International Trade
Economic Growth Models
IS-LM Model
Monetary Policy
Money Market Equilibrium
100

This core principle states that trade is not a zero-sum game — both trading partners benefit from specialization and exchange.

Mutual benefit

100

This economist created the neoclassical growth model showing how capital, labor, and technology drive long-run output.

Robert Solow

100

In the IS-LM model, the LM curve represents equilibrium in this market.

Money market

100

This type of monetary policy involves lowering interest rates and increasing money supply to stimulate a sluggish economy

Expansionary monetary policy

100

In the money market, this variable acts as the price of money — it adjusts until supply equals demand

Interest rate

200

Adam Smith's 1776 book that introduced absolute advantage and challenged mercantilist philosophy

Wealth of Nations

200

In the Solow model, the economy eventually reaches this point where capital per worker stops changing

Steady state

200

The IS curve shows all combinations of interest rates and income where this market is in equilibrium.

Goods market 

200

When a central bank buys government bonds from commercial banks to inject money into the economy, this operation is used

Open market purchase

200

The money supply curve is drawn vertically because this institution fixes the quantity of money regardless of interest rates

Central bank

300

Ricardo proved that countries should specialize based on this — what they give up to produce one good instead of another.

Opportunity cost

300

In the Solow model, only this factor can sustain long-run growth in output per capita — capital accumulation alone cannot.

Technological progress

300

An increase in government spending shifts this curve to the right, raising both income and interest rates.

IS curve

300

This is the interest rate at which commercial banks can borrow directly from the central bank

Discount rate

300

Keynes identified three motives for holding money: transactions, precautionary, and this third one linked to asset speculation

Speculative motive

400

The H-O theorem states countries export goods that intensively use this — their most plentiful resource

Abundant factor 

400

Unlike the Solow model, endogenous growth theory explains long-run growth as driven internally by investment in this type of capital.

Human capital

400

An increase in money supply by the central bank shifts this curve to the right, lowering interest rates and raising income

LM curve 

400

When interest rates fall to zero and further cuts fail to stimulate spending, the economy is stuck in this

Liquidity trap

400

When real income rises, households need more cash for everyday purchases — this type of money demand increases

Transaction demand

500

VERs are worse than tariffs because these flow to foreign exporters instead of the domestic government treasury

Quota rents

500

The Solow model predicts poorer countries grow faster than richer ones, eventually catching up — this is called what.

Conditional convergence

500

The IS-LM model was built to formalize the macroeconomic framework of this British economist

John Maynard Keynes

500

This monetary policy tool sets the minimum percentage of deposits that banks must hold in reserve, directly limiting lending capacity

Reserve requirement

500

When the price level rises, money demand shifts right and equilibrium interest rates move in this direction.

Upward 

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