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Title: Unit 1: What Is Economics


1
Unit 1 What Is Economics?
ECONOMICS for Christian Schools
By Alan J. Carper Bob Jones University Press. 1998
2
Chapter 3 Supply and Prices
  • Chapter 4 The Government as an Economic Entity

3
Objectives
  • Define supply, budget deficit surplus
  • Identify the law of supply
  • Explain how changes in supply occur
  • Explain the existence of the market equilibrium
    point.
  • Describe the causes of a surplus and a shortage
  • Explain how the market price system works to
    alleviate a surplus or a shortage.

4
BIBLICAL INTEGRATION (Chapter 3)
  • Instead of pursuing earthly wealth, pursue the
    wisdom of God and what glorifies Him and He will
    bless you with prosperity as He chooses. (Prov.
    21-11 35-10)

5
BIBLICAL INTEGRATION (Chapter 4)
  • God orchestrates every event in our live as
    believers for His purpose. We, therefore, need to
    trust God to work all things together for good
    for those who love Him. (Rom 828)

6
Todays Scripture
  • For by Him were all things created, that are in
    heaven, and that are in earth, visible and
    invisible, whether they be thrones or dominions,
    or principalities, or powers all things were
    created by Him, and for Him And He is before all
    things, and by Him all things consist. (Col.
    116-17)

7
Chapter 3 II. Determining Prices(p.36-44)
  • Market equilibrium price is the price when the
    supply curve meets the demand curve.
  • An excess of unused products is called a
    surplus.
  • Businesses try to avoid surpluses because of
    the costs of carrying large inventories.

(Carper 36, 37)
8
Solutions to surplus
  • (1) increase demand

(2) decrease supply
(3) allow the price to fall to the market
equilibrium point (price cutting) the simplest
solution.
(Carper. 40-44)
9
Chapter 4 (p. 49-64)
  • Economic model is a simplification of how
    factors in the environment affect choices.

Used for two purposes
(1) Instruction - Used to explain to students
the appearance and operations of more complex
objects.
(2) Predicting the future - Used to help assist
the economist.
Carper. 49
10
We as Christians are to be models of Jesus
Christ, imperfect simplified versions of our
Saviour.
  • Behold what manner of love the Father has
    bestowed on us, that we should be called children
    of God! Therefore the world does not know us,
    because it did not know Him. Beloved, now we are
    children of God and it has not yet been revealed
    what we shall be, but we know that when He is
    revealed, we shall be like Him, for we shall see
    Him as He is. And everyone who has this hope in
    Him purifies himself, just as He is pure.
  • I John 31-3

(The New King James)
11
The Day Welfare hit the Classroom (p.50-51)
  • The illustration was intended to show the
    inequities of the modern welfare system not to
    learn how to cheat the system, but to encourage
    the honest evaluation of the governmental social
    programs and to motivate you to work towards
    improving the system.

Carper 50, 51
12
Two popular forms of economic models
  • (1). Tabular models (or schedules)

(2). Line graphs The line graph displays
more information than the schedule (or tabular
model).
Carper. 52
13
Two groups of the economic system and also the
starting points of the circular flow model
II. The Circular Flow Model
Attempts to explain how an entire national
economy system works.
  • households consumers
  • businesses account for appx. 75 of all
    employment and 80 of all production in the
    United States.

(Carper. 53)
14
When we add up all the goods and services
business produced and sold to final consumers, we
would have a figure the economist call the gross
national product. (GNP)
Carper. 53
15
Gross Domestic Product
  • Gross domestic product , or GDP, measures the
    value of all final goods and services produced in
    the economy. It does not include the value of
    intermediate goods.
  • GDP measures both inflation and savings.
  • GDP is used as a measure of the size of an
    economy and can also be used to compare the
    economic performance in other countries.
  • In 2004, the GDP of the U.S. was 11,734 billion

(Erbi)
16
Gross Domestic Product
  • Aggregate spending, the sum of consumer spending,
    investment spending, government purchases, and
    exports minus imports, is the total spending on
    domestically produced final goods and services in
    the economy.
  • Aggregate Spending
  • GDP C IG G XN
  • C Consumption
  • IG Gross Private Investment
  • G Government Spending
  • XN Net Exports
  • Exports (X) Imports (IM
    or M)

(Erbi)
17
GDP WHATS IN AND WHATS OUT
  • Included
  • Domestically produced final goods and services
    (including capital goods)
  • New construction of structures
  • Changes to inventories
  • Not Included
  • Intermediate goods and services
  • Inputs
  • Used goods
  • Financial assets like stocks and bonds
  • Foreign-produced goods and services
  • Underground or black market activity is not
    counted.

(Erbi)
18
Four factors of production
  • (1)   land
  • (2)   labor
  • (3)   financial capital
  • (4)   entrepreneurship

Carper. 54
19
Land refers to all of the natural resources that
go into the production of goods. Economic
good - contains some form of animal, vegetable,
or mineral resource.
(Carper. 54)
20
Labor is the factor of production denoting all
human effort that goes into the creation of
goods and services.
  • According to the economists it is human effort.
  • Labor includes mental as well as physical work.
  • The work of a poet is as much labor as that of a
    construction worker.

(Carper. 54)
21
Financial capital is all money loaned directly
to the business firms (monetary loans) and real
capital is the tools used to produce goods and
services. - real capital includes factories,
equipment, and other tools of production.
(Carper. 54)
22
Entrepreneurship is the creative activity of
combining natural resources, human labor, and
financial capital to develop new and useful
products and services.
  • Entrepreneurship is the most important factor of
    production, because it directs, organizes, and
    plans the production process.

(Carper. 55)
23
Scripture regarding entrepreneurship
  • No prohibition on business ownership per se, but
    it does limit our involvement in certain
    enterprises.
  • We should avoid ungodly association, such as
    investing in enterprises whose activities are
    condemned in Scripture.

(Carper. 56))
24
Scripture regarding entrepreneurship
  • Many use the verse Matt. 2520-21 to reflect
    being a good steward of material possessions
    commended for investing wisely and bringing forth
    an increase.

So he who had received five talents came and
brought five other talents, saying, Lord, you
delivered to me five talents look, I have gained
five more talents besides them. His lord said
to him, Well done, good and faithful servant you
were faithful over a few things, I will make you
ruler over many things. Enter into the joy of
your lord.
Matt. 2520-21
(The New King James)
25
  • Christians should always be responsible and
    should display the character of Christ -
    especially when we occur losses in investing,
    day-to-day business affairs and/or life (Lev.
    1913-14 Ps. 15).

but as He who called you is holy, you also be
holy in all your conduct, because it is written,
Be holy, for I am holy!
1 Peter 115-16
(The New King James)
26
  • Transfer payments are payments of money or goods
    to persons for which no specific economic
    repayment is expected. (Ex. Social Security,
    Welfare, Unemployment, etc.)

(Carper. 57)
27
Deficit vs. Surplus
  • Usually government spending exceeds the amount it
    receives in taxes thereby operating under a
    budget deficit.

When a government receives more in taxes than it
is paying out, it is operating under a
budget surplus.
(Carper. 56)
28
  • Just as the heart circulates blood throughout the
    body, the financial market efficiently circulates
    money from the nations households to its
    business firms. (Its the heart of the economy.)

(Carper. 59)
29
  • Public Trust Theory observes that elected
    representatives ultimately make most governmental
    decisions according to their own personal
    interests.

(Carper. 60)
30
Saving vs. Dissaving
  • The economist considers saving whenever
    households put money into financial institutions
    (savings acct., payment on loans, etc.).
  • Dissaving is when money is withdrawn from an
    account or borrowed.

(Carper 61, 64)
31
Crowding Out
  • When government borrows it leads to a problem
    called crowding out.
  • Money is finite like all other resources
    every dollar borrowed by the
    government is one less dollar available for
    businesses to use in purchasing the real capital
    they need to produce goods.
  • They are in other words crowded out of the
    financial market by government budget deficits.

(Carper. 64)
32
Federal Reserve System
  • The Federal Reserve System was created by
    Congress in 1913, as a solution to the deficit
    dilemma for it has the ability to create new
    money.
  • (This financing can cause other serious problems
    in the economy.)

(Carper 64)
33
Circular Flow
  • Five participants in the circular flow

(1) Households
(2) Business Firms
(3) Governments
(4) Financial Markets
(5) Federal Reserve System
(Carper. 64)
34
The National Accounts Households
  • Consumer spending is household spending on
    goods and services. (Largest amount)
  • Most households receive the majority of their
    income from wages.
  • Some households receive income from the
    ownership of stocks (a share in the ownership
    of a company held by a shareholder) and bonds
    (borrowing in the form of IOU that pays
    interest).
  • generating profit and interest income
    (dividends)
  • Additionally, other households receive rent on
    land.

35
The National Accounts Households
  • Government transfers payments by the government
    to individuals for which no good or service is
    provided in return.
  • Disposable income, equal to income plus
    government transfers minus taxes, is the total
    amount of household income available to spend on
    consumption and savings.
  • Private savings, equal to disposable income
    minus consumer spending, is disposable income
    that is not spent on consumption.
  • The total sum of flows of money out of
    householdsthe sum of taxes paid, consumer
    spending, and private savingsmust equal the
    total flow of money into householdsthe sum of
    wages, profits, interest, rent, and government
    transfers.

36
Circular Flow
  • Financial Market The banking, stock, and bond
    markets, which channel private savings and
    foreign lending into investment spending (I),
    government borrowing, and foreign borrowing.
  • Government
  • Government borrowing is the amount of funds
    borrowed by the government in the financial
    markets.
  • Government purchases of goods and services (G)
    are government expenditures on goods and services.

37
Circular Flow Chart
38
Circular Flow
  • In the simplified circular-flow model the two
    sectors are households and firms.
  • Business firms sell goods and services to
    households.

39
Works Cited
  • Carper, Alan. Economics for Christian Schools.
    Greenville Bob Jones University Press, 1998.
  • "The New King James Version." Logos Bible
    Software. CD_ROM. ed. 2004.
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