Monday, May 8, 2017

Economics Terms Word Search Puzzle

Your assignment today is pretty simple -- complete the Economics Terms Word Search Puzzle:


Friday, May 5, 2017

Supply Changes

Think about your fictitious business from your project as you read "Economics & You: Input Costs" on page 124.
  • What main resources/products (cotton, gasoline, steel, fabric, etc.) does your business rely on?
     For example, if you sell t-shirts, the manufacturer would need cloth -- or if you are making shoes you might need leather or rubber -- or if you are a lawn care company, you might need gasoline.
  • What resources do your main products require before they get to you?  For example, to create cloth a company must have cotton -- and to have cotton they would need water and fertilizer and seeds and labor.
  • What changes in costs for supplies would make you [in your specific business] charge more for your product/service?  Why?
  • How might technology be used to reduce costs for your business?
  • If one of your main supply necessities (i.e. cotton or gasoline) was owned by one or two companies, what might happen to the price of that resource?  Why?
Answer the following questions:
  • Explain what Subsidies are (p.124) in your own words.
  • Read the "Ballooning Problem" article about reduced supplies and increased demand.  
    • How might government regulation change how helium is used?
    • How is helium becoming a shortage instead of a scarce resource?
  • Suppose the United States buys most of its bananas from a particular country.  If that country suffered a drought, what would happen to the "supply curve" for bananas?
  • If regulation increases price and decreases supply, why does the government issue regulations?
  • Why would an auto-maker want to have manufacturing plants in several different regions?
  • Why would a software company NOT necessarily want facilities in several different regions?
  • Suppose television networks raise the fees that cable television networks must pay to show their programs.  What processes or prices might change?
  • Suppose that you open a shoe repair shop.  What fixed and variable costs would you have?
Videos about Helium Shortage:





AP Macro: 

Understanding Supply and Demand

BELL RINGER:  On a piece of paper, answer the following under "Bell Ringer" and then put them in the 3rd Block Bin:
  1. Refresher: What is the difference between scarcity and shortage?
  2. Think about your fictitious business and explain what product or service is supplied by you, and who demands that product or services.
  3. What does the Latin phrase "ceteris paribus" mean?
  4. Looking at the Supply & Demand graph (right), which of the lines is Supply and which is Demand?
Supply and Demand

As you would probably imagine, Supply and Demand are concepts that are the cornerstone of Economic Theory.  The entire concept of Economics is the study of how and why people choose to buy the things they do.  So much, in fact, that out of the 61 Tennessee Economics Standards, 6 of them specifically involve Supply and Demand.
  • E.11 Define supply and demand, and provide relevant examples. (E)
  • E.12 Describe the role of buyers and sellers in determining the equilibrium price. (E)
  • E.13 Describe how prices of products as well as interest rate and wage rates send signals to buyers and sellers of products, loanable funds, and labor. (E)
  • E.14 Explain that consumers ultimately determine what is produced in a market economy (consumer sovereignty). (C, E)
  • E.17 Identify factors that cause changes in market supply and demand. (E)
  • E.18 Demonstrate how changes in supply and demand influence equilibrium price and quantity in the product, resource, and financial markets. (E)
In addition to supply and demand, we will be working on the following standards:
  • E.2 Explain how consumers and producers confront the condition of scarcity, by making choices that involve opportunity costs and tradeoffs. (E)
  • E.4 Describe how people respond predictably to positive and negative incentives. (C, E)
  • E.5 Explain that voluntary exchange occurs when all participating parties expect to gain. (E)
  • E.23 Compare and contrast the following forms of business organization: sole proprietorship, partnership, and corporation. (E)
Watching the video clips, answer the following questions:  Demand and Supply Explained

Demand:
  1. When the price goes _______ the quantity demanded goes _______.
  2. A Demand Curve is a ________________ sloping curve.
  3. What is the Substitution Effect?
  4. What is the Income Effect?
  5. What is the Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility?
  6. The Demand Curve shifting left indicates a _______________ in quantity demanded.
  7. The Demand Curve shifting right indicates a ______________ in quantity demanded.
  8. What are the 5 Shifters of Demand:
    1. Tastes/Preferences: ____________________________________.
    2. Number of Consumers: ____________________________________.
    3. Price of Related Goods: ____________________________________.
    4. Income: ____________________________________.
    5. Expectations: ____________________________________.
  9. What are "substitutes"?
  10. What are "complements"?

A clip demonstrating the Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility: Matilda: Bruce Bogtrotter

Supply:
  1. When the price goes _________ for a product, the quantity producers make will __________.
  2. A Supply Curve is a ________________ sloping curve.
  3. The Supply Curve shifting left indicates a _______________ in quantity supplied.
  4. The Supply Curve shifting right indicates a ______________ in quantity supplied.
  5. What are the 5 Shifters of Supply:
    1. Price of Resources: ____________________________________.
    2. Number of Producers: ____________________________________.
    3. Technology: ____________________________________.
    4. Taxes & Subsidies: ____________________________________.
    5. Expectations: ____________________________________.
  6. What happens to supply for a product when the price increases?  ______________.
  7. What is the Market Equilibrium ____________________________________.
  8. What is a "Surplus"? ____________________________________.
  9. What is a "Shortage"? ____________________________________.
Discussion & Short Answer:
Your Business:  

Using your virtual/fictitious business, describe how the following Shifters affect Demand in your business:
  1. Tastes/Preferences: 
  2. Number of Consumers: 
  3. Price of Related Goods: 
  4. Income: 
  5. Expectations: 
Using your virtual business, describe how the following Shifters affect Supply in your business:
  1. Price of Resources: 
  2. Number of Producers: 
  3. Technology: 
  4. Taxes & Subsidies: 
  5. Expectations: 
Download a worksheet here: WORKSHEET

Next we will have a short discussion and share some of the progress we are making on our Business Project and our Making a Difference project.

Business Project:
  • What business have you come up with?
  • Where would you locate your business?
  • What is your target demographic?
  • What design considerations (logo, colors, etc.) will you use?
  • Will your business be a sole proprietorship, a partnership or a corporation?
Making a Difference:
  • What is an idea you think would make your community better?
  • What is an idea you think would make our school better?
  • Did anything surprise you as you began thinking about how you could make a difference in your community or in your school?
  • How might any these changes have an effect on the economics of your community?