3E Economics par. 6.4 and 6.6

Negative external effect
Positive external effect
6.2 ass 6
b
c
a
d
e
f
g
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Slide 1: Drag question
EconomieMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 3

This lesson contains 23 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 60 min

Items in this lesson

Negative external effect
Positive external effect
6.2 ass 6
b
c
a
d
e
f
g

Slide 1 - Drag question

Par. 6.3 assignment 9a
A
From € 2,50 to € 3,00
B
From € 2,50 to € 3,50

Slide 2 - Quiz

Par. 6.3 assignment 9c
A
2 mln x € 1,-
B
3 mln x € 1,-

Slide 3 - Quiz

3E Economics par. 6.4 and 6.6

Slide 4 - Slide

Frits is applying for a job at Philips. The demand for labour is ... ?
A
Frits
B
Philips

Slide 5 - Quiz

Labour Market
Supply of labour: Everybody that works or wants to work
( for more than 12 hours a week )

Demand for labour: Companies ( and public sector ) 

Price: wages

Slide 6 - Slide

Labour Market
Supply of labour > Demand for labour 
means unemployment
leads to a situation with lower wages

Demand for labour > Supply of labour
means tight labour market
leads to a situation with higher wages

Slide 7 - Slide

Labour market
Collective agreements: employment arrangement for all employees in a certain industry
Financial: f.e. wage
Non financial: f.e. number of days of

Trade Unions negotiate on behalf of employees

Slide 8 - Slide

Labour market
Trade Unions and employees go for the most favourable CA with high wages
Employers don't want labour costs to be too high
So, tough negotiations

Employees have to be careful with very high goals:
High wages -> high labour costs -> high prices -> less customers ->
-> lower production -> less employees needed -> higher unemployment
( or companies replace employees by machines to avoid high labour costs )

Slide 9 - Slide

Labour market
Minimum wage:
Protect workers against exploitation

Minimum wage:
Supply of labour increases and Demand for labour decreases
So higher unemployment

Slide 10 - Slide

Slide 11 - Slide

Slide 12 - Slide

Taxes
The Netherlands have a progressive tax system

People with a higher income pay a higher percentage of taxes than people with a lower income ( tax brackets )
( See page 204 and 206 )

This makes differences in income smaller

Slide 13 - Slide

Harry: gross income € 40.800,-. net income € 26.250,-
Jeroen: gross income € 61.200,-. net income € 36.720,-
Does this country have a progressive tax system?
Show your calculation!

Slide 14 - Open question

Assignment
Tax% Harry = ( 40.800 - 26.250 ) / 40.800 = 35%
Tax% Jeroen = ( 61.200 - 36.720 ) / 61.200 = 40%

or

61.200 / 40.800 = 1,5
36.720 / 26.250 = 1,4

Slide 15 - Slide

Taxes
Box system

Box 1: income from employment ( and home )
Box 2: investments in companies ( BV, NV )
Box 3: income from savings and investments

Slide 16 - Slide

Box 1: source 2 page 204
How much tax does someone with a taxable income of € 30.000,- have to pay?
A
€ 10.965
B
€ 11.389
C
€ 12.255
D
€ 23.220

Slide 17 - Quiz

Box 1
1> Gross income
2> Taxable income = Gross income - Deductable items
3> Taxes = Bracket% x Taxable income
F.e. taxable income = € 30.000,-
36,55% x 20.142 = 7.361,90
40,85% x ( 30.000 - 20.142 ) = 4.026,99
Total = 11.388,89

Slide 18 - Slide

Box 3
F.e. Equity = € 80.000,-

1,30% x ( 80.000 - 70.800 ) = 119,60
0,60% x ( 70.800 - 30.000 ) = 244,80
Equity until 30.000 is exempted
Total = 364,40

Slide 19 - Slide

Taxes

Total Taxes = Tax Box 1 + Tax Box 2 + Tax Box 3 - Tax credits

Net income = Gross income - Total taxes

Slide 20 - Slide

Par. 6.6 assignment 3

Slide 21 - Slide

Par. 6.6 assignment 3
Taxable income = 62.760 - 11.432 = 51.328
( 51.328 - 20.142 ) x 0,4085 = 12.739,48
20.142 x 0,3655 = 7.361,90
Total = 20.101,38
Taxes = 20.101,38 - 2.182 - 805 = 17.114,38

Net income = 62.760 - 17.114,38 = 45.645,62


Slide 22 - Slide

Hw.
Par. 6.4 assignments 3 and 18

Par. 6.6 assignment 1

Slide 23 - Slide