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Consumers in the Economy: An Overview

3. Consumers in the Economy: An Overview. Chapter Objectives. Relate your consumer economic activities to your financial well-being and to the state of the overall economy. Explain how economic conditions affect job opportunities and standard of living.

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Consumers in the Economy: An Overview

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  1. 3 Consumers in the Economy: An Overview

  2. Chapter Objectives • Relate your consumer economic activities to your financial well-being and to the state of the overall economy. • Explain how economic conditions affect job opportunities and standard of living. • Summarize how consumer spending influences overall economic conditions in a market economy. continued

  3. Chapter Objectives • Describe the impact of consumer and government borrowing on the economy. • Give examples of ways consumer economic problems arise from market characteristics. • Outline consumer economic problems that result from consumer mistakes.

  4. Economic activities of consumers include earning spending saving borrowing insuring investing paying taxes Economic Activities of Consumers

  5. Earning Your Way • You can choose • the field in which you work • your level of education • how much training you attain continued

  6. Earning Your Way • Ability to find work depends on your • job skills • experience • education • career choice • demand for workers in your chosen field • Ability to stay employed and advance depends on your job performance continued

  7. Earning Your Way • Your earning power and job performance determine your personal standard of living • A higher standard of living means a higher quality of life for most people • Your standard of living and income should rise as you advance on the job

  8. Earnings and the Economy • Earning activities of consumers contribute to a country’s wealth • The national standard of living is the level of prosperity in the country continued

  9. Earnings and the Economy • The U.S. has one of the highest standards of living in the world continued

  10. Earnings and the Economy • Measures of a nation’s prosperity • GDP per capita—the national GDP divided by the population of a country • Labor productivity

  11. GDP Per Capita • High or rising GDP per capita means • incomes are high or rising • more goods and services are available to each person • people are consuming more • standards of living are high or rising continued

  12. GDP Per Capita • Low or falling GDP per capita means • incomes are low or falling • fewer goods and services are available to each person • people are consuming less • standards of living are low or falling continued

  13. GDP Per Capita • There are problems with using GDP per capita as a measure of national prosperity • It assumes everyone gets an equal share of goods and services produced • It disregards unpaid work, such as housework, child care, and volunteer work

  14. Labor Productivity • High labor productivity indicates a healthy economy • Productive workers produce more and can increase their earnings continued

  15. Labor Productivity • To raise labor productivity, businesses and governments invest in • capital, such as factories and machinery • research and technology • transportation, communication, and energy • education and training of the workforce continued

  16. Labor Productivity • By raising the productivity of its workforce, a nation can raise its GDP and create wealth • State of the economy determines job opportunities and earnings of workers

  17. Spending and the Economy • Consumers in a market economy make their own spending choices continued

  18. Spending and the Economy • Spending decisions of consumers create demand for goods and services they buy • As a group, consumers determine the success or failure of specific goods, services, and businesses continued

  19. Spending and the Economy • Optimistic consumers tend to spend and borrow more, which creates • greater demand for goods and services • growth of businesses to meet increased demand • more jobs • a sense of prosperity continued

  20. Spending and the Economy • Pessimistic consumers tend to spend and borrow less, which • lowers demand for goods and services • lowers sales and slows business growth • makes jobs harder to find • can lead to a recession

  21. Saving Your Money • Savings is anything that improves a person’s financial position continued

  22. Saving Your Money • Savings include • cash • investments • home improvements • cash value of insurance policies • durable goods

  23. Saving and the Economy • Savings are put into financial institutions • Financial institutions loan money to businesses and other consumers • Loans pay for business growth, building construction, home purchases, and more

  24. Borrowing to Spend • Consumer credit lets you buy now and pay later • Credit helps consumers pay for major and unexpected purchases • Credit is costly; use of credit reduces future income

  25. Borrowing and the Economy • Borrowing increases money in circulation and demand for goods and services continued

  26. Borrowing and the Economy • Borrowing can • cause prices to rise, resulting in inflation • decrease future demand • threaten long-term economic prosperity

  27. In Your Opinion • Does using credit do more harm than good to the economy? to individuals?

  28. Insuring Against Financial Risks • Insurance is a risk-management tool • Policyholders join others in insurance pools and make payments to insurance companies • Insurance companies invest payments in business enterprises • Payments and their earnings pay the bills of policyholders who suffer losses

  29. Insurance and the Economy • Insurance contributes to overall economic stability by • spreading financial risks • stabilizing incomes of people who suffer serious financial losses • Insurance company investments contribute to growth

  30. Investing for the Future • An investment is an asset that increases wealth over time • Investments also carry risk of loss continued

  31. Investing for the Future • Types of investments include • securities (stocks, bonds, mutual funds) • real estate • business ownership • certain insurance policies • valuable items

  32. Investment and the Economy • Investments pay for • business growth and activity • research and development of new technology • marketing of new products and services • Benefits of investments ripple through the economy

  33. Paying Taxes for Government Services • Tax revenues pay for goods and services that government provides • Voters indirectly decide the level of taxes and what they want to “buy” from government • Types of taxes include income tax, sales tax, property tax

  34. Taxes, Government Spending, and the Economy • Positives of government spending • It creates demand for goods and services • It stimulates the economy continued

  35. Taxes, Government Spending, and the Economy • Negatives of government spending: • It can drive up prices and cause inflation • It can drive up the national debt (deficit spending)

  36. Economic Problems of Consumers in a Market Economy • A confusing variety of products • Some questionable selling methods • Conflict of interest between consumers and sellers

  37. Confusing Variety of Products • The marketplace contains many sellers • There are many new products and services created each day • Consumers have many options and choices to make

  38. Questionable Selling Methods • High-pressure selling • False advertising • Contests • “Free” offers

  39. Conflict of Interest • Sellers want to charge the highest price they can get • Consumers want the best quality at the lowest price • Forces of supply and demand balance the needs of sellers and consumers

  40. Consumer Mistakes Leading to Problems • Lack of planning • Failure to use information • Impulse buying and overspending • Poor communication

  41. Lack of Planning • When consumers fail to plan, it can be • difficult to pay bills • hard to save for big expenses and future needs • difficult to use credit wisely • easy to buy things that do not fulfill your needs and goals

  42. Failure to Use Information • Consumers sometimes fail to investigate, ask questions, and know exactly what they are buying continued

  43. Failure to Use Information • Failure to use information can be costly, disappointing, and even dangerous • Information sources include salespeople, the Internet, and consumer magazines

  44. Impulse Buying and Overspending • Consumers sometimes buy without thinking about needs, goals, and consequences • Impulse buying can result in overspending and thoughtless spending, especially among credit card users

  45. Poor Communication • Includes the failure to complain when necessary • Can be costly

  46. Central Ideas of the Chapter • The economic decisions of consumers impact the overall economy. • Smart consumers avoid the pitfalls that a market economy can create.

  47. Glossary of Key Terms Back • asset. An item of value that a person owns, such as cash, stocks, bonds, real estate, and personal possessions. • durable goods. Products that have lasting value, such as furniture, appliances, and cars. • GDP per capita. The market value of final goods and services produced per person. • income tax. A tax on the earnings of individuals and corporations.

  48. Glossary of Key Terms Back • investment. An asset bought to increase wealth over time, but that carries the risk of loss. • labor productivity. The value of the goods and services a worker creates in a given time. • property tax. Tax paid on real estate owned by individuals and corporations. • prosperity. A timeperiod of growth and financial well-being.

  49. Glossary of Key Terms Back • sales tax. Tax added to the price of goods and services you buy. • standard of living. The overall level of comfort of a person, household, or population as measured by the amount of goods and services consumed

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