A | B |
scarcity | Not enough for everyone to have due to lack of resources. |
price | Value assigned according to supply and demand. |
Law of Supply | Idea that suppliers will supply more of a product as the price increases |
Law of Demand | Idea that buyers will want more of a product as the price decreases. |
market price | point where the supply curve and demand curve meet, creating the value of a product. |
shortage | When demand is temporarily greater than supply - price usually increases. |
surplus | When supply is greater than demand - price usually decreases. |
diminishing utility | Idea that a person's demand for a product will reach a maximum no matter the price. |
diminishing return | idea that a supplier will reach a point when increased production will not increase profits. |
productivity | Amount of work produced in a given time. |
comparative advantage | When one nation produces a product better or cheaper. |
division of labor | Splitting jobs into individual tasks in order to increase productivity. |
economies of scale | idea that a larger business can operate more efficiently because of its bulk. |
opportunity cost | What you lose when you make a choice of one thing over the other. |
trade off | The choice you make of one thing over the other. |
factors of production | Land, labor, resources and management. |
capital | Money used to start or run a business. |
capital goods | Machines or tools used to produce other goods. |
traditional economy | Economy where almost everything is made by hand. |
command economy | System where government is in control of all factors of production. |
market economy | Economic situation where individuals make most of the choices. (capitalism) |
mixed economy | Economic situation where individuals and government share the power over economic decisions with individuals owning smaller businesses and government owning the largest. |
laissez faire economics | Economic system where the government takes a hands-off policy as proposed by Adam Smith. |
capitalism | Another name for the market economy where individuals risk their capital for a chance to gain profit. |