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Physical articles that have been produced for sale or use. Three examples are food, clothing, and cars. |
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Work done by someone else for which a consumer, business, or government is willing to pay. Three examples are teaching, gardening, and childcare. |
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Resources used to produce goods and services. Economists define these resources as land, labor, and capital. |
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The willingness and ability to take the risks involved in starting and managing a business. |
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The tools, machines, and buildings used to produce goods and services. |
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A measure of the efficiency with which goods and services are produced. Productivity is often stated as the quantity produced per person per hour. |
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The value of the next best alternative that is given up when making a choice. This is the measure of what you must give up to get what yo most want. |
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Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF) |
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A simple model of an economy that shows all the combinations of two goods that can be produced with the resources and technoloty currently available. |
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Goods and services produced using land, labor, and capital. |
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Land + Labor + Capital = goods and services |
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Individuals assemble and create new goods and sercvices using land, labor, and capital. |
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"Gifts of nature"- including air, soil, minerals, water, forests, plants, animals, birds, and fish. They also include solar energy, wind and geothermal energy, and electromagnetic spectrum. |
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Natural resources such as sunlight and wind that are widely available and in no danger of being used up. |
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Resources, such as forests, fresh water, and fish that can ba replaced as they are used. Some metals can be recycled to use again. |
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Fossil fuels, such as oil, coal, and natural gas- one they are used, they are gone forever. |
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Time and effort people devote to producing goods and services in exchange for wages. |
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Knowledge and skill that people gain from education, on the job training, and other experiences- it's importance is almost impossible to overstate. |
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Relationship between or connection between people, ideas, places, or items. |
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Money that people can invest in stocks, bonds, real estate, or businesses to produce future wealth. |
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Physical Capital or Capital Goods |
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The tools, machines, and buildings used to produce goods and services. |
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The satisfaction or pleasure one gains from consuming a produc t or service or from taking an action. |
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Extra satisfaction or pleasure you will get from an increase of one additional unit of a good or service. |
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The more we get of something, the marginal utility decreases. |
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Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility |
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As the quantity of a good consumed increased, themarginal utility of each additional unit decreases |
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Production Possibilities Curve |
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The sloping line on the PPF graph that represents the best the economy can do with its current factors of production. |
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The result of using resources in a way that produces the maximum amount of goods and services. |
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