Sunday, September 29, 2013

This was a very busy week for the school, especially Mrs. Weser, the juniors, and seniors.  This whole week we were preparing for Junior/ Senior Showdown.  Along with our case study being due on Wednesday added to the stress but we all pushed through and got everything done.  We took a few notes this week and watched the debt chart website.  I thought that was the coolest thing we did this week in class, it showed us how much debt each category was in an it was increasing every second.  We also watched quite a few videos and played a game in which I did not achieve my badges, but I was close.  Overall, I think this was the most fun week we have had in school, outside of Econ class and inside of Econ.

Friday, September 20, 2013

The past week we have done a lot and learned a lot.  Well first off we took quite a lot of notes this week, which I personally do not mind.  We had a stock game going on one day in class after we decided what we were going to open in Weserville, there were many different ideas such as an ice cream shop, restaurant, apartments and many more.  Then for homework one night we started a stock market game, and we all seem to be enjoying it.  We will be doing this for a whole month and whoever  is top ranked will get a prize.  Then at the end of the class we found out we have to write a 3-5 page essay on the laws about healthcare that is going to be passed on January 1st, which should not be fun.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

October 10th, Housing Market Indicates Trouble.  The housing industry seems to be going for a bigger decline and foreclosures hit a record high in August.  Housing is one of the largest factors in the US economy and almost 40% of consumes are spent on housing situations.  When home values fall, Americans seem to spend less, banks lose money, and oversupply of houses.  To fix this problem they are thinking for the lenders to cut the amount of money the borrowers owe to match the value of the house, while the owners give up half of any gains if the house is in value.  Another solution may be to let people refinance so they most likely will not default.  I think that it may be a good idea to use one of these options because I think it will benefit us and the economy in the long run.  It will leave us with more money not using all of our money for the house you are buying, all the foreclosures can hurt the economy because they make the prices drop so it hurts the housing markets.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

A huge current event right now is "Is the cost of college crippling?" written by Frankel Laurie.  What is going on is they are saying that the cost of college is rising dramatically.  Statistics show that nothing in life has risen in price as fast as college has, since 1985 it has risen over 500%.  Some believe universities are the biggest scam going on.  Most people say it is related to economics and that you have to go to college to get ahead and at the same time they are not opening new colleges and as they said "they have a fixed amount of supply and when demand is going up and supply is not, the prices rise" therefore the prices of college must rise.  When the prices rise most people need loans and grants which leads to debt after you get out of college.  They stats said that grants and loans only cover about 30% of your tuition meaning you are still in debt because for tuition that is not that much being covered.  These debts will affect their lives after they get out of college also.  We all know that the cost of colleges is rising and I believe they will keep rising because of their fixed supply and with more and more people wanting and attending college the price will continue rising.  After college people are in a huge debt which I believe can be life affecting, it affects how you live after college and if you are still paying it off when you have a family it will be hard to support while paying off the huge debt you have from college.  Paying off debt will be even harder if the person cannot get a qualified job for their field and may end up working somewhere that does not even need people that attended college.

 http://money.cnn.com/video/news/2013/09/03/n-cost-of-college-rising-education-middle-class-jobs.cnnmoney/index.html?iid=SF_E_LN