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The study of how people make choices under conditions of scarcity and of the results of those choices for society.
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Although we have boundless needs and wants, the resources available to us are limited, so having more of one good thing usually means having less of another.
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The Cost Benefit Principle |
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An individual should take action if and only if, the extra benefits from taking the action are at least as great as the extra costs.
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Someone with well-defined goals who tries to fulfill those goals are best he or she can.
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The benefit of taking action minus its cost.
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The value of what must be forgone to undertake an activity.
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A cost that is beyond recovery at the moment a decision must be made.
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The increase in total cost that results from carrying out one additional unit of an activity.
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The increase in total benefit that results from carrying out one additional unit of an activity.
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The total cost of under taking “n” units of an activity divided by “n”. |
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The total cost of under taking “n” units of an activity divided by “n”. |
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Normative Economic Principle |
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One that says how people should behave.
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Positive Economic Principle |
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One that predicts how people will behave.
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A person (or a firm or a society) is more likely to take an action if its benefit rises, and less likely to take it if its cost rises. In short, incentives matter.
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the study of individual choice under scarcity and its implications for the behavior of prices and quantities in individual markets.
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The study of the performance of national economies and the policies that governments use to try to improve that performance.
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