1/25
Vocabulary flashcards focusing on market types, consumer activity, and economic regulations based on the SKRIPTE EKOF 2025/26 transcript.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
antitrust legislation
law intended to promote free competition in the market place by outlawing monopolies
price war
a period of intense competition among businesses in which each competitor tries to cut retail prices below those of the others
markup
a term used to indicate how much the price of a product is above the cost of producing and distributing the product
consumer durables
things that people buy that last a long time, like refrigerators or television
consumer boom
a period when consumers are spending a lot
consumer boycott
refusal by consumers to buy things from a country or company they disapprove of
consumer confidence
the feeling that people have about economic prospects
consumer spending
the amount consumers spend, often referred to when discussing the economy as a whole
consumer behaviour
the study of how, why, where and when people buy things
consumer backlash
the resistance of consumers to things or organizations that they disapprove of
money supply
amount of money which exists in the economy
supply price
price at which something is provided
the law of supply and demand
general rule that the amount of a product which is available is related to the needs of the possible customer
supplier
person or company which supplies or sells goods and services
to supply
to provide something which is needed
in short supply
not available in large enough quantities to meet the demand
legal monopoly (de jure monopoly)
a monopoly based on laws explicitly preventing competition
efficiency monopoly
a monopoly where a single firm is satisfying all consumer demand
natural monopoly
a monopoly where economies of scale are so large that a single firm can supply the entire market without exhausting them
coercive monopoly
firm that arises as the result of any sort of activity that violates the principle of a free market
pure monopoly
monopoly where only one firm provides a certain product or service in a certain country or area
monopsony
situation where there is only one single large buyer on the market
oligopoly
situation where several firms provide a certain product or service in a certain country or area
monopolistic competition
situation where many firms offer products or services that are similar, but not perfect substitutes
collusion
secret or illegal agreement between two or more firms to artificially set a price of a product or service
alienation
one of the disadvantages of division of labour that refers to the estrangement many workers feel from their work