Term
Any resources that are made by humans and used to create other goods and services are called: |
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Definition
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Term
The resources used to make all goods and services are the: |
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Definition
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Term
Thr purpose of a production possibilities graph is to: |
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Definition
show alternative ways to use economic resources |
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Term
The government of a country must make a decision between increasing military spending and subsidizing wheat farmers. This kind of decision is a: |
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Definition
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Term
The oppurtunity cost of a decision can be examined by using a: |
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Definition
production possibilities graph |
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Term
Production possiblities frontiers curve when they are charted on a graph because they show: |
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Definition
the maximum amount that an economy can produce |
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Term
Why are all goods and services scarce? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the oppurtunity cost of a decision? |
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Definition
The most desirable alternative decisions that could have been made. |
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Term
What is a factory building an example of? |
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Definition
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Term
How would you describe an economy that uses its resources to make the greatest possible number of goods and services? |
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Definition
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Term
The lack of which of the following represents a scarcity? |
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Definition
Enough workers to finish 2 jobs because there's a limited supply of workers |
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Term
Which of the following makes someone an entrepreneur? |
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Definition
When they start their own buisness |
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Term
A country's production possibilities increase because the available workers become more skilled at using a computer. This is an example of growth caused by: |
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Definition
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Term
you bought two new CDs with the last $30 in your checking account, and your next payday is on Monday. What is the oppurtunity cost of these CDs? |
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Definition
Dinner and movie with friends over the weekend. |
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Term
A nation's automakers install new robotic machinery to build cars. Now, cars take only a day to make, and the factories can produce many more cars than before. This is an example of growth caused by: |
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Definition
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Term
One example of an entrepreneur is: |
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Definition
An artist who runs his own buisness painting murals in office buildings and restaraunts |
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Term
What can a decision-making grid do? |
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Definition
Help you determine some of the oppurtunity costs for your decision. |
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Term
Which of the following lists would an economist consider to be land? |
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Definition
iron ore, natural gas, fertile soil, water |
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Term
The community od Desertville traditionally produces a large number of tires and a small amount of kiwi fruit. Kiwis are become increasingly popular, and Desertville has decided to expand kiwi cultivation and decrease tire manufacturing. According to the law of increasing costs, |
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Definition
the cost of producing kiwi's will decrease while the cost of producing tires will increase. |
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Term
Which of the following is an example of scarcity, rather than shortage? |
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Definition
A person wants 5 CDs but he doesn't have enough. |
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Term
The physical capital used by a woodworker to make furniture would include: |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a taxi driver's knowledge of the city streets |
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Term
A company that makes baseball caps is underutilizing its resources. What does this mean? |
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Definition
The company is paying their employees less then they should |
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Term
What could cause a production possibilites curve to move down and to the left? |
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Definition
a nation loses land after being defeated in a war |
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Term
What can cause a production possibilites curve to move to the right? |
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Definition
a new invention loswers the cost of production |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT characteristic of a centrally planned economy? |
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Definition
each collective or factory sets its own goods |
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Term
What is the struggle among various producers for the consumer's buisness called? |
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Definition
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Term
Why does even a free market economy need some government intervention? |
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Definition
to provide for things that the marketplace does not address |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT a key economic question? |
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Definition
How should it be ensured that goods and services are paid for? |
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Term
What does the process of specialization do for an economy? |
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Definition
it makes it more efficient |
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Term
How would the Chinese economy be characterized? |
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Definition
mixed, but on the side of centrally planned |
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Term
What is one of the most important advantages of a free market? |
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Definition
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Term
What incentive motivates a manufacturer to sell a product? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is a chatacteristic of a traditional economy? |
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Definition
children tend to have the same jobs as their parents did |
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Term
What is the product market? |
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Definition
the market in which households purchase the goods and services that firms produce |
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Term
What incentive do manufacturers have to sell their products? |
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Definition
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Term
In what kind of economy does the government make all the decisions? |
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Definition
centrally planned economy |
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Term
What is the purpose of competition? |
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Definition
to act as a regulatingforce in the marketplace |
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Term
What is the function of an economic system? |
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Definition
to produce and distribute goods and services |
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Term
How would the economy of Canada be likely to be chatacterized? |
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Definition
mixed, but on the side of free market |
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Term
What is an important advantage of the free market? |
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Definition
it offers a wide variety of goods and services |
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Term
What might be a hardship for citizens of a centrally planned economy making a transition to a market-based system? |
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Definition
workers would lose job security and guaranteed incomes |
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Term
A person who believed in the doctrine of laissez faire would disapprove of |
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Definition
government funding for education |
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Term
You are an entrepreneur with an innovative idea for a new buisness. In which kind of economy would you have the most oppurtunity to try to achieve success? |
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Definition
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Term
Households pay firms for goods and services. Firms supply households with good and services. The purchase and supply of goods and services takes place in the: |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following goals is difficult to achieve in a pure free market system? |
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Definition
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Term
A government prints and distributes posters to inspire workers to increse their productivity. In which kinf of economy does this most likely take place? |
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Definition
centrally planned economy |
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Term
A person believes that real equality can only exist when political equality is coupled with economic equality. This person believes that democratic means should be used to distribute wealth evenly througout society. This person is a: |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the folloowing is NOT a weakness of centrally planned economies? |
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Definition
most workers lack job security |
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Term
The economy of China is in transition. What does this mean? |
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Definition
the economy is moving from central planning toward a market based system |
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Term
Which of the following is a private organization that attempts to influence public officials to act or vte in ways that will benefit the groups members? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the most effective way for consumers to make their desires known to businesses? |
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Definition
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Term
Why does the government use its powers to make sure that buisnesses disclose so much information to the public? |
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Definition
make buyers more knowlegable and safer |
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Term
What is a positive externality? |
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Definition
economic side effect that generates unexpected benefits |
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Term
What does the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program provide? |
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Definition
provides cash to the states to help run their welfare programs |
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Term
What best describes the role of government in a free enterprise system? |
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Definition
allow individuals to operate their buisnesses in ways they think will maximize their profits |
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Term
What effect does new technology usually have on an economy? |
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Definition
makes economy stronger and more efficent |
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Term
Which of the following is a critical rile for determining whether something is a public good? |
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Definition
if the total benefits to society are greater than the total cost |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT an example of a public good? |
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Definition
(not the answer: highways, national parks, municipal libraries) |
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Term
What protections does OSHA give to people of the United States? |
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Definition
regulations on workplace saftey and infomation about hazards in the workplace |
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Term
What is the term for the total value of all goods and services produced in a particular economy? |
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Definition
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) |
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Term
What is one benefit of Social Security? |
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Definition
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Term
A person who consumes a good or service but does not pay for it is called which of the following? |
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Definition
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Term
Automakers are required to comply with public disclosure laws. What is one example of a requirement of these laws? |
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Definition
car dealers must prominetley display a sticker with the car's fuel efficiencey |
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Term
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Definition
economic side effect of a good or service that generates benefits or costs to someone other than the person deciding how much to produce or consume |
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Term
In 1996, a new federal welfare program called Temporary assistance for Needy Families (TANF) began assisting poor families. Which of the following was NOT a provision of TANF? |
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Definition
(not the answer: benefits, work incentives, welfare programs) |
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Term
The U.S. Constitution guarantees certain rights that allow people to engage in buisness activities. Which of the following does the U.S. Consitution NOT guarantee? |
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Definition
(not the answer: property rights, taxes congress can impose, right to make binding contracts.) |
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Term
Why is legal equality important to the free enterprise system? |
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Definition
guarantees all people same legal rights will maximize the use of human capital. |
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Term
A large telephone company has hired lobbyists to try to persuade lawmakers to reduce governmental regulation over the telecommunications industry. Why might the company do this? |
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Definition
some regulations are costly to implement and cut into profits |
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Term
You read an article in a news magazine that explains how the economy expanded for several years, then went into a period of contraction. What is the subject of this article? |
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Definition
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Term
To stabalize the economy, policymakers try to achieve three main oucomes: high employment, steady growth, and |
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Definition
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Term
Why does the government protect inventors and authors by offering them patents and copyrights? |
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Definition
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Term
A new runway has opened up at the airport, and the flight path goes directly over your apartment. The noise of the aiplanes is a |
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Definition
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Term
Each payday, some of your pay is withheld as payroll deductions for Social Security. What happens to the money that is withheld? |
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Definition
money is redistributed as cash transfers to elderly and disabled people |
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Term
Jeff and Margaret qualify for Section 8 housing, a subsidized housing program from the federal government. What kind of benefit are they recieving? |
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Definition
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Term
When a consumer is able and willing to buy a good or service, he or she creates which of the following? |
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Definition
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Term
What determines the price and the quantity produced of most goods? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
goods for which the demand falls when income rises |
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Term
How is future price related to current demand? |
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Definition
When expected; current demand will fall |
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Term
What determines how a change in prices will affect total revenue for a company? |
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Definition
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Term
What kind of system is the United States economy based on? |
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Definition
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Term
Ceteris paribus, or "all other things held constant," is an assumption that has which of the following effects on a demand schedule? |
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Definition
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Term
What shows the quantities of products demanded at each price by all consumers in a market? |
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Definition
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Term
How did the existence of the baby boom generation change demand in the United States? |
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Definition
demand was raised for different goods with each age |
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Term
What does it mean when the demand for a good is inelastic? |
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Definition
price increase does not have impact on buying habits |
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Term
What kind of table lists the quantity of a good that a person will buy at different prices? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a basic principle of the law of demand? |
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Definition
good's price is lower, people will buy more of it |
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Term
How is current demand for a good related to its future price? |
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Definition
future price will rise as current demand will rise |
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Term
Which of the following is a good that might not be bought when prices rise? |
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Definition
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Term
What kind of changes would be expected in the demand of a country that has a growing population? |
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Definition
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Term
A shift in the demand curve means which of the following? |
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Definition
want more or less at any price because some other price consideration |
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Term
What is a company's total revenue? |
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Definition
amount a company recieves for selling its goods |
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Term
When prices rise, which of the following happens to income? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following events could cause the demand curve for a sports magazine to shift to the right? |
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Definition
local library buys a subscription to the sports magazine for its reading room |
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Term
The price of movie tickets in a town has risen fro $7 to $9. What is the most likely effect of the change in price? |
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Definition
quantity demanded will decrease |
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Term
Alex recieves a raise at work and continues to work the same number of hours each week. His demand for $3 shirts, which he considers an inferior good, will |
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Definition
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Term
Demand for movie rentals is highly elastic. A video store that raises the price of a rental will |
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Definition
possibly gain or lose revenue |
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Term
When movie rentals were $2.95, Sara rented ten movies a month. The price of a rental increased by fifty cents and Sara decided to rent two fewer movies a month. when the price increased by one more dollar, Sara decided to cut the number of movies she rented in half. What is her quantity demanded by month at the current price? |
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Definition
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Term
Will, a sprinter on the track team, has inelastic demand for sports drinks. The local store has raised the price of a sports drink from $1.00 to $1.50. Which of the following could descirbe Will's response to the price change? |
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Definition
He bought 10 bottles a month at $1.00, and 8 bottles a month at $1.50 |
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Term
Which of these events could permanelty shift an individual's demand curve for umbrellas to the right? |
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Definition
he moves from a desert community to a rainy city by the ocean. |
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Term
Which of the following is an example of lower production costs brought about by the use of technology? |
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Definition
the use of e-mail to replace slower surface mail |
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Term
What is the effect of import restrictions on prices? |
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Definition
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Term
What do sellers do if they expect the price of goods they have for sale to increase dramatically in the near future? |
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Definition
store the goods until the price rises |
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Term
Which of the following is the best example of the law of supply? |
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Definition
a sandwich shop increses the number of sandwiches they supply every day when the price is increased |
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Term
Which of the following is an example of a good with an inelastic supply? |
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Definition
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Term
When the selling price of a good goes up, what is the realtionship to the quantity supplied? |
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Definition
it becomes practical to produce more goods |
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Term
What factor has the greatest influence on elasticity and inelasticity of supply? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is a fixed cost for a store? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of these events would indicate a movement along a supply curve for batteries? |
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Definition
battery manufacturers raise the price of 8 AA batteries from $3.50 to $3.95 a set. |
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Term
If the supply of a good is inelastic, |
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Definition
producers will not change their quantity supplied by much if the market price doubles |
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Term
An entrepreneur knits sweaterd for sale. The entrepreneur has fixed costs of $100. When he makes 10 sweaters in one month, he much spend $15 on wool. To make eleven sweaters in one month, he must spend $17 on wool. If he has no other costs, what is the marginal cost of the eleventh sweater? |
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Definition
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Term
A baker cauculates that by spending $16 on labor and materials, she can bake 10 cakes a day. $24 will allow her to bake 12 cakes, while $36 spent on labor and materials produces 14 cakes. In terms of capital and labor, the baker has what kind of marginal returns? |
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Definition
decreasing marginal returns |
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Term
What is one example of a variable cost in a major leage baseball franchise? |
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Definition
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Term
Complete the following sentence: At the most profitable level of production, a firm's marginal cost will be ____ the market price. |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is an example of government influence on supply? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is an example of a barter system? |
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Definition
instead of paying rent, you clean the house for the owner |
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Term
Which of the following is an example of money as a unit of account? |
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Definition
common monetary unit to use as a comparison |
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Term
Which of the following is an example of representative money? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the purpose of the Federal Deposit Isurance Corporation (FDIC)? |
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Definition
to protect the $$ you deposited in the bank |
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Term
What did the Federalists believe about banking? |
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Definition
a centralized banking system was neccesary |
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Term
What occured during the Free Banking Era? |
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Definition
currency varied widely from state to state |
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Term
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Definition
paper currecny used by the conferderacy during the Civil War |
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Term
What is a mortgage used to purchase? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is NOT an example of a liquid asset? |
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Definition
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Term
Why is using coins as money easier than using gold bars? |
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Definition
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Term
What happens during a bank run? |
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Definition
more cutromers withdraw money tha the bank has on hand |
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Term
What condition is neccesary for a fiat money system to work? |
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Definition
the government must control the money supply |
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Term
What happens when you make a purchase using a credit card? |
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Definition
credit card issuer pays the state |
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Term
What is the larget source of income for banks? |
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Definition
the interest they recieve on loans |
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Term
Which of the following is NOT an example of M1 money? |
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Definition
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Term
You need a new computer, and you will need a loan in order to buy one. Which lender is most likelyto charge you the highest interest rate on your loan? |
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Definition
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Term
When you pay for a new CD with a debit card, you authorize the transfer of money from your account to the music store's account. In other words, a payment by debit card is the electronic payment by |
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Definition
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Term
Penny is an artist, and John is a carpetner. Penny agrees to paint a portrait of John's family in exchange for a handmade table created by John. How did Penny and John pay for the goods in their transaction? |
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Definition
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Term
Which of the following is a use of money? |
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Definition
(Look at the 4 uses of money: ex. as a unit of account) |
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Term
In the 1800s, people in mining towns in the West often paid for goods with gold nuggets or gold dust. What was the function of gold? |
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Definition
it was used as a representative money |
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Term
In the 1900s, the Russian people lost confidence in the value of thr ruble, and many were no longer willing to sell goods and serviced in exchange for Russian currency. Which characteristic of money did the Russian currency lack? |
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Definition
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Term
Why is representative money more useful than commodity money? |
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Definition
respresentative money is portable, durable, divisible, and acceptable can also be exchaged for something else of value |
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Term
American leaders in the early United States wanted to establish a stable banking system in order to |
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Definition
promote international trade and economic growth |
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Term
How did the United States goverment make the American public have confidence in the nation's currency in the 1870's? |
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Definition
by the govnerment establishing fiat currency |
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Term
Erin borrowed $18,000 to buy a car. Her loan will be paid off in 5 years. By the time that she pays off the loan, she will have made $20,327 in payments. Why did she have to pay $2,327 more than the price of her car? |
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Definition
She had to pay interest of $2,327 for the privelege of borrwing the principal of $18,000 |
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