Scarcity Fundamentals
Goods, Services, and Production
Entrepreneurs and Risks
Opportunity Cost and Trade-Offs
Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)
100

This is the basic economic problem where wants are unlimited but resources are limited.

What is scarcity?

100

These are tangible items, like a smartphone or pizza, that satisfy human wants.

What are goods?

100

This person organizes factors of production to start a business and hopes for profit.

Who is an entrepreneur?

100

This is the value of the next-best alternative you give up when making a choice.

What is opportunity cost?

100

This graph shows the maximum combinations of two goods an economy can produce with full resources.

What is a production possibilities curve?

200

This term describes a temporary lack of a good at the current price, unlike scarcity which is more permanent.

What is a shortage?

200

These are actions performed by others, such as a teacher lecturing or a mechanic fixing a car.

What are services?

200

In the U.S. economy, entrepreneurs face this potential downside, like losing invested money.

What is financial risk (or losing money)?

200

All economic decisions involve these because resources are limited.

What are trade-offs?

200

Points on the PPC curve represent this, meaning no waste in resource use.

What is efficiency?

300

Scarcity forces societies to decide these three things: what to produce, how to produce it, and who gets it.

What are allocation choices (or "what, how, and for whom")?

300

For a product like a smartphone, this factor of production includes the natural resources like minerals used in its components.

What is land?

300

A key reward for successful entrepreneurs is this, which can come from business profits.

What is financial gain (or profit)?

300

At Heritage High School, allocating budget to sports equipment instead of new computers is an example of this.

What is a trade-off?

300

This happens when the PPC shifts outward, allowing more production of both goods.

What is economic growth?

400

In this example, scarcity of ________ (HINT: A Type Of Resource) might force you to skip a movie to study for a test.

What is time (or money/resources)?

400

This type of capital refers to tools and machines, while the other involves workers' skills gained through training.

What is physical capital (and human capital)?

400

Entrepreneurs encounter this risk when market demand changes unexpectedly, potentially leading to business failure.

What is market uncertainty (or competition/demand shifts)?

400

In a job scenario, if your current part-time gig pays $6/hour and a new one averages $6.50 with tips, this is the opportunity cost of switching.

What is the $60/week from the old job (or the foregone earnings)?

400

Operating inside the PPC indicates this, leading to wasted potential and lower output.

What is underutilization?

500

Unlike a shortage, which can often be resolved by a price increase, scarcity is an ongoing condition that cannot be eliminated because it stems from this fundamental mismatch in the economy.

What is unlimited human wants (and limited resources)?

500

Combining physical and human capital boosts this in production, but a company might skip annual upgrades if the added output doesn't justify the expense.

What is productivity (or efficiency)?

500

Beyond profit, entrepreneurs in the U.S. enjoy this non-monetary reward, like autonomy in decision-making.

What is being their own boss (or independence)?

500

Opportunity costs increase along a PPC because of this principle, where specializing in one good means sacrificing more of the other as production shifts.

What is increasing (or bowed-out) opportunity costs?

500

In the Nissan case study, investing in new factories and worker training shifts the PPC this way by improving these factors (name two: land, labor, or capital).

What is outward (due to better capital and human capital)?