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Whole Class
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100

The Demand Curve is *blank* sloping and The Supply Curve is *blank* sloping

Downward and Upward

100

On the Demand or Supply Curve, a change in price alone does what?

A movement along the curves

100

Assume you like PB&J sandwiches. When the price of Peanut Butter goes up, the demand for jelly goes down. This is an example of what?

Complimentary Goods

100

Assuming you are wealthy, a luxury item would be considered a *blank* good

Normal Good

100

Assuming you are wealthy, ramen noodles would be considered a *blank* good

Inferior Good

200

What is the law of supply?

It's a direct relationship between price and quantity supplied

200
For the supply curve, if the price of an input resource decreases, what will happen?

Supply will increase/shift to the right

200

If the number of buyers in a market decrease, what will happen with the demand curve?

Will decrease/shift to the left

200

When QD > QS means we have a what?

Shortage

200

A worker's salary is an example of what kind of cost?

Fixed

300
For the supply curve, when the price of a product INCREASES, what happens?

The quantity supplied increases

300

When a modest increase in price has little to NO EFFECT on the demand of this product is an example of being what?

Inelastic

300
Assume your preference is Coke over Pepsi. If the price of Pepsi increases, you will buy more Coke. Pepsi is an example of what kind of good? 

Substitute

300

When QS > QD, then we have a what?

Surplus

300

Raw materials are an example of what kind of cost?

Variable

400

The additional costs of an additional unit of output is defined as what?

Marginal Cost

400

What is the goal of a business ultimately?

To Maximize Profits

400

This is where the government pays a business to produce something

A subsidy

400

Taxes in economics, typically does what to supply?

Decrease

400

This kind of market structure is where firms are the "price makers" where they set the market price offerings.

Monopoly

500

In what market are firms "price takers", meaning they have no control over the prices accepted by the going market price?

Perfect competition

500

legal maximum on the price that can be charged for a product or service, typically set by the government to make essential goods affordable and prevent unfair prices.

Price Ceiling

500

Assume you are a farmer. You learn that the cost of fertilizer that you use to grow crops has gone up. What will happen between price, qty, and the supply/demand curve?

Supply will decrease, causing price to go up and quantity to decrease. 

500

This is where the government tells a business the maximum $ amount that they can charge consumers in a market.

Price Floor

500

when a small change in a good's price causes a large change in the quantity consumers want to buy, often for luxury or non-essential items with many substitutes

Elastic Demand