View
217
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Economic Challenges Facing Contemporary Business
http://www.wileybusinessupdates.com
Chapter
3
Distinguish between microeconomics and macroeconomics. Explain the factors that drive supply and demand.
Describe the four types of market structures in a private enterprise system and compare the three major types of economic systems.
Identify and describe the four stages of the business cycle. Explain how productivity, price level changes, and employment levels affect the stability of a nation’s economy.
1
Learning Goals
Discuss how monetary policy and fiscal policy are used to manage an economy’s performance.
Describe the major global economic challenges of the 21st century.
2
3
4
5
Analysis of the choices people and governments make in allocating resources.
Supply: Amount of goods and services for sale at different prices.
Demand: Willingness and ability of consumers to purchase goods and services at different prices.
Economics
Microeconomics
The study of small economic units, such as individual
consumers, families, and businesses.
Factors Driving Demand
Demand curve - shows the amount of a product buyers will
purchase at different prices.
Driven by variety of factors such as competition, price, larger
economic events, and consumer preferences.
Demand Curve
A change in overall demand shifts to a new demand curve.
Supply Curve
Supply curve - shows the relationship between different
prices and the quantities that sellers will offer for sale,
regardless of demand.
Factors Driving Supply
Production plays a central role in determining the overall supply. of goods
and services.
How Supply and Demand Interact
Supply and demand curves meet at the equilibrium price.
Buyers and sellers make choices that restore the equilibrium price.
Changes affect both supply and demand.
Macroeconomics
Issues for the Entire Society Political, social, and legal environments
differ in every country. Economies generally classified in one of
three categories: Private enterprise system: capitalism or
market economy Planned economies: socialism, communism Mixed economies (combinations of the two)
Capitalism
The Private Enterprise System and Competition
Businesses meet needs of consumers and are rewarded through profit.
Government favors a hands-off approach. Marketplace competition regulates
economic life. Four degrees of competition:
Pure competition Monopolistic competition Oligopoly Monopoly
Types of Competition
Planned Economies
CommunismProperty owned and shared by the community under a strong central government.Adopted in early 20th century by many nations, but government-owned monopolies often suffered from inefficiency.
SocialismGovernment ownership and operation of major industries, such as health care or communications.Some private ownership of industry allowed.
Government controls determine business ownership, profits, and resource allocation.
Mixed Market Economies
Economic systems that combine features of private enterprise and planned economies.
Mixture of public and private enterprise can vary widely from country to country.
Process of converting a publicly owned company to a private one is called privatization.
Comparing Economic Systems
Evaluating Economic Performance
Economic system should provide stable business environment and sustained growth.
Business decisions and consumer behavior differ at various stages of the business cycle: Prosperity—High consumer confidence,
businesses expanding Recession—Cyclical economic contraction
lasting for six months or longer Depression—Extended recession Recovery—Declining unemployment,
increasing business activity
Productivity and GDP
Productivity: Relationships between the goods and services produced and the inputs needed to produce them.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP): Sum of all goods and services produced within a nation’s boundaries; a measure of national productivity.
GDP is tracked in the United States by the Bureau of Economic Analysis, a division of the U.S. Department of Commerce.
Price-Level Changes
Inflation is rising prices caused by a combination of excessive consumer demand and increases in the costs of raw materials.
Core inflation rate measures inflation minus energy and food prices. Demand-pull inflation - Excessive consumer
demand. Cost-push inflation - Rises in costs of the
factors of production. Hyperinflation - Soaring consumer prices.
Inflation devalues money. People can purchase less with what they have (decreased purchasing power).
Deflation is when prices continue to fall. Deflation can cause a weakened economy.
Measuring Price-Level Changes Changing prices are tracked by the
Consumer Price Index (CPI). The monthly average change in prices of
goods and services. A multitude of items is priced to compile the
data included in the “CPI Market Basket.” The Bureau of Labor Statistics calculates
the CPI monthly along with other economic measures.
CPI Market Basket
Employment Levels
The unemployment rate is the percentage of total workforce actively seeking work
but currently unemployed.
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Unemployment “game show”
Managing the Economy’s Performance Monetary Policy - government actions to
increase or decrease the money supply and change banking policy and interest rates to influence consumer spending. Expansionary monetary policy: Efforts to increase the
money supply to reduce costs of borrowing and encourage new investment.
Restrictive monetary policy: Efforts to decrease the monetary supply to curb rising prices and overexpansion.
The Federal Reserve System formulates and implements monetary policy.
Government uses monetary and fiscal policy to fight unemployment, Government uses monetary and fiscal policy to fight unemployment,
increase spending, and reduce the duration and severity of economic recession.
Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy - Government actions to influence
economic activity through decisions about taxes and spending.
The Federal Budget - Annual plan for how the government will raise and spend money in the coming year. The primary sources of government funds:
taxes, borrowing, fees When the government spends more than the amount
of money it raised, there is a budget deficit. When we borrow money to cover the deficit, the national debt is increased. (Debt clock)
If the government has more money than it spends, there is a budget surplus.
National debt is tracked by the Government Accountability Office.
Global Economic Challenges