Economics
Grade 10
Learner’s Book
J Luiz B Serfontein
Solutions for all Economics Grade 10 Learner’s Book
11 13 15 17 16 14 12
2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1
Published by
Macmillan South Africa (Pty) Ltd
Private Bag X19
Northlands
2116
Gauteng
South Africa
The publishers have made every effort to trace the copyright holders.
If they have inadvertently overlooked any, they will be pleased to
make the necessary arrangements at the first opportunity.
ISBN: 978-1-4310-0645-8
WIP: 3054M000
Acknowledgements
The publisher and author wish to thank the following, in
anticipation for their permission to reprint copyright material:
South African Reserve Bank
Statistics South Africa
Business Day
Financial Mail
South African Mint
Gerald Crawford
Finance Week
Department of Education
www.bbbee.com
Department of Tourism
e-ISBN: 978-1-4310-1737-9
Contents
1 Economics: Basic concepts............................................................. 1
Circular flow.....................................................................................36
Quantitative elements......................................................................57
4 Business cycles............................................................................. 70
5 Dynamics of markets.................................................................... 87
12 Unemployment.......................................................................... 232
k Do you think that being rich means that you have unlimited
Chec f resources?
l
myse Name some resources that you think might be limited even when
you have a lot of money.
Do you know about inflation? Think about how much things cost now
compared with three years ago. Can you still buy the same things with the
same amount of money as three years ago? Why do you think this is?
Questions like these are very important in economics. This is because
economics is also about the study of the causes and effects of and solutions to
inflation.
As a Grade 10 learner, you will soon be reaching the end of your school
career. Are you thinking about your future yet? What you do after you
matriculate is a very important decision because you must start preparing
yourself now for the labour market. In economics, people study the dynamics
of various markets, including the labour market (how it functions, how wages
are determined, etc.).
South Africa unfortunately has a very high unemployment rate. This means
that we have a very large number of people who are looking for jobs but
who cannot find any. Unemployment is one of the biggest challenges facing
South Africa. Economics studies the causes and effects of and solutions for
unemployment.
Can you now see how economics is about the issues that affect the quality of
life of yourself, your family and friends – all South Africans in fact? So why
are you studying economics?
Soon you will be eligible to vote, but voting is not just about choosing a
person or a party to vote for. It is about making well-informed decisions that
affect your own and other people’s futures. It involves understanding your
society and the issues that affect it. So, it means being able to make informed
and critical decisions about economic questions. As a voter, you can influence
which political leaders deal with the problems South Africa faces, and how.
You also need economics to help you develop a better understanding of your
own actions as a human being. You are always making decisions, so you are
always making choices. Sometimes these choices are not easy or popular, and
sometimes the choices you make mean that you have to give up something
else. This means that the choices that you have made, or are still going to
make, involve a cost – something is gained but something is lost.
So now that you know a little about the importance of economics in your own
life, let’s think about what the study of economics is all about – the what, who,
why and how of economics.
Economics is not only concerned with needs and wants but also how best to
satisfy these unlimited needs and wants. To do that we must consider how
these goods and services that satisfy our needs and wants will be produced.
It is when dealing with production that we are confronted with the issue of
scarcity. We simply do not have enough resources to produce all the things
we need and want.
Because our needs and wants are unlimited and resources are scarce, we as a
society must make some very hard choices. We have to decide which needs
and wants and, importantly, whose needs and wants will be satisfied. We are
therefore not only facing the issue of economic efficiency but also the
problem of ensuring equality.
Macroeconomics
Aggregate price level
Macroeconomics Unemployment
Total level of production
Total level of exports
Economics
Microeconomics
Individual prices
Microeconomics Unemployment in the
agricultural sector
Production of motor cars
Exports of gold
Sub-branches of economics
There are many other sub-branches in economics, but they are normally
classified within the broad categories of micro- or macroeconomics. There are
also many different kinds of specialised or expert fields of economics.
Examples of the sub-branches of economics include the following:
l Development economics focuses on the problems of poorer countries.
Economists are also human beings with their own preferences and ideas, and
this will have great impact on how an individual economist may view the
world. Facts do not speak for themselves; they require interpretation. We may
have the same facts but they will mean different things to different people.
But, this theory is also based on two key assumptions. Firstly, that humans
behave rationally. Secondly, that all other things remain the same or constant.
The assumption that other things remain constant is called the ceteris paribus
condition. It is an important assumption and tool in economics because it
allows economists to make generalisations or theories based on what they
have observed.
Our social, economic and political problems cannot be solved in isolation from
one another. They require an integrated approach. Economics is one of the
keys to a better future for all humankind.
Economics
Economics also forms part of the economic sciences that deal with commercial
subjects, such as accounting, business studies, commercial law and
mathematics of finance. A qualification in commerce usually requires you to
study these subjects, as well as economics.
The field of study for economics is much broader than that of the other
commercial subjects. This is because it involves the functioning of the
economic system, while other subjects deal with specific components of the
economic system.
Commercial law concerns the rules and regulations that govern commercial
or business transactions in the economy. These laws are part of the
environment in which an economy functions. For an economy to work well,
business contracts must be legally binding and honoured by both parties.
Economists are also interested in the effects and unintended results that laws
and regulations may have on the functioning of the economy. Competition
law, for example, is an area where economists are very active.
Mathematics is the study of numbers, shapes, structure and change and the
relationships between these concepts. In economics extensive use is made of
mathematics when economic models are developed.
Geography deals with the study of the earth's physical environment and
human habitat. An overlap exists with the study of economics, especially
Career opportunities
Economics is a skill and discipline that is used in many different jobs. It can
open doors in business and finance – you could work as an economist at one
of the big South African or international banks, or for any of our large
companies in tourism, mining, agriculture, pharmaceutics, insurance, etc. You
could even work in government to make public policy decisions or become
the future Minister of Finance. What about a career with one of the large
international development agencies, such as the United Nations, the World
Bank or the International Monetary Fund? Or you could teach economics at
school or university. What about becoming a financial journalist?
There are many other career opportunities. Government departments use the
advice of economists to understand how the economy may affect them and
how they affect the economy in return. Likewise, major corporations rely on
economists to determine how local and global economics will affect them.
Homework activities
1 Why do you think the study of economics is important? (2)
2 Define the study of economics. (4)
3 What is the difference between efficiency and equality? (2)
4 Distinguish between macroeconomics and microeconomics. (2)
5 Give an example of a positive statement and a normative
statement in economics. (2)
6 Describe the relationship between economics and statistics. (2)
Extra practice
1 Why are needs and wants unlimited? (2)
2 Why do we say resources are scarce? (2)
3 Is the following statement true or false:
In macroeconomics we study the price level of all goods, while
in microeconomics we study the price of a specific good or
service. (2)
4 Can the following statement be proven correct or incorrect?
The economic growth of South Africa has declined during 2010
compared to 2009.
Is this a positive or normative statement? (2)
5 How does the work that accountants do differ from what
economists do? (4)
6 Is it possible to give everybody in our society the same things?
Should we try to give everybody the same goods and services? (2)
k
Chec f Why is it so difficult for us to satisfy all of our needs and wants?
l Who are the important decision makers in the economy?
myse
There are over seven billion people on our planet. Imagine the long list of
needs and wants for everyone. Now imagine trying to satisfy everyone’s needs
and wants with the resources available. For example, consider how much food
seven billion people need. On earth there is only so much land available that
can be used to cultivate the crops to feed everyone. And, to make matters
worse, what land is available is getting smaller all the time as it is increasingly
being used for other things, such as industry, cities or biofuel crops.
Who are we
What goods How will we going to produce
and services will produce these goods these goods and
we produce? and services? services for?
Economics gives us the tools and knowledge necessary to make these kinds of
choices. It is about deciding how best to use the available resources to satisfy
as many needs and wants as possible. Economics is therefore concerned with
the study of choices and decision-making in a world that has very real limits.
Since we live in a world of scarcity, we have to make choices all the time.
Unfortunately, these choices are not always popular or easy to make.
For instance, imagine that you want a soccer ball and soccer boots, but you do
not have enough income to purchase both. If you choose to buy the soccer ball
instead of the soccer boots, then the cost of your choice is the soccer boots that
you gave up. Every choice we make involves giving something up, and this
something else or alternative is the cost of our choice. In economics this cost is
called the opportunity cost.
Because of the choices we are forced to make, we are always trading off
options and alternatives. For example, imagine that you have a test tomorrow,
and that you only have this afternoon to study. However, you would really
like to play soccer this afternoon, as you are trying to get on the school team.
You therefore face a choice – if you choose to play soccer, you will have less
time to study, and you will probably get a lower grade for your test. If you
miss playing soccer you will have more time to study and will probably get a
higher grade, but you may not get a place on the soccer team. Your limited
resource of time therefore puts a constraint on what you can and cannot do.
Can you now see that you have to make decisions and choices all the time as
you try to manage your limited resources to satisfy your unlimited wants?
Economics takes this one step further by looking at how a society manages its
resources to satisfy its unlimited needs and wants.
Let’s look at how these questions affect government. Government has to decide
all the time how to spend limited resources (the revenue that has been raised
through taxation). Decisions must be made on how to allocate this revenue
In economics the opportunity cost of any decision is the value of the best
alternative that is given up because of that decision.
It is not all the alternatives that are given up, but only that thing you really wanted
but chose not to have. Even if you are given something for free it does not mean it
did not cost something. We could have produced something else instead – it is this
something else that is the cost of the goods or service you have received for free.
Can you see that opportunity cost differs from accounting costs? While the
accountant calculates what something actually costs in rand, the economist
estimates it in terms of the best alternative that was given up.
Free goods are useful to people and they satisfy important needs and wants,
but they are not scarce. They are usually gifts of nature and there is an
abundant supply, such as fresh air, sunshine and sea water. These goods do
not belong to anybody and as long as there is an abundant supply of them,
people will not be prepared to pay for them.
Economic goods are goods that are produced using scarce resources. They can
command a price in the market and are usually owned by somebody.
Economic goods are also called scarce goods and we can distinguish between
different kinds of goods.
Consumer goods
Capital goods
Capital goods are used for the production of other goods. Capital goods are
not consumed to satisfy wants, but are used to produce other goods, e.g. the
Public goods are the goods that are collectively consumed and owned by
communities. These goods are supplied by the government. Examples of
public goods are roads and street lights.
All goods and service need resources to be produced. These resources are
called the factors of production. Through the process of production, the factors
of production (the resources) are combined to produce goods and services. It is
possible to produce the same product by using different combinations of
factors of production. For example, a house can be built with bricks, wood,
straw, concrete or even glass. Different kinds of tools can also be used to build
this house; the mortar can be mixed by hand or by machines, for instance.
Factors of production
There are four main factors of production: natural resources, labour, capital
and entrepreneurial ability.
Natural resources include land, water, mineral deposits and the environment.
In other words, they are all the resources that exist naturally. Most natural
resources are limited, but with the aid of technology natural resources can be
made more efficient. For example, fertilisers have improved the quality of
land, making more land available for agriculture. Better drilling technology
has opened up oil deposits in frozen areas such as Alaska. Nevertheless, as
natural resources are limited (in fixed supply), the exploitation of natural
resources must be carefully considered. Over-exploitation can cause
environmental damage as well as long-term economic and human suffering.
Labour is the human effort that is put into the production of goods and
services, and includes both physical and mental work. For example, the
writing of this book took both physical work – typing – and mental effort –
using the brain for research and creativity. When we talk about labour, we
need to separate it into the quality and the quantity of labour:
Capital is items like factory buildings, machines and tools that are used in
producing other goods and services. The characteristic of a capital good that
makes it different from other goods is that it is created with the specific aim of
producing goods and services. Note that this is different from financial
capital, which is the money needed to purchase these real capital goods. It is
not money that is directly used in the production of goods and services, but
these buildings, machines and tools.
One of the fundamental problems in the South African economy is the lack of
entrepreneurs. Only about 7% of South African adults are engaged in
entrepreneurial activity and working for themselves. Given the high levels of
unemployment in South Africa, we will need many more entrepreneurs in the
economy.
Now that you know what the factors of production are, let’s think about how
production should occur. To do this, we must consider which factors of
production are available. For example, if there is an abundance of labour but a
shortage of capital, then it would be best to focus on labour-intensive rather
than capital-intensive techniques. If a country has little land available for
growing crops, then they would have to make sure that this land is used as
intensively as possible.
By comparing the production in the different sectors over the years, we can
see how production in South Africa has changed:
l Primary sector – The contribution of this sector declined from 49% in
1911 to 8% in 2009. The decline in the contribution of agriculture is
particularly noticeable. The contribution of mining also shows a marked
decline from 1911 to now. However, in contrast to many other countries,
mining continues to play a major role in the South African economy
today.
l Secondary sector – This sector’s contribution increased significantly from
5% in 1911 to 22% in 2009. The contribution of the manufacturing industry
in particular shows a marked increase.
l Tertiary sector – The contribution of this sector increased from 46% in
1911 to 69% in 2009.
Workers exchange their labour for income. Income is then exchanged for
goods and services to satisfy needs and wants. All these exchanges take place
in markets. We exchange our labour for income on the factor market and our
income for goods and services on the goods and services market.
A market brings buyers and sellers together to establish a price. For a market
to exist there must be at least a seller who has something to sell and a buyer
who wants and can afford to buy this good or service.
As societies have become more sophisticated, markets too have become more
complex. Markets today are linked globally. A market in Johannesburg can be
linked to a market in New York. Technology now allows people to exchange
goods without ever meeting or being physically present. Exchange now
happens through technology or economic agents. For example, a rooibos
farmer in Citrusdal sells his rooibos to an agent in Johannesburg. This agent
then exports the rooibos to a wholesaler in the USA who sells the rooibos to a
tea shop in New York. The tea shop sells the rooibos to customers, which is
the final market, unless one of the customers runs a restaurant. Then the
rooibos will be served in the restaurant – and this is yet another market.
Another example of a modern market is the internet. There are some auction
(public sale) sites that allow sellers to auction goods and services to the
highest bidder. Again, in this market buyers and sellers do not meet, but the
truly interesting thing is that a market does not even have to be a physical
place – it can just be an abstract space such as the internet.
Not only goods are sold in markets and the service sector now makes up a
large part of many economies worldwide. In some countries the value of the
trade in services is more than that of goods. Examples of service sector
industries are tourism, banking and insurance. Can you think of any others?
Price changes are an important way that businesses decide on how much or
how little of a product they should produce. An increase in the price of a
product usually tells businesses to produce more of a product, but a decrease
in the price tells businesses to produce less. Likewise, price changes also tell
individuals and households if they should use more or less of a product.
Usually, an increase in the price of a product tells consumers that the product
is now scarcer, and that they should use less of it. A decrease in the price will
tell consumers to use more of a product.
If one looks at the statistics for household spending in South Africa for 2009,
it gives us a picture of how households spend their income:
l 7,1 % of our income was spent on durable goods.
l 9,1% of our income was spent on semi-durable goods.
l 39,5% of our income was spent on non-durable goods.
l 44,3% of our income was spent on services.
Is this sustainable?
Economics can create or limit opportunities for people, and for this reason
many believe that it should also be about promoting development. The overall
goal of development is to create a sustainable (continuing) living standard for
all. But development is slightly different from economics. Development
stresses a form of economics in which production is geared towards giving
people more choices and opportunities. It is about creating jobs, ensuring
good health and access to quality education, guaranteeing good nutrition and
thus restoring the dignity of all people.
How can economics be part of ensuring these fundamental human rights? The
most important thing that economics can do is to contribute towards creating
a better life for all by providing more opportunities. It can do so by expanding
The key question that we are now confronted with is whether we are able to
increase prosperity for all people without destabilising the environment. This
is an enormous challenge, but one that must be faced. All economies must
adopt a win-win strategy – a strategy that allows us to preserve natural assets
while increasing the opportunities and living standards of all people. Our
choices do not have to be a case of either/or. In fact, the best way to deal with
poverty is to look after the environment, because it is the only long-term
sustainable solution.
Homework activities
1 Are the following statements true or false?
a) Scarcity is a problem experienced only by poor countries. (1)
b) Opportunity cost is the cost of the best alternative that is
given up. (1)
c) If government provides free education to its citizens, there
is still an opportunity cost associated with the provision of
education. (1)
d) Capital goods are goods that are consumed by households. (1)
e) A market must be in a specific place. (1)
f) An ice cream is an example of a non-durable good. (1)
2 How does opportunity cost differ from accounting cost? (2)
3 What are the three fundamental economic questions? (3)
4 Differentiate between the production, exchange and consumption
processes. (5)
5 What is meant by sustainable development? (4)
Extra practice
1 Briefly describe how a market economy deals with the question:
‘For whom do we produce?’ (2)
2 a) Did you make a choice recently for which you had to give
something up?
b) What was it that you had to give up?
c) What is the opportunity cost of the choice you made? (2)
3 To produce a wooden table you need the following: wood, saw,
carpenter, hammer, nails and a person who decides to produce
and sell the table. Name the factors of production these items
represent. (4)
4 Discuss the consequences for future generations if we do not
take sustainable development seriously. (4)
You will learn how the decisions that these participants make and the way in
which they interact with one another impact on the economic life of every
individual in our society. You will also see how the decision of one participant
in the economy will impact on and cause a reaction in the behaviour of
another participant, and the influence it has on the level of economic activity.
Even though businesses own the capital goods (the buildings, factories, tools
and machines), these businesses are in return owned by households through
the shares they have in them. Some households may own only a few hundred
rands’ worth of shares, while others may own thousands or millions of rands’
worth of shares in a company. The point is that businesses are legal entities
that are owned by people (households). These households own a firm’s capital
goods and have a right to its profit in the form of dividends.
The most important source of income for households in South Africa is the
wages and salaries they receive in return for their labour services. To earn an
income, households must therefore take part in the production of goods and
services. This is an important decision that households must make. The more
factors of production a household owns, and the more valuable the factors of
production, the higher the income of the household.
If one looks at the statistics for household spending in South Africa for 2009 it
tells us that households spend:
l 7,1 % of their income on durable goods
l 9,1% of their income on semi-durable goods
l 39,5% of their income on non-durable goods
l 44,3% of their income on services.
If you think back to the basic economic questions of what, for whom and how
to produce, you will immediately recognise the importance of households. It
is the households, through their income and spending, that determine what is
produced and for whom these goods and services are produced. What
households (consumers) want and can afford (their demand) determines what
businesses will produce.
There are different reasons why households save. Some households save for a
rainy day – that is for those unforeseen events such as the car breaking down
or medical expenses. Sometimes households save for specific events –
birthdays, graduations, holidays or for a deposit to buy a house. Another
important reason why households save, and should save, is to provide for an
income when working members retire.
Businesses do not only produce the consumer goods and services that
households want. They also produce the capital goods (factories, machines
and tools) that are used in the production of consumer goods and services.
This creation of capital goods is known as investment.
Looking back at our economic problem of what, how and for whom to
produce, businesses are responsible for the ‘how to produce’ and they are
continuously searching for ways to make the production of goods and
services more efficient. This is important, because our resources are scarce
and we cannot afford to waste them.
Foreign sector
Over the past few years the economies of different countries have become
much more integrated and dependent on each other and we see a much
higher level of interaction between countries. It can be said that the world is
increasingly becoming a global village where a change in one part of the
village affects many other parts of the village. Fundamental changes in trade
flows (the flow of goods and services between countries), financial flows (the
flow of money between countries), the exchange of technology and
information, and the movement of people between countries have led to this
increased level of integration and interdependence. The term ‘globalisation’
is used to describe this higher level of integration between countries.
South Africa is an open economy. This means that it does a lot of business
with the rest of the world, and international trade therefore has a very
important impact on the South African economy.
The real flow is the flow of the factors of production – the quantity of labour,
capital, land and entrepreneurship. The monetary flow is the flow of income
in terms of money. In other words, the amount that is paid in wages and
salaries, interest, rent and profits. Another thing to notice is that these flows
are in opposite directions. If the real flows increase (more factors of
production are flowing to businesses), the monetary flow increases as well
(more income is flowing to households).
It is in the goods market that households (consumers) buy their goods and
services and the producers supply their goods and services.
The real flow is the flow of goods and services from businesses to households,
while the monetary flow, in the opposite direction, is the spending by
households on the goods and services supplied by businesses.
Surplus units or savers deposit their surplus funds with institutions in the
financial markets, such as banks. The institution then uses this surplus to lend
money to those deficit units that qualify for credit or a loan.
Factors of production
Income
Businesses
Note that the flow of income is in the opposite direction of the flow of the
factors of production and that the flow of the factors of production is a real
flow and the flow of income is a monetary flow.
Income
Households Businesses
Consumption spending
Figure 3.2: Monetary flow between households and businesses
Income
Households Businesses
Leakage
Injection
Consumption spending
Savings Investment
Investment is an injection
Investment is an injection and the financial market plays an important role
concerning this. The financial market channels the savings from households
(which are considered a leakage) to businesses in the form of loans, which
they then use to finance their investment spending. Investment spending is
the production of capital goods. As these goods are produced, more factors of
production are employed and the income flow to households increases.
Investment spending is therefore an injection into the circular flow, as it
increases the spending flow.
Government spending
Households Injection Businesses
Injection
Leakage
Government
Consumption spending
Savings Investment
Taxation is a leakage
Government needs revenue to finance its spending. It gets this revenue from
taxation. There are different kinds of taxes, of which income tax is the most
important. Before households can spend their income they must first pay their
taxes. The income that is left after they have paid their taxes is called their
disposable income.
Businesses
Figure 3.5: Circular flow between households, government and the foreign sector
l Government
l Foreign sector
The government buys goods and services (textbooks, medicine and bricks for
instance) on the goods market. This buying of goods and services is part of the
flow of spending. Government then supplies households and businesses with
goods and services. These include police services, education, the defence
force, roads, etc. The more goods and services government buys, the higher
the spending, income and production flows in the economy. To pay for these
goods and services the government imposes taxes on households and
businesses. Taxation is therefore part of the flow of payments to government
and it is a leakage. The more taxes the government collects, the lower the flow
of spending, income and production in the economy.
The foreign sector buys goods and services on the goods market and it is part
of the spending flow of goods and services called exports. If foreign countries
buy more goods and services from South Africa, our exports increase and
consequently the flows of spending, production and income in the economy
increase. Exports are therefore an injection into the spending, production and
income flow.
Businesses