Unit 1.1 - 1.3 Macro Vocab Quiz Notes
Word | Defination | Example |
---|---|---|
Microeconomics | study of small economic units, such as individuals, firms, and markets | Supply and demand in specific industries, production costs, labor markets |
Macroeconomics | Study of the large economy as a whole or economic aggregates | Economic growth, government spending, inflation, unemployment, international trade |
Positive statement | What is = Based on facts, Avoids value judgments | Government-provided healthcare increases public expenditures |
Normative Statement | What ought to be = Includes value Judgments | Women should earn the same salary as men. |
Economics | Study of how individuals and societies deal with Scarcity.(Social Science concerned with efficient use of scarce resources to achieve maximum satisfaction of economic wants.) | Macro & micro-economic |
Scarcity | unlimited wants but limited resources ( unable to have everything we desire) | Limited oil reserves |
Marginal Analysis | Marginal = additional making decisions based on increments (You will continue to do something as long as the marginal benefit is greater the marginal cost) | when you decide to go to the mall, you consider the additional benefit and additional cost (your opportunity cost) |
Trade- offs | ALL the alternatives that we give up when we make a choices | College; Trade-off = military, gap year, community college, Job |
Opportunity Cost | Most desirable alternative given up when you make a choice Next best thing | College; Making more money |
Utility | satisfaction | / |
Allocate | Distribute | / |
Price | Amount Buyer ( consumer) pays | At groceries what the person buying the oranges will pay |
Cost | Amount seller pays to produce a good | the manager pays to get the oranges to the store will pay |
Consumer goods | created for direct consumption | pizza, pasta, drinks |
Capital goods | created for indirect consumtion | oven, blender, knives |
Physical capital | Any human-made resources that is used to create other goods and service | tools, tractors, machienry |
Human capital | Any skill or knowledge gained by a worker through education and experience | communication skills, Creativity |
Productivity | A measure of efficiency that shows the number of outputs per unit of input | Bob= 10 pizzas in 1 hr stan = 5 pizzas in 1 hour Bob is more productive |
Production Possibiities Curve (PPC) | a model that shows alternative ways that an economy can use its scarce resources | Demonstrates scarcity, trade-offs, opportunity costs, and efficency |
Ineffecient/ unemployment | inside the curve | not using all resources emploies are not working on task |
Unattainable/Impossible | Outside the curve | Can’t have enough stuff to work with not enough resources |
Efficent | On the curve | Exact resources Enough resources to use |
Constant opportunity cost | Resources are easily adaptable for producing either good | In straight line (not common) |
Law of increasing opportunity costs | As you produce more of any good, the opportunity cost will increase | resources are not easily adaptable to producing both goods |
Absolute Advantage | The producer can produce the most output or requires the least amount of inputs (resources) | Papa Johns has absolute advantage in pizza because he can produce 100 and Ronald can only make 20 |
Comparative Advantage | The producer with the lowest opportunity cost | Ronald has a comparative advantage in burgers because he has a lowest Per unit Oppurtunity cost |
Output Question | The amount of input is same for all countries (time, workers or other resources) ONLY the OUTPUT of each country is different | using the same amount of workers the US. produces 10 planes, and China can produce 3 planes |
Input Question | The amount of output (Like cars, planes, or corn) are the same for both countries. ONLY the INPUT for each country is different | The US. takes 20 Workers to produce ONE plane. China takes 40 workers to produce 1 plane |
Terms of Trade | Both Countries can benefit from trade if they each have relatively lower opportunity costs. agreed on one conditions that would benefit both countries | trade 1 ton of wheat for 1.5 ton of sugar |
Word | Defination | Example |
---|---|---|
Microeconomics | study of small economic units, such as individuals, firms, and markets | Supply and demand in specific industries, production costs, labor markets |
Macroeconomics | Study of the large economy as a whole or economic aggregates | Economic growth, government spending, inflation, unemployment, international trade |
Positive statement | What is = Based on facts, Avoids value judgments | Government-provided healthcare increases public expenditures |
Normative Statement | What ought to be = Includes value Judgments | Women should earn the same salary as men. |
Economics | Study of how individuals and societies deal with Scarcity.(Social Science concerned with efficient use of scarce resources to achieve maximum satisfaction of economic wants.) | Macro & micro-economic |
Scarcity | unlimited wants but limited resources ( unable to have everything we desire) | Limited oil reserves |
Marginal Analysis | Marginal = additional making decisions based on increments (You will continue to do something as long as the marginal benefit is greater the marginal cost) | when you decide to go to the mall, you consider the additional benefit and additional cost (your opportunity cost) |
Trade- offs | ALL the alternatives that we give up when we make a choices | College; Trade-off = military, gap year, community college, Job |
Opportunity Cost | Most desirable alternative given up when you make a choice Next best thing | College; Making more money |
Utility | satisfaction | / |
Allocate | Distribute | / |
Price | Amount Buyer ( consumer) pays | At groceries what the person buying the oranges will pay |
Cost | Amount seller pays to produce a good | the manager pays to get the oranges to the store will pay |
Consumer goods | created for direct consumption | pizza, pasta, drinks |
Capital goods | created for indirect consumtion | oven, blender, knives |
Physical capital | Any human-made resources that is used to create other goods and service | tools, tractors, machienry |
Human capital | Any skill or knowledge gained by a worker through education and experience | communication skills, Creativity |
Productivity | A measure of efficiency that shows the number of outputs per unit of input | Bob= 10 pizzas in 1 hr stan = 5 pizzas in 1 hour Bob is more productive |
Production Possibiities Curve (PPC) | a model that shows alternative ways that an economy can use its scarce resources | Demonstrates scarcity, trade-offs, opportunity costs, and efficency |
Ineffecient/ unemployment | inside the curve | not using all resources emploies are not working on task |
Unattainable/Impossible | Outside the curve | Can’t have enough stuff to work with not enough resources |
Efficent | On the curve | Exact resources Enough resources to use |
Constant opportunity cost | Resources are easily adaptable for producing either good | In straight line (not common) |
Law of increasing opportunity costs | As you produce more of any good, the opportunity cost will increase | resources are not easily adaptable to producing both goods |
Absolute Advantage | The producer can produce the most output or requires the least amount of inputs (resources) | Papa Johns has absolute advantage in pizza because he can produce 100 and Ronald can only make 20 |
Comparative Advantage | The producer with the lowest opportunity cost | Ronald has a comparative advantage in burgers because he has a lowest Per unit Oppurtunity cost |
Output Question | The amount of input is same for all countries (time, workers or other resources) ONLY the OUTPUT of each country is different | using the same amount of workers the US. produces 10 planes, and China can produce 3 planes |
Input Question | The amount of output (Like cars, planes, or corn) are the same for both countries. ONLY the INPUT for each country is different | The US. takes 20 Workers to produce ONE plane. China takes 40 workers to produce 1 plane |
Terms of Trade | Both Countries can benefit from trade if they each have relatively lower opportunity costs. agreed on one conditions that would benefit both countries | trade 1 ton of wheat for 1.5 ton of sugar |