit analysis taking small incremental steps toward the final goal
list the four key elements of economics
description analysis explanation prediction
production possiblities frontier
diagram representing various combinations of goods and/or services an economy can produce when all productive resources are fully employed
product market
markets where producers sell their goods and services to customers
HOW to produce
mass production methods that require lot of equipment and few workers, or less equipment more workers, lower costs make manufactured items less expensive and therefore available to more people
FOR WHOM to produce
must be allocated to someone, workers, professional people, government employees
free enterprise economy
one in which consumers and privately owned businesses, rather than the government, make the majority of the WHAT, HOW, and FOR WHOM devisions
labor
people with all their efforts, abilities, and skills (includes all people except entrepreneurs) may vary in size over time due to factors such as population growth, immigration, famine, war, and disease.
explain why productivity is important to economic growth
productivity goes up when ever more output can be produced with the same amount of inputs in the same amount of time
factors of production
resources required to produce the things we would like to have include land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurs
entrepreneur
risk-taker in search of profits who does something new with existing resources, the driving force in an economy because they exhibit the ability to start new business or bring new products to market. they provide initiative that combines the resources of land, labor, and capital into new products
describe the fundamental economic problem
scarcity or the condition that results from society not having enough resources to produce all the things people would like to have
specialization
takes place when factors of production perform tasks that they can do relatively more efficiently than others
division of labor
takes place when work is arranged so that individual workers do fewer tasks that before
