Foundational Concepts
Supply and Demand
Macro Indicators
Government and the Economy
International and Market Structures
100

To say that people make decisions at the margin suggests what?

They weigh the additional costs and benefits of various activities before they make a purchase.

100

What are some determinantes of demand? 

income, tastes, the price of related goods

100

This is the largest component of GDP.

Consumption

100

Describe the beliefs of Adam Smith

Unregulated competition in the marketplace, little to no government intervention, market will fix itself

100

This is a tax on imported goods.

A tariff

200

What does a linear PPC signify?

The shape of the PPC signifies that the resources needed to produce the two goods are interchangeable.

200

Other things being equal, when the price of a good rises, the quantity supplied of the good also rises. This is known as?

The Law of Supply

200

Who is included in the labor force?

People who are 16 an older and employed or unemployed but looking for work

200

Who is responsible for creating maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates

The Federal Reserve

200

Why does the government set a quota on imports?

To increase sales of domestic goods.

300

What does a point on the PPC mean? What does a point inside the PPC suggest? What does a point outside of the PPC suggest?

Point on-means efficiency

Point inside-means inefficiency 

Point outside-means impossible

300

Suppose a decrease in the price of Good X results in less of Good Y sold. This means X and Y are this type of good.

Substitute goods

300

Burgin works part-time serving bubble tea while looking for a full-time job as a lumberjack. What best describes his employment situation.

Underemployed

300

This includes a combination of tax and spending policy.

Fiscal Policy

300

How does contractionary fiscal policy effect aggregate demand?

It decreases aggregate demand

400

Define economics

How society manages its scarce resources.

400

Define equilibrium

At the current price, quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.

400

What is demand-pull inflation? How can it be stopped?

There's too much money chasing too few goods, meaning the overall demand for products and services outpaces the economy's ability to supply them, causing prices to rise as consumers compete for limited items. Limit spending

400

This is a benefit or cost experienced by someone who is not a producer or consumer of a good or service.

An externality

400

What is comparative advantage and how does it impact exports?

Comparative advantage means a country produces goods/services at a lower opportunity cost than others, driving specialization and boosting overall global output, leading to more exports of those efficient goods

500

This concept means a person or country is able to produce more of a good or service than another given the same resources.

Absolute Advantage

500

What would cause a rightward shift in the supply curve?

Primarily lower production costs (cheaper labor/materials/tech) or an increase in the number of sellers/firms, also helped by better technology, favorable conditions (like good weather for crops)

500

How do we calculate GDP?

GDP = C + I + G + (X - M)

500

Compare and contrast Keynesian economics and Classical economics

Classical economics focuses on self-regulating markets, flexible prices/wages, aggregate supply, minimal government, and long-term growth (full employment), while Keynesian economics, born from the Depression, emphasizes sticky prices, aggregate demand, active government (fiscal/monetary policy) to manage short-term cycles, and accepts potential long-term unemployment

500

Describe monopolistic competition

Monopolistic competition is a market structure where many firms sell similar, but not identical, products. Key features include a large number of sellers, freedom of entry and exit, and product differentiation through branding, quality, or style. While each firm has some market power, competition is high, leading to similarities in products and price points, but also inefficiencies like excess capacity and costs from advertising.

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