Thursday, October 29, 2009

No Economics Classes Until December

October 28 Class

We went back over the idea of Needs and Wants and we focused on the role of price, supply, and demand.

We read and discussed three articles from the Foundation for Economic Education: Competition, Profit: Not Just a Motive, and The "I Hate the Poor" Act of 2009...

Very good articles and very good discussions.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

21 October Class

Our main topic of discussion today was "Profit": What is profit? Is it bad or good or neutral?

Sales - Expenses = Profit or Expenses - Sales = Loss.
The possible profit is the incentive for an entrepreneur to contribute money to a business.

We read and discussed "People Before Profits" from the November 2003 Ideas on Liberty (at www.fee.org); and the importance of PRICES in determining the actions of businesses.

We ended by taking a survey from www.fte.org on "Identifying Needs". The survey was followed by animated discussion on whether transportation, education, etc are needs or wants....

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

14 October Class

We discussed very briefly the vote yesterday in the Senate Finance Committee on the Baucus Health Care bill. It goes now to the Senate floor for discussion there.

Most of the class we spent discussing several handouts from the Foundation for Teaching Economics: An Economic Reasoning Quiz, "Incentives Unlock the Mysteries of Human Behavior", and Economic Reasoning Principles.

We discussed tradeoffs, economic choices, consequences of choices, incentives, prices, voluntary trade, markets, and individual freedoms.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Class on Oct 7?

Yes, we will be doing Economics on October 7, during "Fall Break" (We'll be taking the entire month of November off for Wednesday classes, so I figure we need to get them all in in October!)

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Universal Health Care -- an Economic View of It

I’ve had a little more time to digest the talk we went to last night, where they were trying to explain to us how important it is to give everyone universal health care, and how cheap it would actually be.

My response can really all be summed up in a short Economics lesson: Everything we purchase has to be considered a scarcity. No matter how much of it there is, there is still a limited amount of it. (Do we have consensus on that?) In a system that is working, scarcities are taken care of with one tool – prices!

And yet, under the Universal Health Care System being pushed under the Conyers bill for example (H.R. 676) – prices are taken out of the economic equation. When price is no longer allowed to regulate demand, demand ALWAYS exceeds supply. There are no exceptions.

So the bottom line with universal health care is shortages, and shortages will lead to rationing. Doesn’t matter what they say!