9com2 Consumer and Financial Decisions
9com2 Consumer and Financial Decisions
9com2 Consumer and Financial Decisions
What is Commerce?
ACTIVITY:
Class Discussion
What is Commerce?
What will we learn about
in this subject?
What is
Commerce?
What is
Commerce?
Through improving your knowledge of how the world of commerce operates, you can learn to make wise
consumer decisions.
In our daily lives, we are constantly making commercial choices; these commercial decisions can include things
such as:
What to buy
What to produce
Where to live
What career to follow
Where to invest funds
How much money to save.
ACTIVITY:
Alphabet Businesses
investigate the scope of commerce, including the concepts of: consumer, needs and wants, goods and services,
resources, scarcity and how these may impact on choice
What does commerce involve?
Consumers
Needs
Wants
Goods
Services
Resources
Scarcity
and how these may impact on choice
What is a consumer?
Durability Scarcity
Consumer and Financial Decisions
explain factors influencing consumer and financial decisions, for example advertising/marketing, age,
convenience, culture, customer service, disposable income, environmental considerations and social media
ACTIVITY:
Think, pair, share
Social Convenience
Media
Key Factors
Affecting
Consumer and
Financial
Decisions
Disposable
income
Gender
Age
Customer Service
Developments in transportation and technology, especially communications technology, have provided consumers with
a wide range of locations and sources from which to purchase products
The distribution channel for Cadbury Chocolate
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbcrilcQ9VU
Four different types of prices?
Supermarkets
Online
shopping
Where
to buy
Department Convenience
stores stores
Factory Specialty
Outlets stores
ACTIVITY:
Different types of
Retailers jigsaw
What do we think?
Investigate advantages and
disadvantages of different payment
options, including:
Credit is the supply of money NOW for the promise of paying it back LATER for MORE money. As you are
using money you don’t have, you pay interest, unless you pay the total balance back to the credit card company
before the end of the interest free period (usually one month). They can also be linked to smart phones
Advantages:
Don’t need to carry large amounts of cash
Convenient payment method for online and telephone purchases
Help you establish a good credit history
Offer cheap use of funds, provided you always pay your balance in full.
Disadvantages
Easy to overspend and build up your debt
Electronic funds transfer: debit cards
With a debit card, you are using your own money, by electronically
accessing money already in your account. You pay no interest, only an
account operating fee, and can spend up to your account balance.
The most common way of using your debit card for purchases of
goods is by EFTPOS (electronic funds transfer at point of sale).
EFTPOS is a computerised system in which money is transferred from
a consumer’s account to the business’s account. It is important that
EFTPOS receipts are kept for checking against account statements.
Often businesses will also allow you to withdraw extra cash with
EFTPOS.
ACTIVITY:
Comprehension
Questions
PayPal is an intermediary (middle man) whereby you end up paying for the good using your credit card,
bank account or money stored in your PayPal account.
PayPal’s advantage lies with its security and ability to obtain a refund if a dispute about the transaction
arises.
Electronic funds transfer: BPAY
Afterpay is a digital service linked to a customer’s credit or debit card and enables
consumers to ‘buy now, pay later’. The service is available to consumers over 18
years, and allows consumers to purchase something at the current price and pay
this amount off in four equal instalments every two weeks.
Advantages:
Instant online approval and no application fees
No annual fees, and no extra payments if you pay on time
The purchaser receives the good or service immediately.
Disadvantages
Significant fees are charged if you miss a payment. $10 late fee per missed
payment and $7 if the payment is not received within 7 days..
Christmas is a great time of year, but the lead-up can
ACTIVITY: be stressful. There's pressure to buy friends and family
Christmas Chaos thoughtful gifts, to make Christmas Day memorable
Research and to organise a relaxing summer holiday to recharge
your batteries (and maybe your partner's and family's).
Under pressure we can all make bad decisions. Many
of us are so stretched for money that we overreach to
fund our Christmas and holidays.
A cheque is a written communication ordering your financial institution (drawee), to pay a person a specific
amount of money. The person being paid is called the payee. The person authorising the transaction is termed
the drawer. Cheques are issued in a numbered order, called a chequebook. When writing a cheque, no blank
spaces should be left before or after the amount. This prevents words or numbers being added later.
Advantages:
Safer than carrying cash
Can be posted safely
Only the named recipient is able to cash the cheque, making it safer
Disadvantages:
Not accepted everywhere
Take time to process and clear
Bank charges involved with having a cheque book.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwC-EMh2-Z4
ACTIVITY:
Complete the blank
Cheque
When you buy goods using lay-by, you first pay a deposit and then the store puts aside the good for you. You then
make regular payments over a fixed period of time. You do not take possession of, or own the good, until you pay off
the last instalment owing.
If you cancel the lay-by before paying the full purchase price, the store must be notified in writing. The store is
required, under the Lay-By Sales Act, to provide a refund after deducting storage, handling and depreciation costs. If
you do not complete payment by the agreed date, the store can cancel the lay-by. After receiving written notification
from the store, you have seven days to decide to either pay the full amount or receive a refund, less costs.
Advantages:
Can secure straight away
No interest is charged
Disadvantages:
Have to pay for the product in full before you can use it
Not a popular option, as consumers have the ‘buy now, pay later’ options more readily available today.
Book-up
Book-up is credit provided by a retailer so that you can purchase goods from the retailer’s store and pay the
account at a later date. You must pay back this amount within a set period of time. E.g./ tradespeople with
their hardware supplier
Advantages:
Can purchase now and pay later
No interest unless applying for an extension
Can spread purchases over a week or fortnight
Disadvantages:
Form of security required
Unless accurate records are kept, can overspend
Can only be used in that store
ACTIVITY:
Comprehension
Questions
https://create.kahoot.it/details/57506e05-8040-
4f63-8925-907daa6d47a4
Last Lesson Recap
http://www.adnews.com.au/news/reebok-to-pay-350
Last Lesson Recap
1. What is a contract?
2. What are the three stages of a contract and
what do they mean?
Legal Rights of Consumers
Legal Rights of Consumers
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uE8BB-ioNRw
NSW Fair Trading
New South Wales Fair Trading is the state consumer protection agency. It
provides information and assistance to all consumers on areas such as
consumer issues, shopping on the internet, home building and motor vehicle
sales.
The department has the responsibility for:
assisting consumers to resolve their complaints
checking that products meet Australian safety standards
Explain what
Apple Care is and
why it may not be
value for money.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T28vfWkjJmQ&t=1s
Apple Care Benefits
In 2011, a single, national consumer law — the Australian Consumer Law (ACL) — was introduced, which
operates using the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cwlth). This federal Act applies in the same way to all
Australian consumers and businesses, regardless of where the business operates or where the consumer shops.
The Act’s main purpose is to protect consumers against undesirable business practices, such as:
misleading and deceptive advertising
unconscionable (unreasonable and unethical) conduct
misrepresenting the contents of products, their place of manufacture or their characteristics
unfair trade practices that restrict competition and which can severely limit the rights of consumers
false claims regarding goods and services.
ACTIVITY:
Independent Research Research the following things about Choice:
and poster creation 1. Who are they and what are their roles?
2. How do they assist consumers?
State government
Ombudsman
Federal Government
Independent Organisations: CHOICE
The Media
State Government
New South Wales Fair Trading is the state consumer protection agency. It provides information and assistance
to all consumers on areas such as consumer issues, shopping on the internet, home building and motor vehicle
sales. The department has the responsibility for:
assisting consumers to resolve their complaints
checking that products meet Australian safety standards
ensuring that scales, scanners and petrol pumps used to weigh and price products are correct
warning the community about dubious business practices such as scams and rip-offs.
Ombudsman
The two federal government commissions largely responsible for assisting consumers
are:
Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC): protects consumers in
the areas of consumer credit, investment, life and general insurance, superannuation,
and banking (except lending) in Australia. They aim to reduce fraud (scams and rip-
offs) in financial markets and financial products.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC). nationally
enforces and administers of the Competition and Consumer Act, acting as a watchdog
on the pricing of goods and services. The ACCC is obligated to inform the public so
that they are aware of their rights and responsibilities under the law.
Independent Organisation: CHOICE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRZ9fJ4oV-8
ACTIVITY:
Allocating the right
advice In small groups, determine which of the organisations mentioned in
this subtopic would be best suited to deal with the following situations.
• Contact salesperson in • Seek advice from the agency • Lodge a claim with NCAT who deals with
person, over the phone, initially with a casual consumer claims, tenancy issues, building
or in writing. conversation about the works, and reviews of government decisions.
• Remember to keep a It can generally hear claims up to the value of
problem. $40,000.
record of all • Lodge a formal written • This tribunal has the power to make the
conversations, the name complaint and ask the office to following orders to resolve a dispute:
of the people you dealt negotiate or mediate on your • order that money owed does not have to be
with and file any receipts behalf by contacting the trader paid
you have and coming to an amicable • order for goods or services to be provided
solution. • order faulty goods be fixed or replaced
• order a refund and goods to be returned.
Financial Management
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R3ZJKN_5M44&t=6s
Consequences of poor financial management:
Excessive Debt
Excessive debt and poor financial management can have the following consequences:
Personal: These can include being unable to satisfy one’s own needs or wants, inability to maintain lifestyle,
feelings of self-doubt or regret, stress, illness, repossession of personal property, accumulation of excessive
debt (money owing), or even bankruptcy.
Social: relationship tensions or breakdown, social isolation through an inability to afford the cost of social
activities, inability to holiday, travel or invest with others.
Legal: Consequences of excessive debt in this area may include:
garnishee wages or bank accounts and given to creditors
Writ of execution: a court order that allows a court official (the sheriff) to seize and then sell some of
your property.
bankruptcy, where a person gives up control of their assets (items of value such as a car) and finances
Impact of debt on wellbeing
Financial health and overall wellbeing are linked. Common signs of financial stress include high blood pressure,
sleeping difficulties, tiredness, mood swings, loss of appetite, headaches, arguing with people closest to you
about money, psychological stress (for example, feeling fearful) and withdrawing from people. Changes of
behaviour and mindset assist those who have been financially stressed to recover.
Strategies and actions to aid recovery include:
creating a personal budget
rolling all debts into one loan
regularly depositing a little cash into a savings account
setting aside money for emergencies
being open to the idea of talking about money with those closest to you
seeing if you can get a better plan with your bank or financial institution
accessing financial assistance.
Questions to consider:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZKW79_zCTo&t=170s
Suggest some strategies that Toni could have adopted to
improve her wellbeing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_KOXKT1hqw&t=34s
Financial Management
Discuss the role and importance of long-term financial strategies, including superannuation
ACTIVITY:
Class Discussion
By the age of 67, most Australian would wish to retire, meaning they would stop working and
receive a pension. While a pension will provide enough funds for a basic lifestyle, Australians
need to save money themselves to live the retirement they desire.
Superannuation (commonly just called ‘super’) is money that’s put aside and saved while you’re
working. A superannuation fund is a compulsory savings account where each time you are paid,
your employer will allocate a percentage of your income to the account. You may also want to
pay additional money into your account because this does have some tax advantages.
Superannuation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tN5zYppkE0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwUf9wd63WA
Financial Management
Total Income
-
Total Expenses:
Fixed
Variable
=
Savings
Why do people
save money?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVKQn2I4HDM
ACTIVITY:
Britney’s Budget
Monthly Budget
Income:
Total Income
Prepare the budget for Ali Khan for the months of January, Expenses
February and March. Be sure to place equations where
appropriate so that any changes will automatically update
your answer.
Data for Ali Khan:
• Wages $1500 in each month
• Interest $100 in February only
• Rent $400 in each month Total Expenses
• Food $250 in each month Savings
• Phone $50 each month
• Electricity $100 each month
• Transport $100 in each month
ACTIVITY:
Budget Game
https://natwest.mymoneysense.com/students/students-16-1
8/the-budget-game/
http://playspent.org/
ACTIVITY:
Everything you want
to purchase
Some of the current technological methods that can be used to make electronic (cashless) payment include:
1. Visa payWave and MasterCard PayPass. This ‘tap and go’ technology allows for payments of under $100 simply by
tapping your debit or credit card, keyring or mobile phone against a specialised contactless terminal.
2. Smartphone apps. There are numerous apps such as Apple Pay, Google Pay and Samsung Pay. These are aimed at
allowing consumers to make mobile credit card payments using smartphones. The mobile phone is becoming an
extension of the purse or wallet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjHxNp7EqFU
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkM_Z3o8T4g
ACTIVITY:
Class Discussion