Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate...

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Chapter 8 Economics

Transcript of Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate...

Page 1: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Chapter 8

Economics

Page 2: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Chapter Questions

What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology?

How are critical resources such as land allocated in various societies?

How do gender and age relate to the organization of labor in different societies?

Page 3: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Chapter Questions

What is the relationship between the sociopolitical organization of society and its system of exchange?

What is capitalism and how does it differ from other ways in which economics can be organized?

Do all groups in capitalist society participate in the capitalist economy?

Page 4: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Economic System

The part of society that deals with production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.

The way production is organized has consequences for the family and the political system.

Economics is embedded in the social process and cultural pattern.

Page 5: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Allocating Resources

Each society has rules to regulate access to resources:– Land, water, labor, and the materials from which

tools are made.

Productive resources are used to create other goods or information:– Material goods, natural resources, or information.

Page 6: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Productive Resources and Subsistence Strategies

Foragers - weapons to hunt animalsPastoralists - livestock and landHorticulturalists - land, tools, and storage

facilities

Page 7: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Sexual Division of Labor

Universal characteristic of society. In foraging societies, men generally hunt

and women generally gather. In agricultural societies, both men and

women play important roles in food production.

Page 8: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Three Main Systems of Exchange

Reciprocity – mutual give and take among people of equal status.

Redistribution – goods are collected from members of the group and given back to the group in a new pattern.

Market exchange – goods and services are bought and sold at a price determined by supply and demand.

Page 9: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Market Exchange

Principle distribution mechanism in most of the world’s societies.

Impersonal and occurs without regard to the social position of the participants.

When this is the key economic institution, social and political goals are less important than financial goals.

Page 10: Chapter 8 Economics. Chapter Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such.

Capitalism

Economic system:– People work for wages.– Land and capital goods are privately owned.– Capital is invested for individual profit.

A small part of the population owns most of the resources or capital goods.