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ECON

Stack #204608

QuestionAnswer
Freedom of Enterprise Ensures that entrepreneurs and private businesses are free to obtain and use economic resources to produce their chose of product and to sell them in their chosen markets.
Freedom of Choice Enables to employ or dispose of their property as they see fit.
Competition Is freedom of choice exersized in pursuit of a monetary return.
specialization is the use of resources of an individual, firm, region, or nation to produce one or a few goods or services rather than a range of goods and services
human specialization or the division of labor makes differences in abiliy fosters learning by doing saves time
Five Fundamental question What goods & services will be produced How will the goods and services be produced who will get the goods and services how will the system accomidate change? how will the system progress
Self interest simply means that each economic unit that tries to achieve its own particular goal, which usually requires to deliver something of value to others
The functional distribution of income indicates how the nations earned income is apportioned among wages, rents, interest, and profits, that is according to the function performed by the reciever.
Personal distribution of income indicates how the nation's money is divided among households.
2005 disposition of household income 88% personal consumptions, 12% personal taxes, >0% savings.
durable goods are things purchased that have a life of 3 rs or more.
nondurable goods are things purchased that have a life of less than 3 yrs.
law of demand All else equal, as price falls, the quantity demand rises, and as price rises, the quantity demanded falls. (inverse)
determinants of demand 1. consumer tastes (preferences) 2. the number of buyers in the market 3. consumers' incomes 4. prices of related goods 5. consumer expectations (right, increase of demand: left, decrease of demand; demand shifters)
supply a schedule or curve showing the various amounts of a product that producers are wiling and able to make abailable for sale at each of a series of possible prices during a specific period.
law of supply a supply schedule tells us that firms will produce and offer for sale more of their product at a high price than a low price
demand a schedule or a curve that shows the various amounts of a product that the consumers are willing and able to purchase at each of a sereis of possible prices during a specified period of time
determinants of supply 1. resources prices 2. technology 3. taxes and subsidies 4. prices of other goods 5. producer expectations 6. the number of sellers in the market (left, decrease of supply: right, increase of supply; supply shifters)
surplus / shortage excess supply (above equilibrium), excess demand (below equilibrium)
business population plant, firm, industry (physical establishment, fabricating and distributing g&s) (business organization that owns and operates plants) (group of firms that produce the same, or similar, products)
legal forms of business sole proprietorship (a business owned and operated by one person), partnership (a business organization that two or more individuals who agree to own and operate a business together), corporation
stock a share in ownership of the corporation
bond lending money to a corporation
redistributing income transfer payments (welfare, medicare) market intervention (price ceiling, price floors) taxation (income tax)
negative & positive externalities spillover to a third party without compenation, spillover to third parties or the community at large legislation, taxes; subsidize consumers, subsidize suppliers, provide goods via govt
Economic Resources Land Labor Capital Entrepreneurial Ability
Assumptions of the production possibility curve Full Employment Fixed Resources Fixed Technology Two Goods
law of increasing oppertuinity cost as the production of a particular good increases, the oppertunity cost of producing and additional unit rises
market system capitalism, private ownership of resources and the use of markets and prices to coordinate direct economic activity.
oppertunity cost what a person gives up to have/own something else
economic rationale for the law of increasing opportunity cost is that all economic resources are not completely adaptable to alternative uses.
ownprice price of product one deals with
price change movement along the demand curve
optimal output MB=MC Marginal Benefits = Marginal Cost
Created by: wheezylou
 

 



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