Chapter 1 Economics
Utility
Ability or capacity of a good or service to be useful and useful and give satisfaction to someone
Trade-offs
Alternatives that must be given when one is chosen rather than the other.
Paradox of Value
Apparent contradiction between the high value of non essentials and low value of essentials.
Division of Labor
Assignment of tasks so that each worker performed by different workers; same as specialization
Specialization
Assignment of tasks so that each worker performs fewer functions more frequently; same as division of labor.
Need
Basic requirement for survival; includes food clothing and/or shelter.
Opportunity Cost
Cost of the next best alternative use of money,time, or resources when one choice is made rather than the other.
Productivity
Degree to which productive resources used efficiently; normally refers to labor, but can apply to all factors of production.
Production Possibilities Frontier
Diagram representing maximum combinations of goods and for services an economy can produce when all productive resources are fully employed.
Economic Interdependence
Economic activities in one part of the country or world affect what happens elsewhere.
Scarcity
Fundamental economic problem facing all societies that results from a combination of scarce resources and people's virtually unlimited wants.
Gross Domestic Production
GDP, after adjustments for inflation; also called GDP in constant (chained) dollars; same as real GDP.
Consumer Good
Good intended for final use by consumers rather than businesses.
Economic Product
Good or service that is useful, relatively scarce, and transferable to others.
Free-enterprise Economy
Market economy in which privately owned businesses have the freedom to operate for a profit with limited government intervention; same as private enterprise economy.
Product Market
Market where goods and services are offered for sale.
Factor Market
Market where productive resources are bought and sold.
Land
Natural resources or "gifts of nature" not created by human effort; one of four of production
Labor
People with all their abilities and efforts; one of four factors production, does not include the entrepreneur.
Production
Process of creating goods and services with the combined use of land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurship.
Factors of Production
Productive resources that make up the four categories of land, categories of land, capital, labor, and entrepreneurship.
Standard of Living
Quality of life based on ownership of necessities are luxuries that make life easier.
Entreprenuer
Risk-taking individual in search of profits; one of four factors of production.
Economics
Social science dealing with the study of how people satisfy seemingly unlimited and competing wants and with the careful use of scarce resources.
Human Capital
Sum of people's skills, abilities, health, and motivation,
Wealth
Sum of tangible economic goods that are scarce, useful, and transferable from one to another; excludes services.
Economic Growth
Sustained period during which a nation's total output of goods and services increases.
Good
Tangible economic product that is useful, transferable to others; used to satisfy wants and needs
Capital Good
Tool, equipment, or other manufactured good used to produce other goods and services, a factor of production.
Capital
Tools, equipment, and factories used in the production of goods and services; one of four factors of production.
Want
Way of expressing or communicating a need; a broader classifcation than needs.
Cost Benefit Analysis
Why of thinking that compares the cost of an action to its benefits.
Value
Worth of a good or service as determined by the market.