EC-907
EC-15
EC-002
EC-003
EC-912
100

This economic system is based on traditions passed down through generations and is often called a subsistence system.

What is a Traditional Economy?

100

In a private enterprise system, these two groups answer the basic economic questions rather than the government.

Who are individuals and businesses?

100

This is the monetary reward for taking a risk and investing in a business; calculated as Income minus Expenses.

What is Profit?

100

These are the four main classifications of business risk.

What are Hazard, Operational, Strategic, and Financial?

100

This type of competition occurs between businesses that offer dissimilar goods or services, such as a movie theater vs. a bowling alley.

What is Indirect Competition?

200

In this type of command economy, the government owns almost all means of production and does all central planning.

What is Communism?

200

This characteristic of private enterprise drives businesses to provide better products at lower prices to win customers.


What is Competition?

200

This is the formula used to calculate Gross Profit.

What is Income from Sales minus Cost of Goods?

200

This type of risk involves two possibilities: loss or no loss (e.g., a tornado), and is generally insurable.

What is Pure Risk?

200

These are the four main types of market structures

What are Perfect Competition, Monopolistic Competition, Oligopoly, and Monopoly?

300

These are the three basic questions every economic system must answer regarding products.

What are "What will be produced?", "How will it be produced?", and "How will it be allocated?"

300

These are the three specific economic freedoms found in a private enterprise system.

What are the freedom to choose, the freedom to own/sell property, and the freedom to compete?

300

This is the actual profit a business keeps after subtracting both the cost of goods and all operating expenses.

What is Net Profit?

300

This specific risk classification deals with daily business activities, human errors, and production problems.

What is Operational Risk?

300

Competing on the basis of quality, outstanding customer service, or modern facilities rather than price is known as this.

What is Nonprice Competition?

400

Socialist countries are often called this because they provide free medical care and education paid for by high taxes.

What are Welfare States?

400

Laws, taxes, and personal choices act as these within a free market system.

What are Limits to Freedom?

400

hese three external factors can significantly affect a business's profit margin regardless of internal management.

What are the economy, demand, and chance?

400

This risk classification involves long-term plans, competition, and products becoming obsolete

What is Strategic Risk?

400

This 1890 Act was the first piece of government legislation created to prevent monopolies and promote fair competition.

What is the Sherman Antitrust Act?

500

In a market economy, the allocation of resources is primarily controlled by this.

What is the Market (or Supply and Demand)?

500

These are three major disadvantages of the private enterprise system mentioned in the objectives.

What are unemployment, poverty, and unequal distribution of wealth?

500

To increase profit, a business must either increase sales or do this.

What is decrease expenses?

500

These are the four basic ways businesses handle risk.

What are Avoiding, Preventing/Controlling, Transferring, and Retaining?

500

These are two ways competition benefits society as a whole

What are Creating a higher standard of living and creating prosperity/jobs?