Principles of Economics 3e - Chapters 1, 2, and 3 Review

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Comprehensive vocabulary flashcards covering basic economic concepts, systems, individual and social choice models, and internal market dynamics like supply, demand, and efficiency.

Last updated 8:03 PM on 6/13/26
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64 Terms

1
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Economics

The study of how humans make decisions in the face of scarcity, involving individual, family, business, or societal decisions.

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Scarcity

A condition where human wants for goods, services, and resources exceed what is available.

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FRED website

A resource including data on nearly 400,000400,000 domestic and international economic and social variables over time.

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Adam Smith

The author of the 17761776 book titled The Wealth of Nations, which introduced the idea of dividing labor into discrete tasks.

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Division of labor

The way in which different workers divide required tasks to produce a good or service.

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Specialization

When workers or firms focus on particular tasks for which they are well-suited within the overall production process.

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Economies of scale

An economic concept meaning that for many goods, as the level of production increases, the average cost of producing each individual unit declines.

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Microeconomics

The branch of economics that focuses on the actions of individual agents within the economy, such as households, workers, and businesses.

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Macroeconomics

The branch of economics that focuses on broad issues such as growth, unemployment, inflation, and trade balance.

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Monetary policy

Policy determined by a nation’s central bank that involves altering the level of interest rates, the availability of credit, and the extent of borrowing.

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Fiscal policy

Economic policies determined by a nation’s legislative body involving government spending and taxes.

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John Maynard Keynes

One of the most influential economists in modern times who believed that economics teaches you how to think, not what to think.

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Theory

A simplified representation of how two or more variables interact with each other; used interchangeably with the term model in this course.

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Circular flow diagram

A diagram showing how households and firms interact in the goods and services market and in the labor market.

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Traditional economy

The oldest economic system, typically agricultural, where occupations stay in the family and what is produced is what is consumed.

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Command economy

An economy where economic decisions are passed down from government authority and the government owns the resources.

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Market economy

An economy where economic decisions are decentralized, private individuals own resources, and businesses supply goods and services based on demand.

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Market

An interaction between potential buyers and sellers representing a combination of demand and supply.

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Private enterprise

A system where private individuals or groups of private individuals own and operate the means of production.

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Underground economies

Also known as black markets, these are markets where buyers and sellers make transactions without government approval.

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Globalization

The trend in which buying and selling in markets have increasingly crossed national borders.

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Exports

The goods and services that a nation produces domestically and sells abroad.

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Imports

The goods and services that are produced abroad and then sold domestically.

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Gross domestic product (GDP)

A measure of the size of total production in an economy.

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Budget constraint

All possible combinations of goods someone can afford when all income is spent; it is the boundary of the opportunity set.

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Opportunity set

All possible combinations of consumption that someone can afford given the prices of goods and the individual’s income.

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Opportunity cost

The value of the next best alternative; it indicates what people must give up to obtain what they desire.

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Marginal analysis

The process of examining the benefits and costs of choosing a little more or a little less of a good.

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Utility

The satisfaction, usefulness, or value one obtains from consuming goods and services.

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Law of diminishing marginal utility

As a person consumes more of a good, the extra satisfaction from each additional unit decreases.

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Sunk costs

Costs that were incurred in the past and cannot be recovered; the lesson is to ignore them when making future decisions.

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Production possibilities frontier (PPF)

A diagram showing the productively efficient combinations of two products an economy can produce given resources.

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Law of diminishing returns

As more resources are added to production, the additional benefit from each extra resource eventually declines.

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Productive efficiency

When it is impossible to produce more of one good without decreasing the quantity produced of another good.

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Allocative efficiency

When the mix of goods produced represents the mix that society most desires.

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Comparative advantage

When a country can produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another country.

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Positive statements

Factual descriptions of the world as it is.

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Normative statements

Subjective statements describing how the world should be; based on opinions.

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Invisible hand

Adam Smith's concept that individuals' self-interested behavior can lead to positive social outcomes.

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Demand

The amount of a good or service consumers are willing and able to purchase at each price.

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Quantity demanded

The total number of units of a good or service consumers are willing to purchase at a given price.

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Law of demand

Holding all else equal, when price rises, quantity demanded falls; when price falls, quantity demanded rises.

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Demand schedule

A table showing a range of prices for a certain good and the quantity demanded at each price.

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Demand curve

A graphic representation of the relationship between price on the vertical axis and quantity demanded on the horizontal axis.

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Supply

The amount of some good or service a producer is willing to supply at each price.

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Quantity supplied

The total number of units of a good or service producers are willing to sell at a given price.

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Law of supply

Holding all else equal, when price rises, quantity supplied rises; when price falls, quantity supplied falls.

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Supply schedule

A table showing the quantity supplied at a range of different prices.

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Equilibrium

The combination of price and quantity where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied and there is no pressure from surpluses or shortages.

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Equilibrium price

The specific price where quantity demanded is equal to quantity supplied.

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Surplus

Also called excess supply; the condition where quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded at the existing price.

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Shortage

Also called excess demand; the condition where quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied at the existing price.

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Ceteris paribus

A Latin phrase meaning "other things being equal," identifying the assumption that all external factors are held constant.

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Normal good

A product whose demand rises when income rises, and falls when income falls.

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Inferior good

A good whose demand falls when income rises, and whose demand rises when income falls.

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Substitute

A good or service that can be used in place of another good or service.

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Complements

Goods or services often used together so that consumption of one tends to enhance consumption of the other.

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Price controls

Laws enacted by governments to regulate prices, including ceilings and floors.

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Price ceiling

A legal maximum price that one pays for a good or service, keeping the price from rising above a certain level.

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Price floor

A legal minimum price; it keeps a price from falling below a certain level.

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Consumer surplus

The difference between what individuals were willing to pay and the amount they actually paid; the area above the market price and below the demand curve.

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Producer surplus

The price the producer actually received minus the price they would have been willing to accept; the area between market price and the supply curve below equilibrium.

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Social surplus

The sum of consumer surplus and producer surplus; also known as economic surplus or total surplus.

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Deadweight loss

The loss in social surplus that occurs when a market produces an inefficient quantity.