ECON 112 Chapter 3
ECON 112 Chapter 3
Production Creation of goods and services using inputs such as labor, capital, and
resources.
Income: Earnings received by individuals or businesses from the sale of goods,
services, or assets.
Spending: The use of money to purchase goods, services, or assets
Goods Market Market where goods and services are bought and sold by households and
firms.
Factor Market: Market where factors of production, such as labor and capital, are bought
and sold.
Factors of Resources used in the production process, including land, labor, capital, and
Production: entrepreneurship
Natural Materials or substances found in nature that are used in production, such as
Resources: minerals, water, and forests.
Labour: Human effort used in the production of goods and services.
Capital Intensive Production process that relies heavily on capital goods relative to labor.
Production:
Labour Intensive Production process that relies heavily on labor relative to capital.
Production:
Rent: Payment for the use of land or other natural resources.
Households: Individuals or groups of people living together and consuming goods and
services.
Consumer Expenditure by households on goods and services.
Spending:
Firms: Business organizations that produce goods and services for sale.
Circular Flow: Model depicting the flow of goods, services, and money between
households, firms, and the government in an economy.
Injection: Addition of spending into the circular flow of income, such as investment,
government spending, or exports.
Leakage: Withdrawal of spending from the circular flow of income, such as saving,
taxes, or imports.
Financial Sector: Part of the economy that facilitates the allocation of capital and resources
through financial markets and institutions.
Absolute Ability of a country to produce a good or service more efficiently than
Advantage: another country.
Relative Ability of a country to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity
Advantage: cost than another good or service.
Macroeconomic Goals pursued by policymakers to achieve desired outcomes in the overall
Objectives: economy, such as stable prices, full employment, and economic growth.
ECONOMICS CHAPTER 3:
CHAPTER 3: PRODUCTION, INCOME AND SPENDING IN THE MIXED ECONOMY
Chapter focus:
• Total production
• Income and spending
• Sources of production
• Sources of income
• Sources of spending
• Interdependence of the main sectors in the economy
3.1 Introduction
• Micro economy can be compared to a flea market with individual stalls and owners.
• Macro economy can be envisioned as something that cannot be touched or seen.
• When dealing with the economy you must imagine things, we must use mental
pictures.
• In an economic system everything does indeed depend on everything else.
• Three major flows in the economy as a whole: total production, total income, total
spending
• When we start to look at the economy we start at the households and firms, then we
construct a simple picture of how they are linked then we introduce the foreign sector.
The picture is completed by looking at the financial sector's impact on the economy.
PRODUCTION
N
SPENDING INCOME
• Production, income, and spending are all flows to understand wat this means we must
distinguish between:
1. Stocks: which are measured at a particular point of time e.g., wealth, assets, capital
2. Flows: which are measured over a period (production, income, and spending) e.g.,
income, profit, investment
• In the mixed economy, the households, firms, the government, and the foreign sector
all participate in the production process.
• In a mixed economy exchange usually occurs in markets.
• There are two types of markets:
1. Goods market: the market for goods and services
2. Factor markets: the market for several factors of production.
Natural resources:
• All the gifts of nature like mineral deposits, water, arable land, vegetation, natural
forests, marine resources, animal life, atmosphere, sunshine.
• Natural resources are fixed in supply, their availability cannot be increased if we want
more of them.
• Minerals are referred to as non-renewable or exhaustible assets.
• The quality and quantity of natural resources are important just like the other factors of
production.
Labor:
• Goods and services cannot be produced without human eYort.
• Labor can be defined as the exercise of human mental and physical eYort in the
production of goods and services.
• The quantity of labor depends on the size of the population and the portion that is
willing to work.
• The quality of labor is described as human capital which refers to the skills, knowledge,
and health of the workers.
Capital:
• Capital compromises all manufactured resources which are used in the production of
other goods and services.
• When we talk about capital as a factor of production, we do not talk about the financial
connotation we refer to the tangible things that are used to produce other things.
• To produce capital goods, current consumption must be sacrificed in favor of future
consumption.
• Capital goods do not have an unlimited life.
• Provision must be made for existing capital goods because they do not last forever, this
is called provision for depreciation, in national accounts it is referred to as
consumption of fixed capital.
Entrepreneurship:
• The availability of natural resources, labor, and capital means nothing without people
who see opportunities and can organize and combine these factors of production.
• The entrepreneur is the driving force behind production, they are the initiators, the
people who take initiative, innovators, risk takers.
Technology:
• Technology is sometimes identified as a 5th factor of production.
• The discovery of new knowledge is called invention while the incorporation of
knowledge into actual production is called innovation.
Goods market:
• We treat this market as if it were the only market for all goods and services in the
economy.
Factor market:
• Factors of production are purchased and sold in many diYerent markets.
• Labor markets and markets for capitals goods are included in the factor market
The government:
• Government/public sector is a broad term that includes all aspects of local, regional,
and national government.
• Government includes all politicians, civil servants, government agencies and other
bodies belonging to or under control of the government.
• The government does not always act in a consistent manner to obtain goals that vary
from time to time.
• Primary function of the government: establish the institutional framework within which
the economy operates, they also purchase factors of production from households as
well as goods and services from firms.
• In return the government provides households and firms with public goods and
services such as defense, law and order, education, health services, roads, and dams.
• These goods and services are paid for by die households and firms' taxes.
• Government expenditure: G
• Taxes: T
• Transfer payments: the transfer of income and expenditure from certain individuals and
groups to other individuals and groups.