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What is the economic problem?
There are unlimited wants for goods and services but only scarce (limited) resources to produce them
What are unlimited wants?
The infinite desire for goods and services — there will always be more things people want than resources to produce them
What is scarcity?
When there is an insufficient amount of resources to satisfy all wants
What is the difference between needs and wants?
Needs are goods/services required for survival (e.g. food, water, shelter) — Wants are goods/services desired but not essential for survival
Who are the three main economic agents?
Consumers, Producers, Government
Define a consumer
The buyer of goods and services — influenced by how much benefit they will gain from a purchase
Define a producer
The seller of goods and services — influenced by how much profit they will receive
Define a government (as an economic agent)
A group of people with the power to run a country — influenced by wanting the best for society (e.g. changing unemployment levels, adding taxes)
What is a good?
A tangible product — something that can be seen or touched (e.g. a car, a phone)
What is a service?
An intangible product — something that cannot be seen or touched (e.g. a haircut, insurance)
What are the four factors of production?
Land, Labour, Capital, Enterprise
Define Land (FoP)
The natural resources used to make goods and services (e.g. oil, coal, farmland)
Define Labour (FoP)
The workforce — the quantity and quality of people available and willing to work
Define Capital (FoP)
Man-made aids to production used to make goods and services (e.g. machinery, computers, delivery vehicles)
Define Enterprise (FoP)
The factor of production that involves taking a risk and combining the other three factors to produce goods and services
What is profit?
The amount of money a producer has left after all costs have been paid — when total revenue is greater than total cost
What is opportunity cost?
The next best alternative given up when making an economic decision — once a decision is made, the opportunity cost is the value of the option not chosen
What is a market?
A way of bringing together buyers and sellers to buy and sell goods and services
Name the 5 types of market and how they operate
Street market (stalls in a public area)
— Shop (interaction between shopkeeper/customer)
— Auction (price set by buyers competing)
— From home (internet or phone catalogues)
— Online (buying and selling via internet)
What is a market economy?
An economy where resources are allocated entirely by the forces of demand and supply, without government intervention
What is a planned economy?
An economy where all resources are allocated by the government rather than market forces
What is a mixed economy?
An economy that uses both market forces (demand and supply) and government intervention to allocate resources
What are the three sectors of the economy?
Primary: extraction of natural resources (e.g. farming, fishing, mining)
— Secondary: manufacturing raw materials into finished goods (e.g. car production)
— Tertiary: provision of services (e.g. retail, education, healthcare)
What is the difference between production of goods and services?
Goods involve using raw materials to manufacture a whole physical product — Services involve providing an action or experience rather than a physical product
What is economic sustainability?
Decisions that improve quality of life now and in the future without reducing resources for future generations
What is social sustainability?
Decisions that improve society both now and in the future — e.g. improving wellbeing, equality and access to services for all groups
What is environmental sustainability?
Ensuring the environment is protected so the earth can support humans and trade now and in the future — includes use of renewable resources and reducing pollution
What is specialisation?
The process by which individuals, firms, regions and countries concentrate on producing the goods and services they are best at producing
What is exchange?
The giving up of something that an individual or firm has in return for something they wish to have but do not possess
What is division of labour?
Specialisation by individuals within a workplace
— workers each focus on specific tasks rather than completing the whole production process
What are the benefits of specialisation for producers?
Increased output
— higher productivity as workers become more skilled
— higher quality production
— bigger market for each product
— economies of scale reduce average costs
What are the costs of specialisation for producers?
If one part of production fails the whole system may fail
— may not source necessary scarce resources
— workers may become bored
— over-dependence on one product means demand changes hit harder
What are the benefits of specialisation for workers?
Increased skill may lead to higher earnings —
workers do what they are best at increasing productivity —
increased job satisfaction from mastery of a task
What are the costs of specialisation for workers?
Boredom leading to demotivation
— workers unable to do different jobs if industry changes
— deskilling if made redundant —
may be easier to replace specialised workers with machines
What are the benefits of specialisation for countries?
Countries produce what they do best giving greater efficiency
more investment and job creation
international trade increases
increased choice and higher standard of living for consumers
What are the costs of specialisation for countries?
Workers in declining industries become unemployed
— if global demand shifts the whole economy may suffer
— over-exploitation of resources
— may lead to serious environmental damage
What is the product market?
Where final goods and services are offered for sale and bought by consumers, businesses and the public sector — price is determined by demand and supply
What is the factor market?
Where the services of the factors of production (e.g. skills of labour, ability to take risk of enterprise) are bought and sold
How are factor and product markets interdependent?
Households sell factors of production to firms via the factor market — firms use those factors to produce goods and services sold back to households via the product market
[DRAW: circular flow diagram showing households and firms linked by factor market at bottom and product market at top]