The 10 Principles
Thinking Economically
The Gains from Trade
Supply & Demand
Miscellaneous
100

A change in the cost or benefit of an action that causes people to act differently is called this

An incentive

100

Economists make these to simplify a complex world

Assumptions / models

100

This producer can make a good using fewer inputs than another

Absolute advantage

100

This is what happens to quantity demanded when price rises (all else equal)

It falls

100

This diagram shows how money and goods flow between households and firms

The circular-flow diagram

200

Markets are usually a good way to do this with economic activity

Organize it

200

A statement that describes the world as it is, and can be tested, is called this

A positive statement

200

This producer can make a good at a lower opportunity cost than another

Comparative advantage

200

If price is set above equilibrium, this occurs in the market

A surplus, and price will fall

200

The two factors of production besides labor and capital

Land

300

A country's living standards are ultimately determined by this

Productivity

300

Thinking at the margin means comparing the marginal benefit and this

The marginal cost

300

Specializing in your comparative advantage good and trading lets the size of this "grow"

The economic "pie"

300

If incomes rise and a good is normal, demand shifts in this direction

Right (demand increases)

300

This occurs when a transaction affects a bystander who wasn't part of it

An externality

400

This happens to prices, in the long run, when the government prints too much money

Prices rise

400

A cost that has already been incurred and cannot be recovered, which should be ignored in decisions

A sunk cost

400

An exchange rate for trade must fall between these two things in order for both sides to benefit

The two producers' opportunity costs of the traded good

400

Name two things (other than price of the good itself) that can shift a demand curve

Price of related goods (substitutes/complements); income; expectations; number of buyers; tastes (any two)

400

A statement that something should be done is called this type of statement

A normative statement

500

Name and briefly describe society's short-run tradeoff between these two macroeconomic variables

Inflation and unemployment — in the short run, policies that lower one tend to raise the other

500

A decision-maker who systematically and purposefully does the best they can to achieve their goals is called this

A rational person

500

A producer with the absolute advantage in both goods may still not have this in either good — true or false? Explain

False — comparative advantage is about opportunity cost, not absolute input requirements; a country can have the absolute advantage in everything but still lack the comparative advantage in one of the two goods

500

Suppose at the same time wages of input-suppliers fall AND the price of a substitute good falls. What happens to equilibrium price? To quantity?

Price falls for sure (both shifts push it down); quantity's effect is ambiguous (the shifts pull quantity in opposite directions)

500

This is the bowed-out shape of a PPF, caused by this fact about opportunity cost

Bow-shaped; caused by opportunity cost rising as more of a good is produced (resources aren't equally well-suited to every use)