Basic Economic Concepts
Entrepreneur
A person who starts up and takes on the risk of a business
Economic Stability
A situation in which there is economic growth, rising national income, high employment, and steadiness in the general level of prices
Capital
Man made good used to produced other man made goods
Production Possibility Curve
Model Used by Economist to demonstrate scarcity, opportunity cost, trade-offs, and efficiency.
Economic Security
Provide for those who are chronically ill, disabled, laid off, aged, or otherwise unable to earn minimal levels of income
Factors of Production
Resources used to create goods and services
Economic Interdependence
The extent to which economic actions in one market or country affects the outcome in another market or county.
Economic Freedom
The freedom to own property, to make a profit, and to make choices about what to produce, buy, and sell
Scarcity
Unlimited Wants And Needs, But Limited Resources Used For Their Satisfacation.
The three basic economic questions
What to Produce?, How to Produce?, & For Whom to Produce?
trade-off
alternatives that must be given up when one is chosen over another
Economic Growth
an increase in the economy's ability to produce goods and services; reflected by an outward shift of the economy's production possibilities frontier
Opportunity Cost
cost of the next best alternative use of money, time, or resources when one choice is made rather than another
Mixed Economy
economic system that combines both private ownership and government ownership of the means of production
Traditional Economy
economic system that relies on habit, custom, or ritual to decide questions of production and consumption of goods and services
There is no such thing as a free lunch
everything has a cost, even if it is free. Think time, resources, etc.
Taxes
fees for the support of government required to be paid by people and businesses
Factor Market
market in which firms purchase the factors of production from households
Economic Efficiency
result of using resources that produce maximum amount of goods/services
Capitalism (Market) Economy
system in which individuals own the factors of production and make economic decisions through free interaction
Socialism (Command) Economy
system in which the government owns the factors of production and makes economic decisions
Economic Equity
the attempt to balance an economic policy so that everyone benefits fairly
Product Market
the market in which households purchase the goods and services that firms produce