Economics: Introduction & Property Rights
Rule of Law
A concept that those who govern are bound by the laws; no one is above the law.
Production Possibility Curve
A curve that shows the possible combinations of products that an economy can produce, given that its productive resources are fully employed and efficiently used.
Free Market
A market with few government restrictions on how a good or service can be produced or sold or on how a factor of production can be employed.
Efficiency
A measure of how well or how productively resources are used to achieve a goal.
Entrepreneur
A person who organizes, manages, and takes on the risks of a business.
Surplus
A situation in which quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded.
Anarchy
Absence of law or government; chaos, disorder.
Trade off
Alternative that must be given up when one choice is made rather than another.
Socialism
An economic and governmental system based on public ownership of the means of production and exchange.
Capitalism
An economic system based on private ownership of capital
Mixed economy
An economic system that combines private and state enterprises.
Mixed Economic Market
An economic system that has aspects of Free and Command Markets.
Command/Planned economy
An economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
Tangible
Capable of being touched
Opportunity cost
Cost of the next best alternative use of money, time, or resources when one choice is made rather than another
5th Amendment
Criminal Proceedings; Due Process; Eminent Domain; Double Jeopardy; Protection from Self incrimination
Market economy
Economic decisions are made by individuals or the open market.
Traditional economy
Economic system that relies on habit, custom, or ritual to decide questions of production and consumption of goods and services
Prosperity
Good fortune and financial success.
Factors of Production
Land, labor, capital and entrepreneurship; the four groups of resources that are used to make all goods and services
Scarcity
Limited quantities of resources to meet unlimited wants.
Incentive
Motives producers and consumers to act a certain way.
Squatters
People who just pick unoccupied land as their own without paying for it.
Eminent Domain
Power of a government to take private property for public use.
Due Process of Law
Procedures established by law and guaranteed by the Constitution.
Economics
Study of how people and societies use limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants; the management of scarcity and choice.
Property rights
The ability of an individual to own and exercise control over scarce resources.
Underutilization
Using fewer resources than an economy is capable of using.
Economic questions
What to produce?; How to produce?; How much to produce?; and For whom to produce? are example of ____ questions
Rule of Men
doctrine that an individual or government may stand above the law, and rule according to personal whim or choice. The doctrine reflects the belief that standards of justice, equality and impartiality are subjective, not universal. This is the opposite of the rule of law.