FBS Economics Ch 1 & 2 Review for Test | Quizlet

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53 Terms

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Economics

study of how and why people, businesses, and government make the choices they do

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reasons why economics is a science

-Science always begins with observations.

-Scientists use their observation as a basis to predict future cause and effect relationships.

-Many scientists go one step farther by attempting to control future events by altering important variables

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insatiability

unlimited wants

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scarcity

everything is finite or limited in quantity

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Greek etymology of the word Economics

"oikos" house + "nomos" management of

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economic cost

the value people place on a good or service

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goods

tangible things with measurable life spans

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services

intangible products

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economic goods and services

things that bear positive economic costs (a price tag higher than zero)

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nuisance goods

items that bear negative economic costs

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recycling

turning nuisance goods into economic goods

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free goods and services

goods and services with price tags of zero

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Diamond-Water Paradox

intrinsically explains why water, which is essential to life, is inexpensive while diamonds, which do not sustain life, are expensive; the value of water is subjective to the consumer's situation

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Carl Menger

the founder of the Austrian school of economics - Diamond/ Water Paradox

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subjective value

the worth of a good or service as determined by its usefulness to the buyer

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utility

usefulness

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opportunity benefit

the satisfaction a person receives from a choice

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opportunity cost

regret one feels for not choosing another option

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util

economically, an imaginary unit of satisfaction

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microeconomics

the study of the economic behavior and decision making of small units, such as individuals, families, and businesses

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macroeconomics

large scale economic choices and issues

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positive economics

observing economic choices and predicting economics events

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normative economics

The part of economics involving value judgments about what the economy should be like; focused on which economic goals and policies should be implemented; policy economics.

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budget

an estimate of income and expenditure for a set period of time.

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benefits of budgeting

requires managers to plan, coordinate and communicate; provides benchmark for evaluating actual performance; budgeting begins months before beginning of period

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impulse buying

buying decision made by customers on the spot when they see the merchandise

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financial plan

set of goals for spending, saving, and investing the money you receive.

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fixed expenses

costs that do not change each month

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variable expenses

expenses that change from month to month

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Tabular Model / Schedule

a model that shows simple relationships between pairs of variables - provides information limited to only a few observations

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schedule

a table or chart explaining the relationships between pairs of variables; also called a tabular model

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line graph

a graph formed by the plotting of data involving two variables and the connecting of the resulting points to form a line of infinite information from the data

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production possibilities curve

A curve showing the different combinations of two goods or services that can be produced in a full-employment, full-production economy where the available supplies of resources and technology are fixed.

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circular flow model

a simplified representation of how the economy's transactions work together; a model depicting the flow of economic goods and services between households, business firms, the government and financial markets.

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consumption expenditure

spending by households on goods and services such as food, clothing, and entertainment

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factors of production

land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship

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land

all natural resources used to produce goods and services

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labor

Human effort directed toward producing goods and services

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real capital

the tools business firms use to produce goods and services

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Entrepreneurship

the process of bringing together the three factors of production - natural resources, labor and capital - the person who does this is an entrepreneur.

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factor costs

the payments business firms make in exchange for the four factors of production; rent, wages, interest, profit

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rent

payment to resource owners for the use of their natural resources

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wages

factor costs involving all payments for labor used to produce goods or services

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interest

A sum paid or charged for the use of money or for borrowing money

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profit

factor costs involving the rewards the entrepreneurs receive for successful risk taking

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transfer payments

payments by the government to households for which the government does not receive a new good or service in return

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budget deficit

the difference between tax revenue and government spending when government spending exceeds tax revenue

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budget surplus

the difference between tax revenue and government spending when tax revenue exceeds government spending

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financial markets

the banking, stock, and bond markets, which channel private savings and foreign lending into investment spending, government borrowing, and foreign borrowing. financial institutions through which savers can directly provide funds to borrowers

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Dissaving

occurs when people withdraw funds from their previously accumulated savings

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crowding out

The situation that occurs when government borrowing reduces the financial capital available to business firms

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The four major entities in the circular flow model

Households, business firms, the government, and the financial market

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