Economics row 1
Definition
Economics row 2
What are
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Economics row 4
Economics row 5
100

Definition of supply and demand

the amount of a commodity, product, or service available and the desire of buyers for it, considered as factors regulating its price.

100

What are the 3 basic c's of creditworthiness

capacity, character, and collateral

100

What is theory of wages

 This theory state that, under the condition of perfect competition, every worker of same skill and efficiency in a given category will receive a wage equal to the value of the marginal product of that type of labor.

100

What are the different types of taxes

direct and indirect, progressive, proportional, regressive

100

What are Credit scores

A credit score is a prediction of how likely you are to pay a loan back on time based on information from your credit reports. designed to represent your credit risk, or the likelihood you will pay your bills on time.

200

Definition of wages 

a fixed regular payment, typically paid on a daily or weekly basis, made by an employer to an employee, especially to a manual or unskilled worker.

200

What are the 3 basic economic questions

(1) What goods and services should be produced to meet consumer needs? (2) How should they be produced, and who should produce them? (3) Who should receive goods and services?

200

What does equilibrium price mean

the market price where the quantity of goods supplied is equal to the quantity of goods demanded.

200

What are the Positive/Negative Externalities

A negative externality occurs when a cost spills over. A positive externality occurs when a benefit spills over

200

What is a price floor/ceiling

A price ceiling keeps a price from rising above a certain level—the “ceiling”. A price floor keeps a price from falling below a certain level—the “floor”.

300

Definition of Bankruptcy

the state of being completely lacking in a particular quality or value.

300

What are the 4 Phases of the Business Cycle

expansion, peak, contraction, and trough.

300

What is a production possibility curve?

 It shows the combinations of two goods an economy is capable of producing.

300

What are the Characteristics of money

portability, divisibility, durability, acceptability, uniformity, scarcity, and stability of value; meaning it should be easy to carry around, can be divided into smaller units, can last for a long time, is widely accepted by people, is consistent in quality, is limited in supply, and maintains relatively stable purchasing power.

300

What does it mean to be Securing a loan

loans that are secured by a specific form of collateral, including physical assets, such as property and vehicles, or liquid assets, such as cash

400

Definition of Federal Reserve

 the U.S. central bank, created by the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 to establish a monetary system that could respond effectively to stresses in the banking system.

400

What are the Different types of business structures

sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, and S corporation. (LLC, Corporation, etc)

400

What do the shifts on a graph represent?

 if the income level of a population increases, the demand curve will shift to the right, since there is more quantity of demand at every price point.

400

Purpose of health, life and property insurance

protects you from unexpected, high medical costs. covers damage or loss by theft and against perils which can include fire, and storm damage. to help provide financial security to your loved ones upon your death. Helps protect a person from unexpected causes. 

400

What is the risk and reward relationship

The risk/reward ratio—also known as the risk/return ratio—marks the prospective reward an investor can earn for every dollar they risk on an investment.

500

Definition of diversification

the process of a business enlarging or varying its range of products or field of operation.

500

What are the different Market Structures

 perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, and monopoly.

500

What is the Concept of the “invisible hand”

The invisible hand is a metaphor for the unseen forces that move the free market economy. Through individual self-interest and freedom of production and consumption, the best interests of society, as a whole, are fulfilled.

500

What are Opportunity Cost & Trade-offs

trade-off - the giving up of one thing in return for something else. Opportunity cost - what you give up to get what you want.

500

What are the Factors of Production

The factors of production are land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship

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