Microeconomics Exam 1
production possibilities frontier assumptions
1. only 2 goods are produced 2. resources are fixed 3. no changes in technology 4. no economic growth
change in quantity demanded vs change in demand
A change in demand is when the whole curve shifts and a change in quantity demanded is movement along the demand curve due to a change in price. Price Doesn't shift the curve.
change in quantity supplied vs change in supply
A change in quantity supplied reflects a move along a supply curve as price changes
shortage
A situation in which quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied
surplus
A situation in which quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded
macroeconomics
The study of the economy as a whole (global economics)
straight vs bowed ppf
When the PPC is a straight line, opportunity costs are the same no matter how far you move along the curve. When the PPC is concave (bowed out), opportunity costs increase as you move along the curve. When the PPC is convex (bowed in), opportunity costs are decreasing.
law of demand
as price increases, quantity demanded decreases and visa versa
marginal decision making
comparing MB to MC
circular flow diagram participants
households, factor markets, firms, goods and services markets
circular flow diagram
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-circular-flow-model-that-depicts-the-interrelationship-between-households-and_fig4_241767210
adjustment to equilibrium
increase price for shortage decrease price for shortage
The distinguishing feature of economic capital (as opposed to financial capital, like money) is that it
is productive
What are the factors of production?
land, economic capital, labor, entrepreneurship
Scarcity
means that there are never enough resources to satisfy all human wants
what factors determine demand
price, income, prices of related goods, tastes and preferences, expectations, number of buyers
what factors determine supply
price, input prices, technology, expectations, taxes and subsidies, number of sellers
Society gains advantages through trade because of its ability to
specialize resources to the uses where opportunity cost is minimized.
absolute advantage
the ability of an individual, a firm, or a country to produce more of a good or service than competitors, using the same amount of resources
comparative advantage
the ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer
what is supply
the amount of a good or service produced
production possibilities frontier
the line on a production possibilities graph that shows the maximum possible output
microeconomics
the study of individuals and firms
In the case of an negative relationship between two variables, all else remaining constant
the value of the two variables will move in opposite directions from each other.
Economists would say that the decisions we make are influenced by
trade offs
opportunity cost
what you give up in order to get something
what is the equilibrium
where the supply and demand curves intersect
When creating a graph for your economics course, which axis is most commonly used to represent price (p)?
y axis