Market Structures
Employment Labor and Wages
Sources of Government revenue
Government Spending
Financial markets
100

What is a Monopoly?

A market with one seller and no competition

100

What is Frictional Unemployment?

Unemployment from job transitions

100

What is an Income Tax?

Tax on individual income

100

What is mandatory spending?

Government spending that is required by law and doesn't require annual approval through appropriations bills.

100

What is the Stock Market?

Market for stocks and bonds

200

What is Monopolistic Competition?

Many firms sell similar products

200

What is the Labor Force?

Total number of people who can work

200

What is a Property Tax?

Tax on property value

200

What is discretionary spending?

Money used for non-essential expenses that an individual, household, or business can choose to spend or save

200

What is an IPO?

The first sale of stock to the public

300

What is an Oligopoly?

A few firms control the market

300

What is Wage Differentiation?

Higher wages due to specialized skills

300

What is a Sales Tax?

Tax on goods and services

300

What are Transfer Payments?

Payments without goods or services in return

300

What is the Bond Market?

Market for long-term debt securities

400

What is Perfect Competition?

Many firms sell identical products

400

What is the Unemployment Rate?

The percentage of unemployed people

400

What is a Corporate Income Tax?

Tax on corporate profits

400

What is Capital Spending?

Spending on infrastructure

400

What is the Capital Market?

Market for buying and selling financial instruments

500

What is a Natural Monopoly?

A firm controls the entire supply of a product

500

What is the Theory of Wage Determination?

Wages determined by labor supply and demand

500

What is a Tariff?

Taxes on imported goods

500

What is Mandatory Spending?

Ongoing, required government expenses.

500

What is a Stock?

A financial instrument representing company ownership

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