In the Beginning . . .
Production Possibilities
D & S
Entangling Efficiency
Price Prescriptions
100

Wanting more than we can get with available resources. The presence of this necessitates rationing.

What is scarcity?

100

Characterized by a straight line, this term describes a situation in which the tradeoffs between production alternatives do not change as more of one good is produced.

What is Constant Opportunity Cost?

100

This is the amount buyers are willing and able to purchase at a given price.

What is Quantity Demanded?

100

This is the maximum price that a buyer would be willing to pay for a good or service.

What is Willingness to Pay (or Reservation Price)?

100

This is a regulation that sets a maximum or minimum legal price for a particular good.

What is a Price Control?

200

This is an assumption that helps economists explain how people behave. It is characterized by individuals acting in a way that will best achieve his/her goals.

What is Rational Behavior?
200

Production alternatives located along the production possibilities frontier. Two characteristics.

What are attainable and efficient?

200

Consumers purchase more of this type of good when their incomes decrease.

What are Inferior Goods?

200

This is the net benefit that a producer receives from the sale of a good or service. It is measured by the difference between the producer's willingness to sell and the actual price.

What is Producer Surplus?

200

This is the minimum legal price at which a good can be sold.

What is a Price Floor?

300

This is the value of the next best alternative that has to be given up.

What is opportunity cost?

300

The ability to produce more of a good or service than others with a given quantity of resources.

What is Absolute Advantage?

300

This describes the quantity producers are willing and able to sell over a series of prices.

What is Supply?

300

A measure of the combined benefits that everyone receives from participating in an exchange of goods or services.

What is Total Surplus?

300

This is the difference between the price paid by buyers and the price received by sellers in the presence of a tax.

What is a Tax Wedge?

400

This entails comparing additional benefits to additional costs to help with decision-making.

What is Marginal Analysis?

400

The characteristic of being able to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost.

What is Comparative Advantage?

400
This occurs when the quantity of a good that is demanded is greater than the quantity supplied. In this circumstance, the price is set too low.

What is a Shortage?

400

This is an arrangement such that no exchange can make anyone better off without someone becoming worse off.

What is an Efficient Market?

400

This is a requirement that the government pay an extra amount to producers or consumers of a good.

What is a Subsidy?

500

This is a consistently observed relationship between two variables.

What is Correlation?

500

This describes the improvement in outcomes that occurs when producers specialize based on comparative advantage and exchange goods and services.

What are the Gains from Trade?

500

When this occurs, the equilibrium price decreases, and the equilibrium quantity increases.

What is an Increase in Supply?

500

This is the loss of total surplus that occurs because the quantity of a good that is bought and sold is below the market equilibrium quantity.

What is Deadweight Loss?

500

The goal of this type of policy is to keep consumer costs low. When it is enacted and binding, quantity demanded increases and quantity supplied decreases.

What is a Price Ceiling?

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