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Absolute Advantage
The ability of a country or individual to produce more of a good or service with the same amount of resources compared to others.
• Comparative Advantage
The ability of a country or individual to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than others.
• Exports
Goods and services produced in one country and sold to others.
• Imports
Goods and services bought from other countries and brought into a country.
• Opportunity Cost
The value of the next best alternative that you give up when making a choice.
• Factors of Production
The resources used to produce goods and services, including land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.
• Land
Natural resources used in production, such as minerals, forests, and water.
• Labor
The work done by people to produce goods and services.
• Entrepreneurship
The ability to organize and manage the other factors of production to create goods and services, often involving innovation and risk-taking.
• Capital (Capital Goods)
Tools, equipment, and buildings used to produce goods and services.
• Inputs
The resources (like land, labor, and capital) used to produce goods and services.
• Outputs
The goods and services produced from the inputs.
• Trade-Offs
The choices you make when you have to give up one thing to get something else.
• Scarcity
The basic economic problem where unlimited wants exceed limited resources.
• Recession
A period of economic decline, usually marked by a decrease in GDP, employment, and trade lasting for at least six months.
• Substitutes
Goods that can replace each other; if the price of one goes up, the demand for the other usually increases.
• Complements
Goods that are often used together; if the price of one goes up, the demand for the other usually decreases.
• Equilibrium Price
The price at which the quantity of a good demanded by consumers equals the quantity supplied by producers.
• Equilibrium Quantity
The quantity of a good that is bought and sold at the equilibrium price.
• Competitive Market
A market where many buyers and sellers interact, and no single buyer or seller can control the price.
• Production Possibilities Curve/Frontier
A graph that shows the maximum possible output combinations of two goods or services that can be produced with available resources and technology.
• Surplus
When the quantity of a good supplied exceeds the quantity demanded at the current price.
• Shortage
When the quantity of a good demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at the current price.