Decisions Decisions
Markets
Supply and Demand
Produce and Consume
Competition
100

A short-term market condition where the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a given price; often due to disruptions.

What is a shortage?

100

This is a market structure in which one firm controls the supply of a good or service and can influence price

What is a monopoly?

100

This is the rule that when prices increases, more of that good/service will be provided

What is the law of supply?
100

These are the three factors of production involved in creating a good or service

What is land, labor, and capital?

100

The ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer/country?

What is comparative advantage?

200

This condition exists because resources are limited while human wants are unlimited, forcing choices about resource use

What is scarcity?

200

This is a market structure dominated by a small number of large firms whose decisions affect each other

What is an oligopoly?

200

This is the point where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied

What is market equilibrium?

200

These kinds of costs changes depending on how much of a good/service is produced and consumed

What are variable costs?

200

This is the ability to produce more of a good using the same amount of resources as others

What is absolute advantage?

300

This is the value of the next best alternative given up when a decision is made

What is opportunity cost?

300
It is in this type of economy where the government has to balance between free market and regulation

What is a mixed economy?

300

When the price of a product goes up so much, that people start to choose alternative products, lowering the demand

What is the substitution effect?

300

Daily Double

What are fixed costs?

300

This is when people, firms, or countries focus on producing a limited range of goods to increase efficiency

What is specialization?

400

People affect demand by making purchases based on things not related to price called this

What are non-price determinants?

400

This is the market structure where many small firms sell identical products and are price takers

What is pure competition?

400

This is the curve that shows the maximum possible output combinations of two goods an economy can produce given resources and technology

What is the production possibility frontier (PPF)?

400
This is when the average costs of production decrease as the scale of operations increases

What are economies of scale?

400

This is when a group of firms work together to control prices and limit competition

What is a cartel?

500

This is the cost or benefit from an economic activity experienced by third parties not directly involved in the transaction

What is an externality?

500

It is this term that describes a "hands off" form of capitalism where the government does not intervene in the economy

What is laissez-faire?

500

This is a measure of how much quantity demanded responds to a change in price

What is elasticity of demand (or elasticity)?

500

In order to determine the health of an economy over several years, we have to look at the total dollar amount of goods and services produced by a country in different years while adjusted for inflation called this

What is real GDP?

500

This is when you move business operations to a foreign country to reduce costs

What is offshoring?