Supply & Demand
Personal Finance
Market Structures
Budget Basics
Income & Expenses
100

The law stating that as the price of a good increases, the quantity demanded decreases.

What is the Law of Demand?

100

A card issued by a bank allowing the holder to transfer money electronically to another bank account when making a purchase.

What is a debit card?

100

A market structure dominated by a single seller selling a unique product with no close substitutes.

What is a monopoly?

100

To track income and expenses, prevent overspending, and help reach financial goals.

What is the main purpose of a budget?

100

The amount earned before taxes and deductions.

What is Gross Pay?

200

The point at which the quantity supplied perfectly matches the quantity demanded.

What is market equilibrium?

200

The cost of borrowing money, usually expressed as a yearly percentage rate (APR).

What is interest?

200

A market structure in which a few large firms dominate the market, such as the cellular service industry.

What is an oligopoly?

200

Needs are necessary to live and work, while wants are nice to have but not essential.

What is the difference between needs and wants?

200

Take-home pay after taxes and deductions.

What is net pay?

300

A government-imposed legal maximum price that can be charged for a good or service, such as rent control.

What is a price ceiling?

300

A numerical expression based on a level analysis of a person's credit files, representing their creditworthiness.

What is a credit score?

300

A market structure with many firms selling products that are similar but differentiated, like fast food or clothing.

What is monopolistic competition?

300

Name two benefits of making a budget.

Prevents overspending, helps save money, reduces stress, prepares for emergencies, tracks spending.

300

Is rent a fixed or variable expense?

What is a Fixed expense.

400

The term used to describe a good for which demand increases when consumer income rises.

What is a normal good?

400

The golden rule of investing that involves spreading out investments to reduce overall risk.

What is diversification?

400

The theoretical market structure featuring an infinite number of buyers/sellers, identical products, and perfect information.

What is perfect (or pure) competition?

400

Spending more money than you earn

What is a budget deficit?

400

Name three variable expenses.

Gas, groceries, concert tickets, maintenance, repairs.

500

A measure of how responsive consumers are to a change in price.

What is elasticity of demand?

500

An investment pool that allows small investors to buy a diversified portfolio of stocks or bonds managed by a professional.

What is a mutual fund?

500

A formal agreement among competing firms in an oligopoly to illegally fix prices and production levels, like OPEC.

What is a cartel?

500

Spending less money than you earn

What is a budget surplus?

500

Name three fixed expenses of car ownership.

Car payment, insurance, registration.

M
e
n
u