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Economic Systems

Published on Dec 09, 2015

Summary of economic systems.

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Economic Systems

Government & Money

What is economics?

How we make & buy things, spend & save $
Economics is the study of how individuals, businesses, and nations make things, buy things, spend money and save money.
People who study economics are called economists.
Photo by toolstop

Non-Cultural Influences

on Economic Systems
Physical geography can influence the economy of a region.
Photo by kuyman

1. location & accessibility
2. topography & climate
3. available resources

Location and accessibility influence trade and production.

Climate and topography (physical barriers) determine what can be produced, when it can be made.

The available resources determine what can and cannot be made in a region.
Photo by GV_Environ

Factors of Production

Land & Labor
All economic systems need at least two things:
land (natural resources)
labor (people to make things)
Photo by amira_a

Location & Economy

  • Trade Routes
  • Raw Materials
  • Labor
  • Capital
  • Government
Photo by Knight725

Technology

influences the uses of economic elements
Photo by Doha Sam

Economic Types

four basic types
Photo by AndreasPoike

1. Traditional Economy

What are the characteristics?
Photo by Arian Zwegers

Traditional Economy

  • revolves around family
  • divide work by gender
  • mainly agriculture
  • slow to make changes

2. Command Economy

What are the characteristics?

Command Economy

  • no private ownership of land or capital
  • production & pricing controlled by government

Command Economy

  • lack of competition
  • consumer interests a low priority
  • worker motivation focused on patriotism & good of the nation

3. Free-Market Economy

What are the characteristics?
Photo by epSos.de

Free-Market Economy

  • decisions made by individuals
  • individuals own means of production
  • high degree of individual freedom.
  • no government intervention

Free-Market Economy

  • large variety of goods & services
  • individuals act in their self-interest
  • competition results in efficiency and lowest price for consumers.

4. Mixed Economy

What are the characteristics?

Mixed Economy

  • economic system in most nations today
  • combines gov't regulation, tradition, and free-market economies.
Photo by luisvilla

Mixed Economy

  • economic decisions made by individuals with gov't oversight
  • Minimum wage, worker safety, 8 hr work day, social security: examples of gov't intervention.
Photo by luisvilla

Economic Activity

The Four Categories

Primary Activities

closest to nature - use of earth's products
Photo by marfis75

Primary Activities

  • hunting & gathering
  • agriculture
  • extracting minerals from the earth.
  • fishing
  • lumbering
Photo by marfis75

Subsistence Farming

  • small land holdings with large numbers of laborers
  • almost half world's population engaged in it
  • result of Green Revolution
Photo by marfis75

Green Revolution

  • 1969-1999: increased production of grains
  • due to improvements in farm management & seed types
Photo by toehk

Green Revolution

  • benefits led to population increases (India for example)
  • benefits not uniform: less improvement in sub-Saharan Africa
Photo by toehk

Commercial agriculture

  • controlled by market forces: supply & demand
  • influenced by gov't policies: subsidies
  • crop choices guided by profit & competition

Other Primary activities

  • Fishing/Forestry: use of renewable resources
  • Mining: removing non- renewable resources
Photo by Werner Kunz

trade in primary products

  • % of world trade declining
  • important for developing countries
  • trade depends on changes in world market prices.
Photo by kenteegardin

Secondary Activities

manufacturing - construction - power production
Photo by Browni63

transnational corporations

  • international structure of manufacturing
  • 90% largest 100 have HQ in USA, Japan, or EU

transnational corporations

  • most capital goes to advanced countries.
  • corp. often lose their original national identity.
  • difficult to regulate.

transnational corporations

  • four industrial clusters:
  • eastern Anglo-America
  • western & central Europe
  • eastern Europe
  • eastern Asia

Tertiary Activities

retail trade - personal & professional services
Photo by blentley

high tech manufacturing - sun belt

  • developing electronics & robotics
  • less dependent on location of raw materials

Service Sector

  • growing in older, industrialized economies
  • replacing Secondary Activities in US economy.
  • becoming largest sector of US economy.
Photo by Doug Waldron

quaternary activities

information - research - management

advanced services

  • information handling, management, & research
  • especially in computer areas

advanced services

  • post-industrial shift: services over manufacturing
  • increase access to state-of-the-art equipment and services.
  • knowledge is the new commodity

factors of development

difficulty of process

factors of development

  • resources
  • political Stability
  • accessibility
  • government policy toward foreign investment
  • good relative location