Supply and Demand
Elasticity
Price and Utility
Misc
Markets
100

if total revenue on a product drops, what are producers likely to do

produce less

100

What would be a substitute for tea? 

coffee, hot chocolate

100

Where is equilibrium? 

where the quantity supplied equals the quantity demanded

100

total costs are determined by 

adding fixed and variable costs

100

a market with only one producer

monopoly

200

increased gov regulation on a product would do what to the supply curve

shift it left

200

Give an example of a highly inelastic good.

medicine, gas, etc

200

What effect does a high price have on consumers? 

buy less

200

A surplus is created by _________. 

A price floor

200

Benefit of a market

Economies of scale- (can often produce a good at the lowest price) 

300

a good corn harvest would likely do what to the price of corn

decrease it

300

What would be a complement for hot cocoa? 

marshmallows 

300

What effect does a high price have on producers? 

incentivizes production

300

Price ceilings and floors keep the price from reaching what? 

equilibrium

300

In perfect competition, what sets the price?

Supply and demand

400

How would a government granting a new subsidy shift the supply curve for that product? 

to the right

400

When an highly inelastic good gets more expensive, what happens to the demand for other products? 

goes down

400

Explain diminishing marginal utility. 

The first item has high value but that value drops off as a consumer purchases more of that item
400

Who benefits the most from a price ceiling? 

the consumers (if they can get the product) 

400

When price is not used to distribute goods/determine what is produced, who determines it instead? 

the government

500

How is supply and demand a little like arm wrestling?

Supply and demand fight each other for opposite goals until they reach a compromise (equilibrium price) 

500

Demand is elastic when what are available 

other substitutes

500

Describe the advantages of prices as a way of distributing goods in a market. 

Neutral, flexible, familiar, and efficient

500

How do you know what stage of production you are in? 

by what the marginal product is doing (increasing, increasing but at a decreasing rate, or causing total product to go down) 

500

A market failure results from 

too little competition

too little knowledge of market conditions

immobile resources

too few public goods

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