Title: Chapters 2
1Chapters 2 3 Economic Systems
2- Introduction Vocabulary
- Economic Systems Chart
- Traditional Economy
- Market Economy
- Circular Flow Diagram
- Command Economy
- Marxism
- Lenin
- Stalin
- Gorbachev
- Mixed Economy
- Circular Flow Diagram
- Other Vocabulary
- Poverty
3Turn to Page 1
41.What is an Economic System?
The method used by a society to produce and
distribute goods and services
5What are the FOUREconomic Systems?
- Traditional
- Market
- Command (Centrally Planned)
- Mixed
62. What are the FOUREconomic Questions?
- What goods and services should be produced?
- How should these goods and services be produced?
- Who consumes these goods and services?
- For Whom are the goods and services produced?
73. What are the Economic Goals?
- Efficiency Use the most of resources
- Freedom Lack of government intervention
- Security / Predictability Assurance that goods
and services will be available - Equity Fair distribution of wealth
- Innovation / Growth Innovation leads to
economic growth
8Other Vocabulary Words
- Safety net
- Government programs that protect people
experiencing unfavorable economic conditions - Provides for Natural disasters, injuries,
joblessness - Does NOT provide for
- Low Income
9Other Vocabulary Words
- Standard of Living
- Level of economic prosperity
10Turn to the Chart
11Traditional
- A traditional economic system is one in which
people's economic roles are the same as those of
their parents and grandparents. Societies that
produce goods and services in traditional ways
are found today in some parts of South America,
Asia, and Africa. There, people living in an
agricultural village still plant and harvest
their own food on their own land. And the ways
they produce clothing and shelter are almost
exactly the same as those used in the past.
Tradition decides what these people do for a
living and how their work is performed.
12Traditional
Who answers the 4 Economic Questions? Habit, custom, ritual, tradition
Advantages Security (know what will do in life) Freedom (no government)
Disadvantages Equity (Some have more than others) Growth (Stagnant, not moving)
Examples Third-world countries
Examples in Practice Haiti, Rwanda, Chad
Associated Terms Non-industrialized
Other Terms Children usually do the same job as parents
13Market
- A market economic system is one in which a
nation's economic decisions are the result of
individual decisions by buyers and sellers in the
marketplace. When you finish school, you may go
to work where you choose, if a job is open. You
are also free to go into business on your own.
Suppose that you decide to open a business. You
will risk the money that you have saved or
borrowed in the hope that you will be successful.
The price that you charge for your goods or
services will be influenced by the prices charged
by your competitors (other businesses selling the
same items). The success that you have will
depend on the demand by consumers for your goods.
You may do extremely well. But if people do not
want what you are selling, you will go out of
business.
14Market
Who answers the 4 Economic Questions? Individuals
Advantages Efficiency (voluntary exchange) Freedom (lack of government) Growth (motivated to improve)
Disadvantages Equity (some have more than others) Security (possibility of failure)
Examples NO pure Market Economies
Examples in Practice U.S., England, Japan
Associated Terms Free enterprise, Capitalism
Other Terms Producers motivated by profit, Voluntary exchange
15Command (Centrally Planned)
- In a command economic system, the main decision
maker is the government. No person may
independently decide to open and run any kind of
business. The government decides what goods and
services are to be produced. And the government
sells these goods and services. The government
also decides how the talents and skills of its
workers are to be used.
16Command
Who answers the 4 Economic Questions? Government
Advantages Security (Government appointed positions) Efficiency (Central planning regulation)
Disadvantages Growth (Stagnant, not moving) Freedom (Government control)
Examples No pure Command Economy
Examples in Practice Cuba, China, Laos
Associated Terms Socialism, Communism
Other Terms Assigned jobs, Government owns everything
17Mixed
- The United States has a combination of a Market
economy and a Command Economy
18Mixed
Who answers the 4 Economic Questions? Individuals and Government
Advantages Growth (ability to change and improve) Efficiency (combination of individuals government)
Disadvantages Equity (some have more than others) Security (possibility of failure)
Examples U.S., Canada, China, England
Examples in Practice ______
Associated Terms ______
Other Terms Continuum
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20Traditional Economy
21Traditional Economy
Women usually work at home and/or do the same
work their mothers did
Men usually do the same work their fathers did
Example My grandfather was a carpenter My father
was a carpenter I am a carpenter My son is a
carpenter
Usually stagnant, low standard of living
Example Third-world countries
22Standards
- 6.1.12AB
- 6.4.12AB
- 6.5.12DE
23Market Economy
24Vocabulary
Invisible Hand used to describe the self-regulating nature of the marketplace
Profit financial gain made in a transaction
Competition the struggle among producers for the dollars of consumers Regulating force in a free market
Self-interest ones own personal gain Motivating force in a free market
25Invisible Hand Example Coca-Cola in the Europe
- In 1989, as the Berlin Wall was toppling,
Douglas Ivester, head of Coca-Cola Europe (and
later CEO), made a snap decision. He sent his
sales force to Berlin and told them to start
passing out Coke. Free. In some cases, the
Coca-Cola representatives were literally passing
bottles of soda through holes in the Wall. - --Naked Economics, page 3
26Invisible Hand Example Coca-Cola in the Europe
- He recalls walking around Alexanderplatz in
East Berlin at the time of the upheaval, trying
to gauge whether there was any recognition of the
Coke brand. Everywhere we went, we asked people
what they were drinking, and whether they liked
Coca-Cola. But we didnt even have to say the
name! We just shaped our hands like the bottle,
and people understood. We decided we would move
as much Coca-Cola as we could, as fast as we
couldeven before we knew how we would get paid. - --Naked Economics, page 3
27Invisible Hand Example Coca-Cola in the Europe
- Coca-Cola quickly set up business in East
Germany, giving free coolers to merchants who
began to stock the real thing. It was a
money-losing proposition in the short run the
East German currency was still worthlessscraps
of paper to the rest of the world. But it was a
brilliant business decision made faster than any
government body could ever hope to act. - --Naked Economics, page 3
28Invisible Hand Example Coca-Cola in the Europe
- By 1995, per capita consumption of Coca-Cola in
the former East Germany had risen to the level in
West Germany, which was already a strong market. - --Naked Economics, page 3
29Invisible Hand Example Coca-Cola in the Europe
- In a sense, it was Adam Smiths invisible hand
passing Coca-Cola through the Berlin Wall. Coke
representatives werent undertaking any great
humanitarian gesture as they passed beverages to
the newly liberated East Germans. Nor were they
making a bold statement about the future of
communism. - --Naked Economics, page 3-4
30Invisible Hand Example Coca-Cola in the Europe
- They were looking after businessexpanding
their global market, boosting profits, and making
shareholders happy. And that is the punch line
of capitalism. The market aligns incentives in
such a way that individuals working for their own
best interestpassing out Coca-Cola, spending
years in graduate school, planting a field of
soybeans, designing a ratio that will work in the
showerleads to thriving and ever-improving
standard of living for most (though not all)
member of society. - --Naked Economics, page 4
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39Self-interest Example 1
- Self-interest make the world go around, a point
that seems so obvious as to be silly. Yet it is
routinely ignore. The old slogan From each
according to his abilities, to each according to
his needs - --Naked Economics, p. 27
40Self-interest Example 2 The Prisoners Dilemma
- The basic idea is that two men have been
arrested on suspicion of murder. They are
immediately separated so they can be interrogated
without communicating with one another. The case
against them is not terribly strong, and the
police are looking for a confession. Indeed, the
authorities are willing to offer a deal if one of
the men rats the other as the trigger man.
41Self-interest Example 2 The Prisoners Dilemma
- If neither man confesses, the police will charge
them both with illegal possession of a weapon,
which carries a five-year jail sentence. If both
of them confess, then each will receive a
twenty-five-year murder sentence. If one man
rats out the other, then the snitch will receive
a light three-year sentence as an accomplice and
his partner will get life in prison. What
happens?
42- The men are best off collectively if they keep
their mouths shut. But thats not what they do.
Each of them starts thinking.Prisoner A figures
that if his partner keeps his mouth shut, then he
can get the light three-year sentence by ratting
him out. Then it dawns on him His partners is
almost certainly thinking the same thingin which
case he had better confess to avoid having the
whole crime pinned on himself. Indeed, his best
strategy is to confess regardless of what his
partner does It either gets him the three-year
sentence (if his partner stays quiet) or saves
him from getting life in prison (if his partner
talks)
43- Of course, Prisoner B has the same incentives.
They both confess and they both get twenty-five
years in prison when they might have served only
five. Yet neither prisoner has done anything
rational. - --Naked Economics, p. 34
44Vocabulary
Voluntary Exchange Each person willfully trades items and expects to gain something from the transaction
Incentive Expectation that encourages people to behave in a certain way Ex Consumers look for lower price
Consumer Sovereignty Power of consumers to decide what gets produced
Specialization Concentration of productive efforts of individuals and firms on a limited number of activities
45Incentive Example 1
- When we are paid on commission, we work
harder,if the price of gasoline goes up, we drive
less - -- Naked Economics, p. 26
46Incentive Example 2
- Have you ever seen some variation of the sign
near the cash register at a fast food restaurant
that says, - Your meal is free if you dont get a receipt.
Please see a manager? - Does Burger King have a passionate interest in
providing a receipt so that your family
bookkeeping will be complete?
47Incentive Example 2
- Burger King does not want its employees
stealing. Burger King can either spend a lot of
time and money monitoring its employees for
theft, or it can provide an incentive for you to
do it for them. - --Naked Economics, p. 31
48Who is Adam Smith?
- A Free Market philosopher who wrote the book,
Wealth of Nations
http//www.econlib.org/library/Enc/bios/Smith.html
49Adam Smith Quote
- It is not from the benevolence of the butch, the
brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner,
but from the regard to their own interest - --Naked Economics, p. 27
50Capitalism Example
- At the beginning of the twentieth century, half
of all Americans worked in farming or ranching.
Now that figure is about one in a hundred and
still falling. (Iowa is still losing roughly
fifteen hundred farmers a year.) Note that two
important things have NOT happened (1) We have
not starved to death and (2) we do not have a 49
percent unemployment rate.
51Capitalism Example
- Instead, American farmers have become so
productive that we need far fewer of them to feed
ourselves. The individuals who would have been
farming ninety years ago are now fixing our cars,
designing computer games, playing professional
football, etc. - --Naked Economics, p. 36
52Political Ideologies
Capitalism Socialism Communism
Means of Production Private Public private Public
Who/what determines economic activity Consumers businesses Government, Consumers, Businesses Government
Example You have 2 Cows You sell one and buy a bull The government takes them and puts them in a barn with everyone elses cows, then gives you as much milk as it thinks you need. Your neighbors help you take care of them and everyone shares the milk
53Circular Flow Diagram for a Market Economy
54Turn to page 30 in your Economics textbooks
55Product Market
Monetary Flow
Physical Flow
Households
Firms
Physical Flow
Monetary Flow
Factor Market
56 57Words associated with a Circular Flow Diagram
Household person or group of people
living in the same residence
Firms an organization that uses resources to
produce a product, which it then sells
Monetary Flow movement of money
Physical Flow movement of products
Factor Market firms purchase the factors of
production from households
Product Market households purchase goods
services from firms
58Standards
- 6.1.12AB
- 6.2.12AB
- 6.4.12AB
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60Command Economy(Centrally Planned)
St. Basil Cathedral in Moscow
61Command Economy Example 1
- Charles Weelan, author of Naked Economics, was
recently part of an Illinois delegation visiting
Cuba. Because the visit was licensed by the U.S.
government, each member of the delegation was
allowed to bring back 100 worth of Cuban
merchandise, including cigars. - -- Naked Economics, page 5
62Command Economy Example 1
- Having been raised in the era of discount
stores, we all set out looking for the best price
on Cohibas so that we could get the most bang for
our 100 allowance. After several fruitless
hours, we discovered the whole point of
communism The price of cigars was the same
everywhere. - -- Naked Economics, page 5
63Command Economy Example 1
- There is no competition between stores because
there is no profit as we know it. Every store
sells cigarsand everything else for that
matterat whatever price Fidel Castro tells
them to. And every shopkeeper selling cigars is
paid the government wage for selling cigars,
which is unrelated to how many cigars he or she
sells. - -- Naked Economics, page 5
64Command Economy Example 2
- During the twentieth century, communist
governments killed some 100 million of their own
people in peacetime, either by repression or by
famine - --Naked Economic, p. 21
65Who is Karl Marx?
66Who is Karl Marx?
- His philosophy has become known as Marxism
- Capital, published in 1872
- Father of Communism
- There are FIVE stages a society goes through
- To get to each stage, there is a Violent
Revolution
- Tribal
- Primitive Communism
- Feudalism / estate property
- Capitalism
- Communism
http//www.sla.purdue.edu/academic/engl/theory/mar
xism/modules/marxstagesmainframe.html
67No social classes (family instead) Hunting/
gathering Slaves create social classes
population increases leading to wants, creating
relations with others leads to war or bartering
Tribal
Union of several tribes either by conquest or
agreement Private property creates a working
class (proletariat)
Primitive Communism
A certain amount/ percentage of working class
income was given to aristocracy (royalty)
Feudalism / estate property
People gain items Aristocracy goes into debt
Proletariat are fooled to believe that they are
in control, where instead Aristocracy exploits
them and takes part of their wealththey feel
like they are the property of the Aristocracy
Capitalism
Goal in society, people do things for the greater
good of society
Communism
Read pg1-3
68Russia
69United States
70 Russia vs. United States
- Land 16,995,800 sq km
- Largest country in the worlddifficult to plant
on - Population 143,420,309 (July 2005)
- Land 9,161,923 sq km
- (only continental U.S.)
- World's third-largest country by size (Russia,
Canada) - Population 295,734,134
- (June 2005)
- Worlds third-largest population (China, India)
- http//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index
.html
71Leaders of Russia
Vladimir Lenin
Years in Power 1917 1924
Role / Importance in Russia Supports Marxism Leader of Bolsheviks (Russian Communists) Duty of elite to lead poor Leader of November 1917 Revolution
72Who was Vladimir Lenin?
http//www.marxlibrary.net/lenin/lenin_2.htm
73Leaders of Russia
Vladimir Lenin Joseph Stalin Man of Steel
Years in Power 1917 1924 1924 1953
Role / Importance in Russia Supports Marxism Leader of Bolsheviks (Russian Communists) Duty of elite to lead poor Leader of November 1917 Revolution 5-Year Plans promoting heavy industry Collectivization Purges
74Who is Joseph Stalin?
75Leaders of Russia
Vladimir Lenin Joseph Stalin Man of Steel Mikhail Gorbachev
Years in Power 1917 1924 1924 1953 1985 1990
Role / Importance in Russia Supports Marxism Leader of Bolsheviks (Russian Communists) Duty of elite to lead poor Leader of November 1917 Revolution 5-Year Plans promoting heavy industry Collectivization Purges Initiatives Perestroika Glasnost Democratization End of Soviet Union
76Who is Mikhail Gorbachev?
77Vocabulary
78Five Year Plans
- Bring all industry under state control
- All industrial development planned by state
- Emphasis on weapon production
- (using heavy industry)
79What is heavy industry?
Industry that requires a large capital
investment and produces items used in other
industries Examples Chemical, Steel, Heavy
machinery
80What are Purges?
Name given to when Stalin killed those
who threatened to overthrow his power
81What are collectives?
Large farms leased from the state to groups of
peasant farmers (Many small farms combined into
one large farm)
82Gorbachevs Initiatives
- Perestroika
- rebuilding Reforming communism (example help
the workers in collectives by allowing them to
have private farms) - Glasnost
- public voicing public discussion of issues,
accessibility of information to the public - Democratization
- Expand participation in the political process
83Prior to 1917 Feudalism
84 Russian Social Classes Feudalism
- Tsar (Ruler) Nicholas II ? ? ?
- Landowners ? ? ? ?
- Serfs - peasants who were not
- allowed to leave the land without
- their owners permission)
- made up 90 of Russias population
Read pg. 4
85Russia, Prior to 1917
- Combined Society of Farming Industrial
- People worked 12-hour days
- Illegal to have
- a) labor unions
- b) strikes
- c) socialist political parties
- d) workers newspapers
- If violated, could be shot or arrested
86Russia, Prior to 1917
- Combined Society of Farming Industrial
- People worked 12-hour days
- Illegal to have
- a) labor unions
- b) strikes
- c) socialist political parties
- d) workers newspapers
- If violated, could be shot or arrested
People NOT paid muchand hungry!
Karl Marxs publication, Capital circulating
through country
87Russia, by 1917
- Russia was in World War I
- Very cold weather conditions
- Severe food shortages
88March 1917 Capitalism
Read pg 5 Top
89March 1917
- Workers in Petrograd (St. Petersburg) demanded
- a 50 raise in pay so they could buy food
- Management refused the workers request
- Workers went on strike
- Workers were locked out of work,
- Workers do NOT get paid
http//www.historylearningsite.co.uk/lenin.htm
90March 1917
- Tsar Nicholas II refuses to release emergency
food supplies - Rioters release people from jail
- 25,000 soldiers mutinied and took the workers
side - Tsar Nicholas was forced to give up the throne!
- (NOTE Lenin was not involved in this Revolution)
91The Bolsheviks believed this wasRussia moving
fromFeudalist society (Stage 3)into Capitalism
(Stage 4)
92Who was Vladimir Lenin?
http//www.marxlibrary.net/lenin/lenin_2.htm
93- In 1887, Lenins elder brother was arrested and
hanged for plotting to kill the tsar (king) of
Russia. At this time nearly all Russians saw the
tsar as a god. It is claimed that when Lenin
heard about the execution, he said "Ill make
them pay for this. I swear I will." Many years
later, Lenins wife said that it was this event
that turned Lenin into a revolutionary with a
desire to rid Russia of the system that had been
responsible for Alexanders execution.
94- In 1895, he went on a visit to Europe. When he
returned he brought back communist books and
leaflets. This was strictly forbidden in Russia,
he was arrested and sent to prison, and later was
exiled to an area called Siberia. He had to stay
there until 1900. After his release, he spent
much of his time out of Russia living in Europe.
He produced a newspaper, which was smuggled into
Russia by supporters of Lenin. However, his face
was too well known by the secret police for Lenin
to have been safe in Russia.
95Leaders of Russia
Vladimir Lenin
Years in Power 1917 1924
Role / Importance in Russia Supports Marxism Leader of Bolsheviks (Russian Communists) Duty of elite to lead poor Leader of November 1917 Revolution
96Lenin believed
The poor Russians were uneducated, and
therefore incapable of educating themselves.
Therefore, Lenin believed it was the duty of
elite intellectuals to lead the poor.
97- A civil war in Russia started. Any problems were
dealt with by the feared communist secret police.
In the factories, the government took complete
control. In the countryside, the secret police
was sent out to take food from the peasant
farmers. Anybody found keeping food from others
was shot. The peasants responded by producing
food only for themselves and so the cities were
more short of food than before. Life under Lenin
appeared to be worse than under Nicholas II! The
civil war had devastated Russias economy.
98November 1917 Communism
Read pg 5 Bottom Pg. 6 Top
99- By October 1917, Lenin felt the time was right
for a revolution. He returned in disguise. The
actual details for the revolution were left to
Leon Trotsky but the actual date for it to begin
was left to Lenin.
100- Speeches were made by Trotsky as to why people
should support the communists. While he was
giving these speeches, he knew that the Red
Guards and armed workers were actually taking
over key points in the city. By the time that the
speeches had finished most of the city was in the
hands of the Bolsheviks (communists led by Lenin)
- as Trotsky had planned. The telephone and
telegraph buildings were taken over, as were the
power stations. Bridges were captured. So were
the railway stations. There was very little
bloodshed and it is probable that many people in
Petrograd were unaware of what had happened when
they woke up in the morning.
101- Throughout the November 7th the Red Guards kept
on occupying important buildings. By
mid-afternoon, the only building not held by the
Bolsheviks was the Winter Palace, the old home of
the tsar. It was here that the Provisional
Government met. In fact, the troops who were
meant to be defending the building had gone home
and only the Womens Battalion remained.
102- By the end of the day the members of the
Provisional Government were under arrest, the
tsar and his family were also under house arrest.
Lenins statement that he would overturn the
government of Russia - made after his brother had
been executed - was fulfilled. - Forming a government of Bolsheviks and that it
would contain no middle class people. The
government would work to help the workers and
peasants. Lenin's problems included limited
control of Russian territory, many groups against
his rule, and Russia was still in World War One
103- What became of the royal family ?
- Once the communists had taken over in November
1917, the royal family became a problem as there
were many thousands who still believed in royalty
and were willing to fight to have the family
restored to power. To stop this from happening,
an order was made for them to be executed. In the
summer of 1918, the Romanov family was under
house arrest in another city. It is said that
they were told to get ready to go to Germany
because they were to leave Russia. They were
taken to a cellar and shot by the Communist
secret police. Their bodies were thrown down a
series of wells in a forest so that it was
impossible for any relics of them to be found.
104November 1917
- Lenin in charge of events
- Trotsky and other communists were giving speeches
- Bolsheviks took over key points of Petrograd
- The Bolsheviks arrested Tsar Nicholas II and all
of the royal family - July 16, 1918? A group of people (probably the
Bolsheviks) killed Tsar Nicholas II and all of
the royal family, the family doctor, and 3 others
(11 total were killed)
105The Bolsheviks believed this wasRussia moving
from Capitalism (Stage 4) into Communism
(Stage 5)
106Movie (1917)
1071924 - 1953
Read Bottom pg. 6 Pg 7 8
1081924
- Lenin dies
- Petrograd is renamed Leningrad
- Stalin becomes leader of Russia
109Who is Joseph Stalin?
1101924 - 1953
- Stalin institutes several Five-Year Plans
- Heavy Industry, Collectives, Purges
- Managers had targets to fulfill
- Propaganda encouraged people
- Good managers / workers rewarded
- Bad managers / workers disciplined
- (fined, work camps, prison, executed)
111- Stalin became a follower of Lenin and went to
secret meetings and distributed leaflets. - When Stalin became the undisputed leader of
Russia in 1929, he realized that Russia was far
behind the west and that she would have to
modernize her economy very quickly if she was to
survive. Also a strong economy would lead to a
strong military if Russia was going to survive
threats from external forces. A modernized Russia
would also provide the farmers with the machinery
they needed if they were going to modernize their
farms - such as tractors. -
112- The Five Year Plans
- This brought all industry under state control
and all industrial development was planned by the
state. The state would decide what would be
produced, how much would be produced and where it
should be produced. The targets were completely
unrealistic and could not be met but vast
improvements were made. The emphasis was on heavy
industries such as coal, oil, iron and steel and
electricity. Stalin brought in experts from
foreign countries to help them.
113- Products produced were frequently so poor that
they could not be used - even if the factory
producing those goods appeared to be meeting its
target. The punishment for failure was severe. A
manager could be executed as an "enemy of the
people". Workers could be sent to a prison camp
in Siberia. Nobody was allowed to condemn or
criticize the five year plans as they were
Stalins idea.
114- Life for the workers
-
Life was very hard for industrial
workers. Their pay was poor and there was barely
anything they could spend their money on even if
they had any. Consumer goods were simply not
produced. Working conditions were very dangerous
and the hours were long.
115Shortage Example
- There is an old-pre-Cold War story about a
Soviet official who visits an American pharmacy.
The brightly lit aisles are lined with thousands
of remedies for every problem from bad breath to
toe fungus. - --Naked Economics, page 5
116Shortage Example
- Very impressive, he says. But how can you
make sure that every store stocks all of these
items? - --Naked Economics, page 5
117Shortage Example
- The anecdote is interesting because it betrays a
total lack of understanding of how a market
economy works. In America, there is no central
authority that tells stores what items to stock,
as there was in the Soviet Union. Stores sell
the products that people want to buy, and in
turn, companies produce items that stores want to
stock. - --Naked Economics, page 5
118Shortage Example
- The Soviet economy failed in large part because
government bureaucrats directed everything, from
the number of bars of soap produced by a factory
in Irktusk to the number of university students
studying electrical engineering in Moscow . In
the end, the task proved overwhelming. - --Naked Economics, page 5
119Shortage Example 2
- There is an old joke, one of Ronald Reagans
favorites A Soviet women is trying to buy a
Lada, one of the cheap automobiles make in the
former Soviet Union. The dealer tells her that
there is a shortage of these cars, despite their
reputation for shoddy quality. Still, the woman
insists on placing an order. - --Naked Economics, page 63
120Shortage Example 2
- The dealer gets out a large, dusty ledger and
adds the womans name to the long waiting list.
Come back two years from now on March 17th, he
says. - --Naked Economics, page 63
121Shortage Example 2
- The woman consults her calendar. Morning or
Afternoon? she asks. - What difference does it make? the surly dealer
replies. Thats two years from now! - --Naked Economics, page 64
122Shortage Example 2
- The plumber is coming that day, she says.
- --Naked Economics, page 64
123- Good managers were well rewarded. Unsuccessful
managers could pay a severe price for failure.
Punishment was also used by those who did not
work hard. Bad comments from your manager could
also lead to prison.
124- Collectivization was Stalins answer to his
belief that Russias agriculture was in a
terrible state. Stalin believed that Russia had
to be able to feed itself - hence
collectivization - and that at the very least the
peasant farmers should be providing food for the
workers in the factories if the Five Year Plans
were going to succeed. - Collectivization meant that small farms would be
gathered together to form one large massive one.
These bigger farms would be called collectives.
The key to collectives would be the use of
science and machinery.
125- However, many peasants, rich or poor, were
against collectivization. The land that Lenin had
given them was now being taken away by Stalin.
Those villages that were due for collectivization
but did not want to join a collective, killed
their animals and destroyed their grain so that
they could not be taken by the soldiers and
secret police. By 1939, Russia was producing the
same amount of food as it had in 1928.
Collectivization was clearly a disaster.
126- What was controlled / Censored by the state?
- Education
- Religion leaders arrested and churches shut
down - Media (television, radio, newspapers, books)
- Farming
- Factories
- Weddings, divorces, births (abortions)
- Medicine
127- So why was a failure of policy allowed to
continue? Simply because it was Stalins idea and
nobody would dare tell Stalin that one of his
ideas was a mistake. - Stalin's control over Russia meant that freedom
was the one thing that people lost. Some people
committed suicide rather than do what the state
ordered them to do. Many others tried to leave
the country.
128- Also many of Russia's most talented people had
been murdered during the Purges of the 1930's.
Anyone with talent was seen as a threat by the
increasingly paranoid behavior associated with
Stalin and were killed or imprisoned.
129What happened after Stalin died in 1953?
- Some mourned Stalin
- Some were happy he was dead
- Several leaders in Russia from 1953 until
- Khrushchev (1953 - 1964)
- Andropov (1964 - 1984)
- Chernenko (1984 - 1985)
- Gorbachev (1985 1989)
1301985 1990
Read pg. 9
1311985 1990
- Mikhail Gorbachev leader of the Soviet Union and
institutes several initiatives, including
Glasnost, Perestroika, and Democratization, which
ultimately lead to the downfall of the Soviet
Union
132Who is Mikhail Gorbachev?
133Reasons the Soviet Union Collapsed
- Size of Country
- Size of Population
- Type of Geography
- Gorbachevs initiatives
- Lack of Incentives
134Is Communism GOOD or BAD?
Support Oppose
Area is small People get what they need Contribute to society Like to work together and/or like to work Area is too large Shortages of products Lack of individuality Dont like each other and/or dont like to work
135Movie(1990)
136Review Questions
- Explain how a traditional economy works?
- What is the name of the Free Market philosopher?
- What was the name of the last tsar of Russia and
the First communist leader? - Whose philosophy did Russia adopt in 1917?
- Who/What answers the 4 economic questions in each
economic system? - What type of economic system does the U.S. have?
137Standards
- 6.1.12AB
- 6.2.12B
- 6.4.12AB
138(No Transcript)
139Product Market
Monetary Flow
Physical Flow
Households
Firms
Physical Flow
Monetary Flow
Factor Market
140Mixed Economy
141Why is the United States a Mixed Economy?
Free Market Command
What goods and services should be produced? Profits Anti-trust laws Government monopolies
How should the goods and services be produced? Profits Consumer sovereignty Safety regulations
Who will consume these goods and services? Profits Pollution laws
For whom are the goods and serves produced? Profits Income Welfare Public goods
142Mixed Economy Vocabulary
- Continuum
- A range with NO clear divisions
(Open your Economics textbooks to page 43)
143Mixed Economy Vocabulary
- Laissez faire
- Hands off
- Government should NOT intervene in the
marketplace - Transition
- A period of change an economy moves through from
a Command Economy -
- Privatized
- To sell state-run firms to individuals
144Therefore, we considered the United States a
Free Enterprise System
Here are some characteristics of our Economic
System
145Characteristics of an American Free Enterprise
- Public disclosure laws
- Laws requiring companies to provide
- full information about their products
-
- Caveat emptor
- Let the buyer beware
- Poverty threshold
- Income level below what is needed to
- support a family or household
146Mixed Economy
- How much money a year would you need to have to
live comfortablywithout any help / aid from
anyone - You work and Live in Northampton.
- Necessities
- Luxuries
147What is Poverty?
- Suppose you made 10 an hour and worked 40 hours
each week. - How much money would you bring home each week?
- 400.00?
148What is Poverty?
- Well, if your getting paid legally, the
government usually takes out about 1/3 of your
paycheckEVERY WEEK!!! - That would mean of the 400 a week you would make
before taxes are take out (called Gross Income),
the government would take about 125.00 - This would leave you with about 275.00 each week
to use or save (called your Net Income)
149What is Poverty?
- If you brought home 275 a week for a month (4
weeks), that would mean you would make 1100 a
monthafter taxes of course. - This means you would make 14,300 a year(52
weeks)after taxes of course - By the way, if you did NOT have taxes taken out,
you would make 20,800.
150What is Poverty?
Item Cost Amount left
Income (275 x 4 weeks) 1100 1100
Rent (you need a place to live) 450 650
Electric (or oilheat, stove, lights) 100 550
Phone (communication) 35 515
Television (or computer, nightly entertainment) 40 475
Transportation (gas for car, bike, bike) 100 375
Maintenance (shampoo, soap, toothbrush) 75 300
Clothing (underwear, socks, shirts, pants) 75 225
Entertainment (movies, dinner) 50 175
Food (you need to eat!) ONLY have 175
151Oh, I forgot
You are a single parent with 3 children
So, what can you do?
152What do you do if you are POOR?
- Welfare
- Government aid to the poor
- Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF)
- In 1996 reform of welfare, which aims to move
people from welfare dependence to the work force - Social Security
- Established in 1935 during Great Depression
- Payments to elderly and disabled
153What do you do if you are POOR?
- Unemployment insurance
- Were employed, but are no longer employed, you
can collect this - Workers compensation
- If you are injured during employment
- In-kind benefits
- Goods and services provided for free or greatly
reduced prices - Examples food stamps, housing (HUD)
154What is the difference between
- Medicare
- Americans over age 65
- Disabled
- Poor
- Medicaid
- Some poor who are unemployed or not covered by
employment insurance
155What is an Externality?
An economic side effect of a good or service that
generates benefits or costs to a decision
- Positive Externality
- Beneficial side effects
- Swimming, boating, pleasant surroundings
- Negative Externality
- Unintended side effects
- Loss of wildlife, overcrowding, noise
156What are the Economic Stabilizers?
- 1. Unemployment between 4.5 -5.5
- 2. Constant increase in GDP
- 3. General price levels with low inflation rate
157Circular Flow Diagram for a Mixed Economy
(Open your Economics books to page 42)
158Product Market
Factor Market
159Standards
- 6.1.12AB
- 6.2.12A I
- 6.4.12AB
- 6.5.12D