MICROECON CH. 2
the concept of demand can be summarized by a schedule or curve showing the quantity of a product that would be
consumed at various possible prices(purchased or consumed represents the demand curve described)
what is produced is ultimately determined by
consumers because if the goods offered are not what consumers want, consumers will not buy them
"each day, central planners in the old Soviet Union were tasked with setting 27 million prices-correctly"
coordination problem
"if you compare a list of today's most powerful and profitable companies with a similar list from 30 years ago, you will see lots of new entries"
creative destruction
a shortage results from an excess of quantity (supplied/demanded)
demanded
with a price ceiling, quantity (supplied/demanded) will exceed quantity (supplied/demanded), resulting in a persistent shortage of product
demanded; supplied
BARTER requires that you
find a person who has what you want and a person who needs what you have to offer
the freedom of firms to obtain economic resources, decide what products to produce with those resources, and sell those products in market of their choice
freedom of enterprise
a change in quantity demanded is caused by an increase or decrease in the (price/supply) of the product under consideration and nothing else
price
the use of money
provides a common value that makes buying and selling transactions simpler than would be the case with barter
in the circular flow model there is a flow of
real goods and services and a slow of money
an increase in (supply/demand) while holding (supply/demand) constant results in a decrease in equilibrium price but an increase in equilibrium quantity
supply; demand
in a command economy scarce goods are allocated by
a government appointed planning board based on the board's long term priorities
in the circular flow model
resource markets provide for the exchange of labor and product markets provide for the exchange of goods and services
what each individual or firm believes is best for itself and seeks to obtain
self interest
market (supply/demand) is a schedule or curve showing the various amounts of a product that PRODUCERS are willing and able to make available for sale at each possible price during a specific period
supply
some large hardware stores such as Home Depot boast of carrying as many as 20,000 different products in each store. this volume of goods is the result of
the choice of consumers regarding what to purchase to satisfy their wants and the choice of producers regarding what to produce to maximize profits
self interest helps achieve society's economic goals because
as consumers and producers exercise their freedom to act in their own self interest markets will produce the desired goods at the lowest possible cost
an economic unit, meaning a household, firm or government, should continue to engage in an activity as long as the marginal (cost/benefit) exceeds the marginal (cost/benefit)
benefit; cost
a woman who wants to start a flower shop finds she cannot do so unless the central government has already decided to allow a flower shop in her area
command system
the presence in a market of independent buyers and sellers who compete with one another and who are free to enter and exit the market as they see fit
competition
in the circular flow model
BUSINESSES sell goods and buy labor; HOUSEHOLDS buy goods and sell labor
T/F: Households sell finished products to businesses
FALSE
T/F: Money must be issued by a government for people to accept it
FALSE
T/F: "the market system is a profit and loss system"
TRUE; because producers decisions are motivated by the attempt to earn profits
T/F: "competition is the disciplinarian of the market economy"
TRUE; because when producers face competition they are driven to provide goods and services at the lowest possible cost
the freedom of resource owners to dispose of their resources as they think best, of workers to enter any line of work for which they are qualifies; and of consumers to spend their incomes in whatever way they feel is most appropriate
freedom of choice
the use of capital in the production process
improves efficiency, increases output, and provides for growth
in market economies, firms rarely worry about the availability of inputs to produce their products, whereas in command economies input availability is a constant concern because
in market economies, buyers of inputs know that sellers want to earn profits
"managers in the old Soviet Union often sacrificed product quality and variety because they were being awarded bonuses for quantitive, not qualitive, targets"
incentive problem
there is a wide variety of desired goods and services in a market system because
individual wants are diverse
"it's not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest"
invisible hand
the emergence of the MP3(iPod) technology is an example of "creative destruction" because
it has replaced compact discs as a technology used for the storage and transfer of music
the only taxes levied by the government are to pay for national defense, law enforcement, and a legal system designed to enforce contracts between private citizens
laissez faire system
if the cost of production rise, the producer has an incentive to produce (more/less) output
less
the added cost of producing one more unit of output
marginal cost
an institution that brings buyers and sellers together
market
"invisible hand"
market prices provide info to consumers regarding products they wish to purchase and to producers regarding products they wish to produce
in a market system scarce goods are allocated through the operation of
market prices that are determined by consumers and producers acting in their own self interest
shops stock and sell the goods customers want but the government levies a sales tax on each transaction to fund elementary schools, public libraries, and welfare programs
market system
economic transactions willingly undertaken by both the buyer and the seller because each feels that the transaction will make him/her better off
mutually agreeable
price and quantity supplied have a (positive/negative) relationship
positive
the right of private persons and firms to obtain, control, employ, dispose of , and bequeath land, capital, and other property
private property
millions of economic resources tend to get arranged logically and productively rather than haphazardly and unproductively because
private property owners are motivated to protect and maximize the benefits from their property
the market system depends on private property ownership and the protection of private property rights to
provide an incentive to maintain property and allow for the orderly transfer of property ownership
"division of labor" means that workers
specialize in tasks that take advantage of their individual abilities and skills
consider the statement: "we want money only to part with it." when ppl express a desire to "have money," they really want
the goods and services that money can buy
when an economy relies on specialization
trade enables individuals to obtain the goods in which they don't have a specialization