Since this chapter looks at economics systems and globalization, we will also be adding Chapter 15 which deals with international trade.

Similar documents
CHAPTER 2: SECTION 1. Economic Systems

COMPARATIVE ECONOMIC SYSTEMS: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE BEFORE YOU BEGIN

Economic Systems. Essential Questions. How do different societies around the world meet their economic systems?

Economies in Transition Part I

Unit 1: Introduction to Economics Chapters 1 & 2

ECON 1000 Contemporary Economic Issues (Summer 2018) Economic Systems: Capitalism versus Socialism

Laissez-Faire vs. Socialism Who is responsible?

Communism. Marx and Engels. The Communism Manifesto

ECONOMIC SYSTEMS AND DECISION MAKING. Understanding Economics - Chapter 2

Economics has been defined as the study of how people respond to incentives.

Note Taking Study Guide DAWN OF THE INDUSTRIAL AGE

Bell Ringer: February 10(14), 2017

Business Ethics Concepts & Cases

Planning Activity. Theme 1

11/7/2011. Section 1: Answering the Three Economic Questions. Section 2: The Free Market

* Economies and Values

Unit 1: Fundamental Economic Concepts. Chapter 2: Economic Choices and Decision Making. Lesson 4: Economic Systems

Understanding this chapter is important to

Monday, November 2 nd 7B Social Studies

Economic Systems and the United States

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 03) Exam #1 Fall 2009 (Version D) Multiple Choice Questions ( 2. points each):

Chapter 2: Economic Systems Section 3

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 02) Exam #1 Spring 2009 (Version C) Multiple Choice Questions ( 2. points each):

Chapter 2: The U.S. Economy: A Global View

Chapter 2. The Evolution of Economic Systems. Copyright 2011 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.

Social Science 1000: Study Questions. Part A: 50% - 50 Minutes

Magruder s American Government

Bell Ringer. What do you know about the differences between and?

Economic Systems and the United States

RUSSIA FROM REVOLUTION TO 1941

Economic Theory: How has industrial development changed living and working conditions?

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 05) Exam #1 Fall 2010 (Version A) Multiple Choice Questions ( 2. points each):

Economic Systems and the United States

Module 5 Review Guide

ECONOMIC SYSTEMS METHOD USED BY A SOCIETY TO PRODUCE AND DISTRIBUTE GOODS AND SERVICES

Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776 The Flow of Money and Goods in a Market Economy

Industrial Revolution: Reform. Key Concept 5.1 Industrialization and Global Capitalism Tuesday March 27, 2018

The Industrial Revolution. Europe s

HOLT CHAPTER 22. Section 1: Capitalism Section 2: Socialism Section 3: Communism HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON

LECTURE 5: CLASSICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY. Dr. Aidan Regan Website: Twitter: #CapitalUCD

The Three Great Thinkers Who Changed Economics

Study Questions for George Reisman's Capitalism: A Treatise on Economics

PART ONE THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN ECONOMIC SOCIETYC SOCIETY CHAPTER 1 THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM

Chapter Economic Issues and Concepts. In this chapter you will learn to. The Complexity of the Modern Economy. The Self-Organizing Economy

A 13-PART COURSE IN POPULAR ECONOMICS SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE

Teacher Overview Objectives: Adam Smith: The Wealth of Nations

Econ Global Inequality and Growth. Introduction. Gabriel Zucman

Adam Smith and the Development of Capitalism Smith argued the world would be an orderly, better place, with increased prosperity if people followed

Soci250 Sociological Theory

and government interventions, and explain how they represent contrasting political choices

Assembly Line For the first time, Henry Ford s entire Highland Park, Michigan automobile factory is run on a continuously moving assembly line when

The Three Great Thinkers Who Changed Economics

Subverting the Orthodoxy

BAllOT BOX. (J c c. 3C( tuw

Stratification: Rich and Famous or Rags and Famine? 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.

The Three Great Thinkers Who Changed Economics

In a core chapter in their book, Unequal Gains: American Growth. Journal of SUMMER Mark Thornton VOL. 21 N O

The difference between Communism and Socialism

When Adam Smith and Karl Marx Encounter Social Enterprise

Karl Marx ( )

Section 4 Notes Window panes

Ch. 15: The Industrial Revolution

Why did economic systems begin to shift during the Industrial Revolution?

1. STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO DEFINE WHAT AN ECONOMIC SYSTEM IS

PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMICS & POLITICS

Defining poverty. Most people think of poverty in terms of deprivation lack of food, shelter, and clothing.

The Beginnings of Industrialization

ARCH 572: ARCHITECTURAL PRACTICE II. Economics

WORLD HISTORY SECTION II

MGT610 2 nd Quiz solved by Masoodkhan before midterm spring 2012

Labor Unions and Reform Laws

The Industrial Revolution. A new era in human history

SCARCITY, CHOICE AND THE ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES

Why did the Industrial Revolution begin in Great Britain????

NCERT Solutions for Class 9th Social Science History : Chapter 2 Socialism in Europe and the Russians Revolution

U6D1 Overview: New Seating Chart

SSWH 15 Presentation. Describe the impact of industrialization and urbanization.

ECON 209 (W) Comparative Economic Systems Syllabus. SC 302 Campbell Hall 1 M, W, F 10-11:05 AM Office hours Tues, 1-2 PM; Fri 2:45 3:45 PM

From Lenin to Stalin: Part II. Building a Communist State in Russia

Big Data and Super-Computers: foundations of Cyber Communism

Reflection & Connection Task

Do Classes Exist the USSR? By S. M. Zhurovkov, M.S.

From The Wealth of Nations

Chapter 4. The Human World Sections 1 and 2

Ideologies of Individualism & Collectivism

Name Chapter 4 TEKS. Subsistence Agriculture VS Market-Oriented (Commercial) Agriculture. by selling their products and then buy what they need

Economic Perspective. Macroeconomics I ECON 309 S. Cunningham

US Government Chapter 1 Section 3 Review

Conference Against Imperialist Globalisation and War

RUSSIA: INDUSTRIALIZATION AND REVOLUTION ( ) AP World History: Chapter 23b

Competing Theories of Economic Development

Chapter 1: Foundations of Government Unit 1

Module 20.2: The Soviet Union Under Stalin

The Communist Manifesto: Annotations

Why did revolution occur in Russia in March 1917? Why did Lenin and the Bolsheviks launch the November revolution?

netw rks Roosevelt and the New Deal, Excerpts from Two Speeches by Alfred E. Smith and Norman Thomas Background

Russian Revolution. Isabel Torralbo Talavera

MARXISM AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ELİF UZGÖREN AYSELİN YILDIZ

Chapter 20: Historical Material on Merchant s Capital

I. The Agricultural Revolution

Transcription:

Monday, January 30 Tuesday, January 31 Since this chapter looks at economics systems and globalization, we will also be adding Chapter 15 which deals with international trade.

Three Economic Questions All nations in the world must decide how to answer three economic questions about the production and distribution of goods. How a society answers these three economic questions defines its economic system.

Three Economic Questions Every society must answer the following questions: What goods will be produced? Because of scarcity, no country can produce every good it wants in the quantity it would like. How will the goods be produced? Will production decisions be made by individuals or by the government? Will producers use existing technology or new technology? For whom will the goods be produced? Will the government decide? Will price decide? Will goods be produced for the purpose of trade with other countries?

Two Major Economic Systems Free enterprise is an economic system in which individuals own all or most of the resources and control their use. Free enterprise is also known as capitalism or a market economy. Socialism is a different kind of economic system, in which the government may control or own many of the resources. Socialism is sometimes referred to as a command economy.

Use your textbook to complete the chart on page 3, the questions on page 4, and all of page 5. Do NOT work on the Economic Freedom chart on page 4 yet. We will do that once everyone has finished the comparisons.

Differences Between Free Enterprise and Socialism In a free enterprise system, resources are owned and controlled by individuals. In socialism, these resources are controlled by the government. For example, in the former Soviet Union, the central government owned many of the resources in the country. Today, in North Korea, the government owns almost all of the resources in the country.

The government plays a different role in each type of economy. In a free enterprise system, the government plays a small role in the economy. It does not make decisions about what goods and services will be produced or how they will be produced, and it allows prices to fluctuate. In a socialistic system, the government may make these decisions. Government decision makers control prices. Under socialism, government decision makers may write an economic plan, a plan that specifies the direction economic activities are to take. This plan may outline how many manufactured goods or agricultural goods are to be produced, and the prices that are to be charged for them.

Income distribution refers to how all the income earned in a country is divided among different groups of income earners. Government decision makers under socialism are more likely to use the government s powers to redistribute income, usually directing it away from society s high earners.

Does the United States operate under a free enterprise system or a socialist system? Under free enterprise people are allowed to own property, such as their house and land. Advocates of free enterprise believe that if something is owned by you alone, you are more likely to take care of it than if it were owned by you and others or owned by the government. A socialist view believes that it would be better for the government to own most of the nonlabor property in the economy, such as factories, raw materials, and machinery. Socialists believe that the government would be more likely than private individuals to make sure this property was used for the benefit of many instead of a few.

Mixed Economies Can every country s economy be easily categorized as either a free enterprise economy or a socialist economy? A country s economic system may contain some parts of free enterprise and socialism. For example, the United States is considered to have a free enterprise economic system. Most of the resources are owned by private individuals, and no overall economic plans determine the use of those resources. However, the U.S. government does control some prices. Economies with features of both free enterprise and socialism are called mixed economies. Most economies in the world are mixed economies. Mixed economies have different levels of economic freedom; some have more, others have less.

Index of Economic Freedom To see a more updated list of Economic Freedom, follow the instructions on page 4 of your notes to complete the chart.

Traditional Economies Before free enterprise and socialist economies, many economies were traditional economies. A traditional economy is a system in which the answers to the three economic questions are based on customs, skills, and cultural beliefs. In a traditional economy, these customs, skills, and beliefs are passed on from one generation to the next. An example would be the old feudal system in Western Europe. Under the feudal system, all land was owned by a king. The king granted land to nobles, who in turn granted small plots of land to peasants to farm. The peasants kept part of what they produced; the remainder went to the nobles and, ultimately, to the king. Few traditional economies exist today. Most economies are mixed economies. Of course, the mixture of free enterprise and socialism often differs between nations. Will the mixture continue to change within a particular country as time goes on?

The Visions Behind Free Enterprise and Socialism A vision is a sense of looking at, understanding, and explaining how the world works. Adam Smith was an 18 th century economist whose ideas are fundamental to free enterprise. He believed that free enterprise is not only the economic system that produces the most goods and services, but that it is also the most ethical economic system.

Smith felt that our self-interest prompts us to work hard, take risks, and in the end benefit others through our activities. Smith also believed that if people wanted to serve their own self-interest, they had to serve others first. According to Smith, we are led by an invisible hand to do good for others.

Karl Marx was a 19 th -century economist who pointed out what he believed to be many of the failures and injustices of free enterprise. His ideas are at the heart of socialism and communism. Marx did not see self-interest as leading to good things. Instead, he saw it as hurting others. Marx believed that capitalists, in pursuing their self-interests, actually exploited the workers.

In his labor theory of value, Marx argued that all value in produced goods comes from labor. Therefore, the value of any item is determined by the necessary labor time needed to produce that item. The difference between the total value of production and the subsistence wages paid to workers defines the surplus value. For example, it takes 5 hours of labor time to produce a chair and 10 hours to produce a table, and this makes the table twice as valuable as the chair. According to Marx, this surplus value should go to the worker.