Capitalism

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126 Terms

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Microeconomics

the study of how households (people) and firms make decisions; how & why they interact in markets

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Marx, Smith, Schumpeter

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Macroeconomics

the study of economy-wide phenomena, including inflation, unemployment, and economic growth; relations between large entities, states & governments in world affairs

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Micro-Men

Smith, Marx, Schumpeter

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Macro-Men

Keynes, Coase, Sen

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Sen

Economic Man; well being, freedom, tolerance, governmental help, famines, nation-state involvement

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Macro: Change via Command

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Croase

Command, Competition, Contract, Costs: firms can solve issues that government can't (via private bargaining); government needed to reduce spillover but that's all

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Macro: Competition as Command

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Keynes

Created the global economy; led the Bretton Woods Agreement (IMF & World Bank), government involvement can resolve unemployment, increase demand & consumers will buy more; markets aren't always self-regulating (food desserts)

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COMMAND: government involvement

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Marx

Capitalist Critic, Classes cause Conflict, Change: Political Economy

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Smith

Original founder of the invisible hand; advocate of self-regulating markets; emphasizes competition

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Schumpeter

Innovation, technical progress, change (creative destruction); challenger to capitalism by advocating for change

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interdisciplinary

Economic principles with insights from sociology, politics, & psychology; a political economy emphasizes interdisciplinary economics as an environment of micro and macro relations often emphasizing insights from sociology, political science and psychology (socio-economics)

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Hunting & Gathering

The first economic system: cooperatively acquiring & sharing food; consensus decision making; no government; little private property; little inequality; no surplus product (cooperative, mobile clans, less surplus)

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Slavery

The second economic system: slaves do most of the productive work; their owners own the equipment & animals used in the production; own what the slaves produce; & control the government; the surplus product consists of slave owners' gain & control

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Feudalism

Serfs work both for themselves & hereditary landowners (lords) who ruled locally; serfs pay rent in kind & work a set number of days per year on the lord's land; the surplus product takes the form of rents & the outputs of the serf's forced labor (little $ made)

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Independent Consumer Production

Families work on land they own; using capital goods & animals they own; control & own what they produce; make decisions themselves (own boss) & government is minimal; artisans, mom/pop; skill-based

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Agrarian Despotism

A political elite governs; claiming the surplus product by taxing both landowning farmers and the tenants (the taxes overtake all profits for the capitalists, landowners, & laborers) - taxes in kind or currency

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Communism

Most economic decisions are made in accord with a plan drawn up and implements by a powerful central government; capital goods are state owned; economic inequality is in theory limited; government controls the surplus (emphasis on efficiency/quotas/units); Central Planning

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Capitalism

Owners of capital goods hire wage labor to produce commodities to sell for a profit; employers make most economic decisions; substantial economic inequality exists; capital owners reap the surplus product as profit and other sources of property-based income

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Adam Smith; the Wealth of Nations

Recall both our text & our class discussion of the term: Economic Man. Name the great economist, ____, who first advocated for this concept, and name his most widely read book (published in 1776), discussing the topic __________.

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New York & the Erie Canal

Finished in 1825, over-land transport in the U.S was revolutionized by an inland canal in the state of _______, known as the ______________________.

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Class

"The relationship between those who produce a product...and those who control the use of the surplus product is called a _________ relationship."

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Textile; Water & People

Generally located in the northeastern states, what antebellum industry (_______), is considered by historians as the first to employ large groups of wage labor in the production of commodities? What was the industry's principal source of power for the machinery? ____________________.

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Putting-Out Systems

In early US history, what was the system called when a manufacturer took partially completed materials to individuals in their homes & on the farms for further hand labor production? _____.

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True

True or False: "Humans are unique among animals in that large numbers of unrelated people cooperate to produce the goods and services we require" _________________________.

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True

In the 19th century, the sale of western lands & tariffs were the 2 chief sources of revenue for the United States' governments. _________________________________________.

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Slave

In antebellum America there were 2 labels for describing labor-based production systems. One was known as free-based and the other was known as _________ -based labor.

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Command, Competition, & Change

The approach presented in chapter 3 of our text is a 3-dimensional approach to economics. The 3 dimensions are ________________, _______________________, & _____________________.

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False

True or False: In a capitalist economy, the way the surplus (profits) is typically used does not produce "rapid changes"

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Jefferson, France, Louisiana Purchase

In 1803, President _________ negotiated a treaty with what country, _______, in which a territory known as __________ was purchased, and the result nearly doubled the United States.

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Neoclassical Economics

Our principal authors prefer to label their approach to discussing capitalism, as an approach set forth in most economic textbooks is known as ______________________________________.

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Panics

Today, our economy experiences periodic recessions or downturns. Before the 20th century, these "hard-times" cycles were referred to as _____________________________.

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True

True or False: Social scientists & economists post that our current social structure of accumulation (since 1990s) in the process of decay.

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Smith

Modern economies are dominated by large concerns

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Smith

Division of labor implies economic interdependence

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Coase

Government policies should facilitate private bargains

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Sen

Democratically elected governments more likely to address poverty

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Keynes

Unemployment is a chronic problem in a capitalist society

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Marx

Economic systems have dominant & subordinate classes

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Coase

Firms are mini-command economies based on giving & following orders

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Coase

Capitalism is a mixture of competition & command

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Keynes

Government market intervention reduces stability

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Marx

Technical progress, knowledge growth, and conflict among classes foster perpetual change

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Sen

Famines are not the result of shortages of food

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Smith

Labor is the Basis of Wealth

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Smith

The individual pursuit of self-interest has beneficial effects

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Sen

Economic Policy should promote freedom, tolerance & well-being

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Schumpeter

Key to progress is innovation: creative destruction

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Smith

Satisfaction of human needs is the measure of wealth of a nation

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Schumpeter

Periods of prosperity & stability alternate with periods of stagnation & instability

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Keynes

Markets are not self-regulating and often fail to sensibly use our productive potential

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Marx

Members of classes work together in pursuit of common interests

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Smith

Markets are self-regulating systems for the orderly coordination of the division of labor

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Panic of 1819

The Panic of 1819 describes the first recession to occur during the Market Revolution's development. The panic arose from a weak or failing banking system in which banks could not maintain a balance between the cash and debt flow. At the time, banks made money by lending to the people and were responsible for maintaining a balance between the money held and the money lent. Banks were expected to maintain enough money to "rest on call" for clients seeking to alter or withdraw agreements. However, as banks were no longer reliant on species like gold and silver, balance management became more difficult, especially with the increasing amount of loans given out. The banks began issuing IOUs as an effort to maintain the gaps arising within the balance. However, when the government made changes to loan laws, the public panicked and sought to withdraw most money held by the banks, practically overnight. Consequently, the influx of withdrawal caused banks to scramble, entering bank runs and devaluing the currency from banks issuing de-valued bank-notes or using third parties to create currency.

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1st Recession

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Banks imbalanced in loans dealt & cash held as specie no longer on hand - led to currency de-valuing as IOUs & 3rd party printing replaced

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Accumulation

Using surplus to better business; money from the company back into it company

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(Making a profit & putting it back into the business (for better);

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Creates motivation, innovation, size, newness & changes;

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Fuels progress & changes (in all areas); driver of change)

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Barrier to Entry

Obstacles that make it more difficult or costly to firms to enter our market, such as technical secrets, initial investments that are very large and exclusive marketing arrangements

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Breakthrough

Occurs when a firm discovers or develops a new method of doing business

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Business Cycle

Periodic expansion and contraction of output and employment usually taking place over a period of 3 to 10 years

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Bureaucratic Job Ladder:

Primary, Independent, Subordinate, Secondary

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Capitalist Epoch

Began in EU: 80 A.D. 1500: when capitalist organization of labor processes first appeared

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Capitalism

Using Privately Owned Goods (property rights)

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To Produce Commodities

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Command down Competition

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Hiring Wage Labor - slaves, owned production

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To make a Profit (increase wealth/accumulate)

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CLASS society & one of the many economic systems (7)

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Producers: wage labor used to make cheap commodities

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Controllers: bosses, controls part of surplus OR reap the profits

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Conflictual labor process as resulting relationships

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Capitalist

Owner: provides an input of capital ($, land, material) & gets control over usage/paid

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Class Relations

Labor division, social hierarchy (command, competition, conflict)

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Collective Bargaining

Occurs when negotiating wages, employment conditions, workers occupation, representative collectively by union employers may also be collectively represented by an employers association

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Command

Vertical dimension & represents the rules & guidance around employment (bosses)

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Commercial Profits

Results from selling more products than it costs to purchase/produce

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Contract

An agreement, either written, explicit or unwritten implicit commits to more parties to taking certain act actions such as making payments in delivering goods or services

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Coordination by Command

Interactions are governed by specifying, precise behavior (orders; bosses)

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Coordination by Rules

Place interactions are governed by general principles of behavior (economic system; norms)

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Counter Cyclical Policies

Policies aimed at dampening the business cycle

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Depreciation

The cost of restoring capital suffered and producing last year's output

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Economy

Relationships among people that organizes labor processes of all societies to sustain production for profits

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Economic Man

Refers to the assumption that human beings are calculating a moral and self-interest

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Economic Hubs

An area of production that attracts people (despite geography)

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Economy of Scale

Exists when an increase in the number of units of output produced and increase in the skill of production, brings about a fall in the average cause that is a fall in the cost per unit of output

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Feudalism

The dominant economic system in Europe during the middle ages, obtain the surplus and other customary obligations owned by surfs

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Innovation

Inventive ideas: key to progress (change): according to Schumpeter

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Investment

Spending money to improve firms, predictive equipment, software facilities, workforce skills in order to increase productive capacity and productivity; pursuit of profit & survival prompts continuous change in tech/social