Economic Principles
Economic Decision Making
Economic Systems
Gains From Trade
Other/Misc.
100

"unlimited wants, limited resources" describes the vocab word..

scarcity

100

What are inputs?

Land, labor, and capital (and entrepreneurship) 

100

In a command economy, who commands that economy (makes decisions for the economy)?

The government/ruler/authority 

100

What does it mean if you specialize in something?

You develop a skill for one thin

You become an expert in a specific activity

(Example: Ms. M specializes in teaching social science, not ALL the subjects)

100

Pineapple or potato?

Potato!

200

When there is scarcity, we are forced to make...

choices

200

shortages are __________, scarcity is _________

shortages are temporary, scarcity is forever

200

Who decides what in a market economy?

Individual producers (sellers) and consumers (buyers)

The way buyers and sellers exchange goods and services

200

Delegating tasks to different people who may specialize in that task is an example of...

division of labor

200

Why did Ms. Mischin mess up when she said that a building was land? (land, labor, capital)

Land is only natural resources (water, wood, energy)

A building is an example of capital

300

What is a "market"?

Any arrangement that brings buyers and sellers together to do business

300

What is utility?

Satisfaction or pleasure you get from consuming a good/service

(utility = deliciousness from a cookie)

300

How do mixed economies divide the decision making?

Between government and individuals

300

What is economic interdependence?

Depending on other people/countries to produce the goods and services we want
300

What song did Ms. Mischin play to show how scarcity impacts our choices/decisions

"You Can't Always Get What You Want" by the Rolling Stones

400

What does "margin" mean in "thinking at the margin"?

The outer edge/border of something

a little more or little less

one extra unit of a good

400

How is a tradeoff different from opportunity cost?

tradeoff: giving up one thing for another

opportunity cost: the VALUE of the second-best alternative you gave up

400

What are the 3 fundamental economic questions societies use to determine who gets what?

What will be produced

How will it be produced

For whom will it be produced

400

What is an absolute advantage?

You can produce a good/service using fewer resources than someone else 

Example: (resource = time). I can run more laps than Simon in 10 minutes

400

What is a market?

Any arrangement that brings buyers and sellers together to do business with each other.

500

What is economics all about?

The study of how people use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants

500

What does it mean when a Production Possibilities Curve shifts to the LEFT?

The economy is shrinking

Less goods are being produced

There are less resources available

A natural disaster occurred

500

"Equal opportunity, profit motive, property rights, limited government, economic freedom, competition, and binding contracts" are all examples of America's ________ __________ __________.

Free enterprise system

500

What is a comparative advantage?

When you can produce a good/service at a lower opportunity cost than someone else

500

Eating too much pizza to the point where you get sick is an example of the Law of _________ _________.

The Law of Diminishing Utility or negative utility

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