2023-11-02T03:07:17+03:00[Europe/Moscow] en true <p>Utility</p>, <p>Total Utility</p>, <p>Marginal Utility</p>, <p>Diminishing Marginal Utility</p>, <p>Consumer Equilibrium</p>, <p>Behavioral Economics</p>, <p>Loss Aversion</p>, <p>Fungible</p>, <p>ELASTICITY</p>, <p>What is a “Normal” Good and give a simple example?</p>, <p>What is an “Inferior” Good and give a simple example?</p>, <p>Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand</p>, <p>perfectly elastic</p>, <p>Perfectly INelastic</p>, <p>What does Price x Quantity sold give us?</p>, <p>Are Luxury Items Elastic or Inelastic and Why?</p>, <p>Are Necessities items Elastic or Inelastic and Why?</p>, <p>What are minimum wage laws and a "Living Wage"?</p>, <p>What are usury laws?</p>, <p>interest rates?</p>, <p>What is the “price” commonly called in the labor market?</p>, <p>How do economists define equilibrium in financial markets?</p>, <p>Are households demanders or suppliers in the <strong>Financial Markets</strong>? Why ?</p>, <p>Are firms demanders or suppliers in the <strong>Labor market</strong>?&nbsp; Why?</p>, <p>What is intertemporal decision making?</p>, <p>What is Financial Capital?</p> flashcards
ECO Chapers 4-6 quiz

ECO Chapers 4-6 quiz

  • Utility

    the satisfaction or value someone gains from obtaining goods and services.

  • Total Utility

    the satisfaction obtain from a consumer’s choices

  • Marginal Utility

    the additional utility that is provided by the additional unit that is consumed.

  • Diminishing Marginal Utility

    the pattern that every marginal unit of a good consumed provides less additions to the utility than the last unit. 

  • Consumer Equilibrium

    where the consumer gets the most satisfaction (highest number), when the price of goods is equal to the ratio of marginal utilities. 

  • Behavioral Economics

    a branch of economics that seeks to understand the behavior or thought process behind a consumer’s decision-making. As well as how money can mean different things to everyone depending on their situation. 

  • Loss Aversion

    is that losing money hurts more than gaining money. 

  • Fungible

    that different goods are capable of having different substitutions with each other and all have equal value.

  • ELASTICITY

    the measure of the responsiveness of one variable that then changes to another variable.

  • What is a “Normal” Good and give a simple example?

    is a good that increases in demand when a consumer’s purchase power increases. An example would be clothing or household appliances. 

  • What is an “Inferior” Good and give a simple example?

    is a good whose demand decreases when consumers increase. An example would be used cars or pizza.

  • Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand

    is when there are two goods and there’s a percentage change in one good that is demanded due to a percentage change in the price of the other good. 

  • perfectly elastic

    is an extreme example. It means that the quantity demanded will increase to infinity. “see infinite elasticity” An example would be luxury products such as jewelry or cars. The direction of the slope is horizontal.

  • Perfectly INelastic

    is an extreme case, necessities with no close substitutes will likely have high demand curves. An example would be life-saving prescription drugs. The direction of the slope is vertical

  • What does Price x Quantity sold give us?

    Total revenue

  • Are Luxury Items Elastic or Inelastic and Why?

    Luxury items are elastic because when a consumer’s income increases, demand increases. You also usually have other goods or services that can substitute these luxury items. 

  • Are Necessities items Elastic or Inelastic and Why?

    Inelastic because there are never really any substitutes for necessity items and so they’re highly demanded.

  • What are minimum wage laws and a "Living Wage"?

    Minimum wage laws are a price floor that makes it illegal for an employer to pay an employee less than what is required. Living wage is a concept, not a law. It’s a wage that a person who works 40 hours a week can live on. Those who use a living wage view the minimum wage as too low for their standard of living. 

  • What are usury laws?

    Usary laws are laws that input a limit on interest rates that usually lenders are able to charge. 

  • interest rates?

    are the prices that are given when you borrow from a bank or the financial market. For example, if you invest in a credit card you need to pay interest because you are borrowing money from the financial market. It is the rate of return.

  • What is the “price” commonly called in the labor market?

    The “price” is commonly called a wage or wages in the labor market. 

  • How do economists define equilibrium in financial markets?

    Economists define equilibrium as when both supply and demand balance each other or are equal in financial markets.

  • Are households demanders or suppliers in the Financial Markets? Why ?

    Households are demanders in the financial markets because they are always looking to purchase goods or services therefore creating a demand in the financial markets.

  • Are firms demanders or suppliers in the Labor market?  Why?

    Firms are demanders in the labor market because they’re always looking for workers and employees to do labor for their business and work for their company in order for them to be suppliers in the financial market.

  • What is intertemporal decision making?

    is when participants in the financial markets have to make decisions when spending their money. These are decisions that occur over time.

  • What is Financial Capital?

    Financial capital is someone’s savings.