Fundamentals of Economics
Demand & Supply
Market Equilibrium
Economic Models
Real-World Economics
100

Scarcity in economics is what?

Limited resources and unlimited wants.

100

What is the law of demand?

When price increases, quantity demanded decreases.

100

What is equilibrium in a market?

The point where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.

100

What are the four factors of production?

Land, labour, capital and enterprise.

100

A product that can replace another product is called what?

A substitute good.

200

What is opportunity cost?

The value of the next best alternative forgone.

200

What happens to demand if the price of a product increases?

Quantity demanded falls.

200

What occurs when price is above equilibrium?

A surplus (excess supply).

200

What does a point inside a Production Possibility Frontier represent?

Underemployed or inefficient use of resources.

200

If consumers become more health conscious, what happens to demand for healthy food?

Demand increases (shift right).

300

Give an example of a factor of production and explain it.

Labour – human effort used to produce goods and services. 

Land - Trees required to create cricket bats

Capital - Machinery required for mining 

Enterprise/Entrepreneurship - Elon Musk 

300

If streaming services become more popular during a sports tournament, what happens to demand?

Demand increases (shift right).

300

What happens if price is below equilibrium?

A shortage occurs (excess demand).

300

What does the Production Possibility Frontier show?

The maximum output combinations an economy can produce with limited resources.

300

If fertiliser prices increase for farmers, what happens to supply of vegetables?

Supply decreases (shift left).

400

Explain why scarcity forces individuals and societies to make choices.

Because resources are limited, choices must be made about how they are allocated.

400

List and explain each non-price determinant of supply.

PRESENTS 

400

If demand increases but supply stays the same, what happens to equilibrium price?

Price increases.

400

What is the opportunity cost of moving along a PPF curve?

The amount of one good sacrificed to produce more of another.

400

Floods damaging watermelon crops would affect which curve and how in the market for watermelons? Explain the non-price determinant.

Supply decreases (shift left).

Negative Supply Shock.

500

Explain the relationship between price and demand.

It is inverse – when price rises demand falls, and when price falls demand rises.

500

Explain why a demand curve slopes downward and the supply curve slopes upward.

Because consumers buy more at lower prices and less at higher prices. 

Because producers supply more at higher prices and less at lower prices - profit. 

500

A severe drought reduces wheat harvests across Australia at the same time that global demand for wheat increases due to population growth and higher bread consumption. Using supply and demand theory, explain what will most likely happen to the equilibrium price and equilibrium quantity in the wheat market.

Supply decreases due to the drought (shift left) and demand increases due to higher global demand (shift right). The equilibrium price will increase. The change in equilibrium quantity is uncertain because it depends on whether the demand increase or the supply decrease is larger.

500

Explain what the circular flow of income shows. Adress each component.

The movement of money, goods and services between households, businesses, government, Banks, and the overseas market. It also shows where leakages and injections occur.

500

List and explain each non-price determinant of Demand 

PIRATES

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