Foundational
Economics 2.0
Economic Systems
Demand
Supply
100

intangible actions or activities performed by one person for another for payment

What are services?

100

TINSTAFFL stands for this

What is there's no such thing as a free lunch?

100

the doctrine that government generally should not interfere in the marketplace. 

What is laissez faire?

100

this refers to the combination of quantities that someone would be willing and able to buy over a range of possible prices at a given moment.

What is demand?

100

this refers to the amount of a product offered for sale at all possible prices in a market

What is supply?

200

tangible, physical items that can be owned and stored

What are goods?

200

the mechanism that allows buyers and sellers to exchange goods and services

What are markets?

200

resource use and social behavior are dictated by ritual, habit, or custom

What is a traditional economy?

200

this principle states that the quantity demanded varies inversely with its price

What is the law of Demand?

200

this principle states that more product will be offered for sale at higher prices than at lower prices.

What is the law of supply?

300

land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship

What are the factors of production?

300

Scottish economist and philosopher who is considered the father of modern economics, best known for his book The Wealth of Nations

Who is Adam Smith?

300

combines elements of both capitalist and planned economies

What is a mixed economy?

300

this illustrates the quantities demanded by everyone who is interested in purchasing a product at all possible prices. It is downward sloping

What is a demand curve?

300

improvements in this determinant enable firms to produce units of output with fewer resources.

What is the determinant of technology and/or productivity?

400

the process where individuals, firms, or countries focus on producing SPECIFIC goods or services, leading to increased efficiency, productivity, and a greater division of labor. Ex. McDonalds "speedy system"

What is specialization? 

400

a graph that illustrates the maximum possible output combinations of two goods in an economy

What is a production possibilities curve?

400

a central authority, typically the government, makes all decisions about production, distribution, and pricing of goods and services

What is a centrally planned (communist) economy?

400

It lists the quantity (x) an individual would demand at all possible prices (y) that might prevail in the market at a given time

What is a demand schedule?

400

a measure of the degree to which the quantity supplied responds to a change in price

What is supply elasticity?

500

the ability or capacity of a good or service to be useful and give satisfaction to someone

What is utility? 

500

trade-off a government faces between spending on military defense and spending on domestic needs  

What is gun or butter?

500

production, distribution, and pricing of goods and services are primarily guided by the interactions of private individuals and businesses in the marketplace, driven by supply and demand, with limited government intervention.

What is a (free) market economy? 

500

this "effect" says that as the price of one good rises, people are likely to choose an alternative good.

What is the substitution effect?

500

similar to the individual supply curve, except that it shows the quantities offered by all producers in a given market.

What is market supply curve?