Bellringer We will have a series of political cartoons to introduce you to various economic systems...

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Bellringer

• We will have a series of political cartoons to introduce you to various economic systems

• On a piece of paper, number 1-8 and answer the questions at the top of the cartoons

• If work was not turned in at the end of class yesterday then turn it in on my chair at the start of class

BACKPACKS AND ID’S

1.What can you infer about socialism?2. Do you feel socialism is a good or bad thing? Explain

3. What can you infer about capitalism?4. Do you feel capitalism is a good or bad thing? Explain

5. What differences do you see between capitalism and communism?6. In your opinion, which one seems to be a better system?

7. Why do think you would see this in capitalism?

8. According to the cartoon, do you agree or disagree that capitalism is not working? Explain

What is an Economy?What is an Economy?

The way a nation makes choices about how it will use its resources to produce and distribute goods and services

Economic GeographyEconomic Indicators and Systems

Economic Indicators, what are they?

They tell how well an economy is performing.

What is GDP? •It is the total value of all goods and services produced by a nation in a year. (GDP = gross domestic product.)

What is GDP per capita?

•It reflects the value of goods and services produced in a year in a country by an average person.

What are some other economic indicators?

•Average number of automobiles,•Telephones,•Televisions, •Or computers per person

GDP – Gross Domestic Product (total value of goods and services produced divided by the total population)

Economic Systems – 4 Types

Communist – China

Free Enterprise – United States

Socialist - Syria

Traditional – Java, Indonesia

Four Types of Economic Systems

1. Traditional2. Free Enterprise3. Communist4. Socialist

Bushmen of Kalahari - Africa

Berbers of Algeria

Village in Bhutan – South Asia

Traditional Economies

•Economic Decisions: Made by customs and traditions.

•Production: Based on customs and time-honored methods. New ideas are discouraged

•Private Property: None (things are owned by the family or village)

•Trade: Very little outside trade because they only make enough to meet their needs.

2 Main Production Methods For Traditional Economies

1. Subsistence agriculture – growing only enough to feed the farmer and his family.

2. Cottage industries –weave cloth, make furniture and clothes by hand at home.

These are mostly found in rural, non-industrial areas

What are these examples of?

Free Enterprise = Capitalism = Free Market System

Economic Decisions: Based on supply and demandSupply – how many there areDemand – how much consumers will pay

Production: New ideas are encouraged

Ownership: People own their own goods and property with limited government interference

• People invest their money in different ways (factories, machines, and land)

• Profit???

Competition

Two Main Production Methods

Commercial Agriculture - Large scale farming to sell; modern and requires less labor

Commercial industries – goods are manufactured in factories for sale throughout the country or overseas

Commercial Agriculture

Commercial Industries

Karl Marx1818-1883

Communism(Command Economy)

Economic Decisions: Government makes ALL decisions

Ownership: No private property. Government owns everything

Cooperation: Cooperation replaces competition

Goal: Classless society – equality among workers

Socialism(Mixed Economy)

Economic Decisions: Government makes decisions about production,

distribution, and use of resourcesOther decisions are made privately

Ownership: Government owns major business Private ownership of everything else

•Goal: End poverty by a fairer distribution of income among society. People’s basic needs (health care, transportation, education, housing) are met for free or at very low cost.

Economic Systems

Command Economy

Communism

On the far left

Market Economy

CapitalismOn the far

right

SocialismLeft of center but right of communism

Economic Activities

Economic Activities

#1 Primary Economic Activities: economic activities which rely directly on natural resources.

Myanmar agriculture rice field

Forestry

Skorpion Zinc Mine, Namibia

In the U.S. only 3% of the labor force.

What 2 types of agriculture would be considered primary economic

activities?

Economic Activities

#2 Secondary Economic Activities: using raw materials to produce products of greater value.

Food processing

Car manufacturing in India

Toy manufacturing in China

England Furniture Manufacturing Plant, USA

Manufacturing

Petroleum Refining

Gold Refining

Refining

What 2 types of industries would be considered secondary

economic activities?

Economic Activities

#3 Tertiary Economic Activities: economic activities which do not use raw materials, but serve others.

Service Industry

In the U.S. – 80% of labor force

What are 3 types of tertiary economic activities?

Economic Activities

#4 Quaternary Economic Activities: economic activities which focus on information.

What are 2 types of quaternary economic activities?

Global Trade (Globalization)• Exports: goods that are sent out of a country• Imports: goods that are brought into a

country

Trade Routes

Impacted by technology

Industrial Development

Industrialized Countries

DevelopmentIndicators

Economic Activity

Crime Levels

Political Stability GDP/GNP Women employment Average Income

% of Higher Education graduates

Age Range of Pop

Standard of Water pipes

Water Access

Telephone Communication

# of TVs per person

# of computers per person

Electricity consumption

Health Care

Calories per person per day

Death/Birth RatioLife expectancy

Ratio of doctors per person