Economics
Political Socialization
Polling
Ideologies
100

A set of economic policy tools designed to regulate the amount of money in the economy...

Monetary Policy

100

What is political socialization?

the experiences and factors that shape an individuals political values attitudes and behaviors    

100

a survey that measures public opinion about political issues, candidates, or policies

political poll

100

What is the conservativism?

ideology favoring more control of social behavior, fewer regulation of businesses and less government interference in the economy

200

What is GDP?

total value of goods and services produced in an economy

200

the dominant set of beliefs, customs, traditions, and values that define the relationship between citizens and government      

Political culture

200

What is the difference between entrance and exit polls?

entrance poll - a poll conducted of people coming to an event                  

exit poll - survey conducted outside a polling place in which individuals are asked who or what they just voted for and why   

200

ideology favoring less government control over social behavior and more greater regulation of businesses and of the economy        

liberalism

300

What is the FED?

a board of governors and member banks responsible for monetary policy

300

What are the four corners of the political compass?

Liberal, conservative, authoritative, and authoritarian

300

What is sampling?

The method of selecting a subset of individuals from a large population to represent that population in a poll

300

What is libertarianism?

ideology favoring little government regulation and intervention beyond protecting private property and individual liberty  

400
The belief that the government should increase spending during recessions to stimulate demand and boost economic growth

Keynesians

400

What are the 3 types of organizations?

Civic organizations, religious institutions, and local communities
400

What is the margin of error?

a statistical term that represents the amount of random sampling error in a poll's results, indicating the degree of uncertainty in the findings

400

What is the difference between partisanship and bipartisanship?

Bipartisan refers to cooperation, agreement, and compromise between two opposing political parties to achieve a common goal, often used in two-party systems like the U.S.

Partisan describes actions or attitudes adhering strictly to the interests of a single party, often without compromise, favoring one side over the other

500

an economic school of thought that emphasizes the role of supply in driving economic growth. The central idea is that lower barriers to production sich as reduced taxes and decreased regulation will lead to increased production job creation and overall economic expansion 



Supply-side economics

500

What are the 5 main factors of political socialization?

Family, media, religion, education, and geography

500
What are tracking polls?

Polls that are conducted repeatedly over time to track changes in public opinion and measure shifts in voter sentiment leading up to an election.

500
What core american principles shape these ideologies?

Individualism, free enterprise, equal opportunity, freedom of speech, etc

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