FOUNDATIONS
SCARCITY & PRODUCTION
MARKETS & TRADE
ELASTICITY & POLICY
GDP & MACROEECONOMICS
100

This field studies how societies manage limited resources to meet unlimited wants.

What is Economics?

100

This concept means there are not enough resources to meet everyone’s wants.

What is scarcity?

100

This point occurs when quantity supplied equals quantity demanded.

What is equilibrium?

100

This measures how responsive demand or supply is to price changes.

What is elasticity?

100

This acronym stands for Gross Domestic Product.

What is GDP?

200

These are three main goals of macroeconomics: economic growth, full employment, and this.

What is price stability?

200

This curve shows the maximum output combinations possible given resources and technology.

What is the production possibilities frontier (PPF)?

200

This happens when the price is above equilibrium, meaning more is supplied than demanded.

What is a surplus?

200

This type of elasticity measures how demand changes when income changes.

What is income elasticity of demand?

200

This formula measures GDP by spending: C + I + G + (X − M).

What is the expenditure approach?

300

This branch of economics focuses on individual markets, firms, and households.

What is Microeconomics?

300

This term refers to the next-best alternative you give up when making a choice.

What is opportunity cost?

300

This law states that as price rises, quantity supplied also rises.

What is the law of supply?

300

This formula measures price elasticity of demand.

What is (% change in quantity demanded) / (% change in price)?

300

This type of GDP removes the effects of inflation.

What is real GDP?

400

This type of statement contains value judgments and cannot be tested.

What is a normative statement?

400

This principle states that as more of one input is added, additional output eventually decreases.

What are diminishing marginal returns?

400

This global process increases interconnectedness through trade, technology, and investment.

What is globalization?

400

If two goods have positive cross elasticity, they are this type of goods.

What are substitutes?

400

Counting goods more than once in GDP is called this.

What is double counting?

500

These are three reasons to study economics: analytical skills, insight into decisions, and diverse career opportunities.

What are the benefits of studying economics?

500

This ability to produce goods at a lower opportunity cost explains trade benefits.

What is comparative advantage?

500

These are three ways societies can organize economically: traditional, command, and this.

What is a market economy?

500

Governments use this economic concept to predict the effects of taxes, subsidies, or policies on markets.

What are models?

500

This measure reflects total goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a year.

What is GDP?