Microeconomics, CHAPTER 1
Markets
Bring buyers and sellers together to exchange goods and services
Trade-off
Giving up one thing for another
circular flow diagram
Shows how goods, services, and resources flow through the economy
Economics
The study of how individuals and societies allocate their limited resources to satisfy their practically unlimited wants
negative incentive
discourage action by providing undesirable consequences or punishments
Direct Incentives
easy to recognize
positive incentive
encourage action by offering rewards or payments
Incentives
factors that motivate a person to act or exert effort
Indirect Incentives
incentives that indirectly cause an action
Five Foundations of Economics
incentives, trade-offs, opportunity cost, marginal thinking, trade creates value
Scarcity
refers to the limited nature of society's resources, given society's unlimited wants and needs
comparative advantage
refers to the situation where an individual, business, or country can produce at a lower opportunity cost than a competitor can
economic thinking
requires a purposeful evaluation of the available opportunities to make the best decision possible
marginal thinking
requires decision-makers to evaluate whether the benefit of one more unit of something is greater than its cost
marginal cost
the cost of producing one more unit of a good
marginal benefit
the extra benefit of adding one unit
opportunity cost
the highest-valued alternative that must be sacrificed to get something else
Microeconomics
the study of the individual units that make up the economy
Macroeconomics
the study of the overall aspects and workings of an economy
Trade
the voluntary exchange of goods and services between two or more parties
indirect incentives create
unintended consequences