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Transcript Chapter 2 for Website
Chapter 2 – Economic Systems
Resources are scarce everywhere, thus:
Every country must answer three economic questions
What goods and services should be produced?
How should these goods and services be produced?
Who consumes these goods and services?
Economic System – the structure of methods and
principles a society uses to produce and distribute goods and
services.
Economic Systems
Economic goals and societal values
Every society pursue each goal to some degree:
Economic Efficiency – maximize what can be produced
can’t be efficient unless you can provide the right goods to the right
people at the right time
Economic Freedom – the opportunity for individuals to
make their own choices
Economic Security – people want to know that
goods/services are available when needed and that they will get
paid on time
Safety net – governments programs like workman’s compensation,
unemployment compensation, social security disability payments
Economic goals and societal values
Economic Equity – deciding who gets how much
payment. Each society is different.
Economic Growth – economy should grow with rising
population and for individuals to have wage growth
Standard of Living – level of economic prosperity
Innovation – process of bringing new methods, products, or
ideas into use
Instrumental in economic growth i.e. industrial revolution, computer
technology, etc.
Goals in Conflict – some goals undermine others i.e.
safety nets can slow economic growth because they are
expensive
Types of Economies
Traditional Economy
Oldest and simplest economic system
Relies on habit, custom, or ritual to answer three economic
questions
Little room for innovation
Revolves around a family unit
Found in small, close knit communities
Individuals work to support the community not themselves
Ex. Native Amazon tribes, African tribes, some 3rd world
nations
Chapter 2.1 Questions
What is an Economic System?
What must happen for a nation’s standard of living to
improve?
Why would it be inefficient for a manufacturer to produce
audio cassettes instead of CDs today?
Which basic economic goals can be achieved easily in a
traditional economy? Which cannot? Explain
Free Market System
Market – any arrangement that allows buyers and sellers to
exchange things
These allow us to exchange things we have (money) for things
we want (goods/services)
Specialization – concentration of the productive efforts of
individuals and businesses on a limited number of activities
This leads to the most efficient use of capital, land & labor
Free Market System
Free Market Economy – answers to the three economic
questions are made by voluntary exchange in markets.
Also known as Capitalist Economy
Individuals and privately owned business own the factors of
production, make what they want, and buy what they want
Free Market System
Factor Market – When firms purchase factors of production from
households
Hiring workers
Renting land or buildings
Product Market – households buy the goods and services that firms
produce
How does the marketplace function?
Self Interest – buyers and sellers consider only their own personal gain.
This motivates people to act.
Incentives – hope of reward or fear of penalty that encourages a person to
behave in a certain way
Competition – the struggle among producers for the dollars of consumers
Self interest and competition work together to regulate the marketplace
Free Market System
Advantages of the Free Market:
Economic Efficiency – market responds efficiently to rapidly
changing conditions
Economic Freedom – individuals work where they want,
businesses produce what they want, households consume what they
want
Economic Growth – competition encourages innovation, thus free
markets encourage growth
Additional Goals
Consumer Sovereignty – the power of consumers to decide what gets
produced
There is no country in the world that has a truly “Free Market”
Chapter 2.2 Questions
How does specialization make us more efficient?
How do self-interest and competition affect the free market?
Why do you think no country has a pure free market
economy?
Centrally Planned Economies
Centrally Planned Economy – the government, rather
than individual producers and consumers, answer the key
economic questions
Government owns the land and capital
Government decides where people work and what they are paid
Also known as a “Command Economy”
Opposed to private property, free market pricing, competition
and consumer choice
Centrally Planned Economies
Two types of government associated with Command
Economies
Socialism – not a single economic system; rather, a range of
economic and political systems based on a belief that wealth
should be evenly distributed throughout society
Communism – central government owns and controls all
resources and means of production and makes all economic
decisions
Soviet Union
China
Centrally Planned Economies
Disadvantages of Centrally Planned Economies
Economic Efficiency – since government owns everything
and fixes wages, workers lack incentive to work faster or
produce more
Economic Freedom – individual freedoms sacrificed in order
to pursue societal goals
Economic Growth – innovation is not promoted and they do
not encourage entrepreneurship
Economic Equity – government officials are typically wealthy
and workers are typically poor and suffer shortages
Additional Goals – has provided secure jobs and income
Chapter 2.3 Questions
What does a centrally planned economy oppose that a market
economy encourages?
Explain why each of the following goals is difficult to achieve
in a centrally planned economy:
Economic freedom
Economic growth
Who benefits and who suffers most from a centrally planned
economy? How?
Mixed Economies
Most economies today are “mixed”
Mixed Economy – a market-based economic system in
which the government is involved to some extent
the degree to which the government is involved varies from
nation to nation
Mixed economies
Mixed Economies
A wide variety of Mixed Economies exist
Economic Transition – a period of change in which a
nation moves from one economic system to another
Privatization – the process of selling businesses or services
operated by the government to individual investors
China is currently selling state owned businesses to individuals
and then letting them compete in the market place
Mixed Economies
U.S. Economy
Founded on Free-Market principles
Free Enterprise System – an economic system characterized by
private or corporate ownership of capital goods
Government intervention plays a key role in economy
However, government allows marketplace to operate with
minimal regulation
U.S. enjoys a high level of economic freedom
Chapter 2.4 Questions
Why have some nations began an economic transition to a
free enterprise system?
How does laissez faire differ from a centrally planned
government?
How is China carrying out privatization?