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Chapter 4: The US Economy: Private and Public Sectors

  • Households are suppliers of economic resources + major spenders in the economy

  • Functional distribution of income - Illustrates how the nation’s income is distributed among wages, rents, interest, and profits

    • Largest source of income for households is wages/salaries

  • Personal distribution of income - How the nation’s total income is divided among individual households

    • Taxes, noncash transfers, and movement of households among categories lessens income inequality

  • How households dispose of income

    • Personal taxes

    • Personal saving - Flows into bank accounts, insurance policies, bonds and stocks, mutual funds, etc.

      • More income → Usually save more

    • Personal consumption

      • Durable goods - Products with expected lives of 3 years or more

      • Non-durable goods - Products with expected lives of less than 3 years

      • Services - Work done for consumers by lawyers, barbers, doctors, etc.

  • Businesses

    • Plant - Physical establishment that helps with manufacturing and distributing goods and services

    • Firm - Organization that uses resources to produce goods and services for profit

    • Industry - Group of firms that produces same, or similar, products

  • Legal forms of business

    • Sole proprietorship - Business owned + operated by 1 person

      • Easy to set up + organize

    • Partnership - Business owned + operated by 2+ people; share risks, profits, and losses

    • Corporation - Distinct/separate from individual stockholders that own it; run by hired managers

      • Pools financial resources of large #s of people

      • Stock - Share in the ownership of a corporation

      • Bond - Lends money to corporation; no corporate ownership for purchaser

      • Organized stock exchanges + bond markets → Simplifies transfer of securities b/w sellers + buyers

      • Limited liability - Stockholders risk only what they paid for their stock; personal assets not at stake

      • Corporations benefit from expanding + becoming more efficient

      • Ownership can easily be transferred

    • Principal-agent problem - Interests of people managing the corporation (agents) and of the owners (principals) don’t always coincide

  • The government’s role in the economy

    • Legal framework + services needed for a market economy to operate effectively

    • Legal rules that control relationships b/w businesses + consumers

    • Improves resource allocation (MB = MC)

    • Maintains competition

      • Monopoly - Single seller controls an industry

      • Natural monopoly - Only 1 seller can achieve lowest possible costs

      • High competition → Efficient production

    • Redistributes income

      • Transfer payments - Welfare checks, food stamps, unemployment compensation, etc.

      • Market intervention - Modifying prices set by market forces

      • Taxation - Takes larger proportion of income from rich

    • Reallocates resources

      • Externality - Some of the costs or benefits of a good “spill over” to 3rd parties that aren’t the buyer or seller

      • Negative externalities - Production or consumption costs that affect 3rd parties without compensation

        • Overallocation of resources

        • Corrected w/ legislation or taxes

      • Positive externalities - Production or consumption benefits that are enjoyed by 3rd parties

        • Underallocation of resources

        • Corrected w/ subsidies or government management of an industry

      • Private goods - Produced through competitive market system; rivalry + excludability

      • Public goods - Everyone can simultaneously obtain benefits; one person’s benefit does not reduce benefits available to others

      • Free-rider problem - People can receive benefits from a public good w/o paying for it

        • Unprofitable for private firms

      • Quasi-public goods - Government provides public goods and services that could include exclusion (could be provided by private firms)

      • Reallocation - Resources shifted from production of private goods to production of public + quasi-public goods

    • Uses monetary + fiscal policy to fix problems with widespread unemployment or inflation

  • The government in the circular flow model

    • Makes purchases in both product + resource markets

    • Provides public goods + services to both households + businesses

    • Households + businesses forced to pay taxes

  • Government finance

    • Government purchases - Products purchased directly absorb resources + are part of domestic output

    • Transfer payments - Don’t directly absorb resources or create output; recipients don’t contribute to domestic output in return for them

  • Federal finance

    • Federal spending

      • Pensions + income security

      • National defense

      • Health

      • Interest on the public debt

  • Federal tax revenues

    • Personal income tax - Levied on taxable income

      • Progressive tax - People w/ higher incomes pay a larger percent of their incomes

    • Marginal tax rate - Rate at which the tax is paid on each additional unit of taxable income

    • Average tax rate - Total tax paid divided by total taxable income

      • A progressive tax’s average rate rises as income increases

    • Payroll taxes - Taxes based on wages + salaries used to finance compulsory federal programs

    • Corporate income tax - Levied on a corporation’s profit

    • Sales and excise taxes - Taxes on commodities or purchases

  • State and local finance

    • State finances

      • Primary source of tax revenue for state gov’ts is sales + excise taxes

      • State personal income taxes

      • Corporate income taxes + license fees

    • Local finances

      • Property taxes - Make up 72% of local governments’ tax revenue

      • Revenue from intergovernmental grants from federal + state gov’ts

JQ

Chapter 4: The US Economy: Private and Public Sectors

  • Households are suppliers of economic resources + major spenders in the economy

  • Functional distribution of income - Illustrates how the nation’s income is distributed among wages, rents, interest, and profits

    • Largest source of income for households is wages/salaries

  • Personal distribution of income - How the nation’s total income is divided among individual households

    • Taxes, noncash transfers, and movement of households among categories lessens income inequality

  • How households dispose of income

    • Personal taxes

    • Personal saving - Flows into bank accounts, insurance policies, bonds and stocks, mutual funds, etc.

      • More income → Usually save more

    • Personal consumption

      • Durable goods - Products with expected lives of 3 years or more

      • Non-durable goods - Products with expected lives of less than 3 years

      • Services - Work done for consumers by lawyers, barbers, doctors, etc.

  • Businesses

    • Plant - Physical establishment that helps with manufacturing and distributing goods and services

    • Firm - Organization that uses resources to produce goods and services for profit

    • Industry - Group of firms that produces same, or similar, products

  • Legal forms of business

    • Sole proprietorship - Business owned + operated by 1 person

      • Easy to set up + organize

    • Partnership - Business owned + operated by 2+ people; share risks, profits, and losses

    • Corporation - Distinct/separate from individual stockholders that own it; run by hired managers

      • Pools financial resources of large #s of people

      • Stock - Share in the ownership of a corporation

      • Bond - Lends money to corporation; no corporate ownership for purchaser

      • Organized stock exchanges + bond markets → Simplifies transfer of securities b/w sellers + buyers

      • Limited liability - Stockholders risk only what they paid for their stock; personal assets not at stake

      • Corporations benefit from expanding + becoming more efficient

      • Ownership can easily be transferred

    • Principal-agent problem - Interests of people managing the corporation (agents) and of the owners (principals) don’t always coincide

  • The government’s role in the economy

    • Legal framework + services needed for a market economy to operate effectively

    • Legal rules that control relationships b/w businesses + consumers

    • Improves resource allocation (MB = MC)

    • Maintains competition

      • Monopoly - Single seller controls an industry

      • Natural monopoly - Only 1 seller can achieve lowest possible costs

      • High competition → Efficient production

    • Redistributes income

      • Transfer payments - Welfare checks, food stamps, unemployment compensation, etc.

      • Market intervention - Modifying prices set by market forces

      • Taxation - Takes larger proportion of income from rich

    • Reallocates resources

      • Externality - Some of the costs or benefits of a good “spill over” to 3rd parties that aren’t the buyer or seller

      • Negative externalities - Production or consumption costs that affect 3rd parties without compensation

        • Overallocation of resources

        • Corrected w/ legislation or taxes

      • Positive externalities - Production or consumption benefits that are enjoyed by 3rd parties

        • Underallocation of resources

        • Corrected w/ subsidies or government management of an industry

      • Private goods - Produced through competitive market system; rivalry + excludability

      • Public goods - Everyone can simultaneously obtain benefits; one person’s benefit does not reduce benefits available to others

      • Free-rider problem - People can receive benefits from a public good w/o paying for it

        • Unprofitable for private firms

      • Quasi-public goods - Government provides public goods and services that could include exclusion (could be provided by private firms)

      • Reallocation - Resources shifted from production of private goods to production of public + quasi-public goods

    • Uses monetary + fiscal policy to fix problems with widespread unemployment or inflation

  • The government in the circular flow model

    • Makes purchases in both product + resource markets

    • Provides public goods + services to both households + businesses

    • Households + businesses forced to pay taxes

  • Government finance

    • Government purchases - Products purchased directly absorb resources + are part of domestic output

    • Transfer payments - Don’t directly absorb resources or create output; recipients don’t contribute to domestic output in return for them

  • Federal finance

    • Federal spending

      • Pensions + income security

      • National defense

      • Health

      • Interest on the public debt

  • Federal tax revenues

    • Personal income tax - Levied on taxable income

      • Progressive tax - People w/ higher incomes pay a larger percent of their incomes

    • Marginal tax rate - Rate at which the tax is paid on each additional unit of taxable income

    • Average tax rate - Total tax paid divided by total taxable income

      • A progressive tax’s average rate rises as income increases

    • Payroll taxes - Taxes based on wages + salaries used to finance compulsory federal programs

    • Corporate income tax - Levied on a corporation’s profit

    • Sales and excise taxes - Taxes on commodities or purchases

  • State and local finance

    • State finances

      • Primary source of tax revenue for state gov’ts is sales + excise taxes

      • State personal income taxes

      • Corporate income taxes + license fees

    • Local finances

      • Property taxes - Make up 72% of local governments’ tax revenue

      • Revenue from intergovernmental grants from federal + state gov’ts