Economic concepts and fallacies
Distributive Justice
Economic Systems
Economic Systems Continued
Political systems
100

What is opportunity cost? Give an example.

What you lose out on when choosing one alternate over another

100

Every student in a class receives the same grade, regardless of their effort or performance.

Strict Egalitarianism

100

What is a traditional economy? 

Economy in which decisions are guided by customs and traditions. 

100

Imagine a city in which all of the factories and delivery systems are owned by the government. The government decides what is made and who gets what. What form of economy is this?

Command Economy. 

100

Which political system is characterized by private ownership of the means of production, free markets, and limited government intervention?

Capitalism

200

Which fallacy?

"If I save more money, I will be wealthier; therefore, if everyone saves more money, the entire economy will be wealthier."

Fallacy of Composition

200

If businesses didn't have to pay taxes (no redistribution of wealth)

Libertarian principles

200

What is a command economy? 

All economic decisions are made by the government, government controls production and distribution. 

200

Private businesses like grocery stores operate alongside government-run services like healthcare. The government also regulates industries and provides social programs.

Mixed economy. 

200

In which political system does the government own and control major industries, with the goal of reducing inequality and providing basic needs?  Private ownership is allowed, but taxes are high.

Socialism

300

Which fallacy?

"After the government lowered interest rates, the economy improved; therefore, lowering interest rates caused the economic recovery."

Single causation

300

Employees receive bonuses based on their sales performance; those who sell more earn higher bonuses

Desert-Based Distribution (Meritocracy

300

What is a market economy? 

A market economy is one guided by the laws of supply and demand. 

300

Imagine a world in which everyone gets by with only what they need. People adhere to the customs and teachings of the generations before them to guide their decisions. What is this economy? 

Traditional Economy 

300

Which system advocates for a classless society where all property is collectively owned and there is no state?

Communism

400

Which fallacy?

Increased tariffs have resulting in increased prices of many goods in Canada.

No fallacy!

400

A government imposes a progressive tax system to fund social programs that benefit the majority of citizens

Welfare-Based Principles (Utilitarianism)

400

What is a mixed economy? 

Based on supply and demand with some government involvement. 

400

Sellers freely offer goods at prices determined by what buyers are willing to pay. What they produce is driven by supply and demand.  There are no taxes.

Market economy. 

400

Difference between Socialism and Communism?

Socialism: Allows for private property and market activity within a framework of government regulation, progressive taxation and social welfare programs.

Communism: Seeks to abolish private property entirely and establish collective ownership of all resources, ideally leading to a stateless and classless society (though, in practice, communist states have been highly authoritarian).


500

What's the difference between a positive and a normative statement?  Give an example of each

Positive statements are objective, factual claims about how the world is, and can be tested with evidence, ex "Increasing the minimum wage will cause some businesses to reduce their staff."

Normative statements are subjective opinions about how the world should be ex) "The government should increase welfare benefits to reduce poverty."

500

A city implements a program to provide job training and placement assistance specifically for unemployed individuals in low-income neighborhoods.

Difference Principle or Luck Egalitarianism 

500

What is Canada and why?  

Canada is a mixed economy because entrepreneurship and private ownership and allowed and encouraged, but wealth is redistributed through progressive taxation and government controls some industries, such as utlities

500

Benefits of a mixed economy?

answers may vary

500

Preserves class structures and private property, but with heavy state control and often suppresses workers' rights. It promotes nationalism and a strong, centralized authority.

Facism