Chapter 2 Key Terms Flashcards
Allocative Efficiency
When the mix of goods produced represents the mix that society most desires.
Budget Constraint
All possible consumption combination of goods that someone can afford, given the prices of goods, when all income is spent; the boundary of the opportunity set.
Comparative Advantage
When a country can produce a good at a lower cost in terms of other goods; or, when a country has a lower opportunity cost of production.
Invisible Hand
Adam Smith’s concept that individuals’ self-interested behavior can lead to positive social outcomes.
Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility
As we consume more of a good or service, the utility we get from additional units of the good or service tend to become smaller than what we received from earlier units.
Law of Diminishing Returns
As we add additional increments of resources to producing a good or service, the marginal benefit from those additional increments will decline.
Marginal Analysis
Examination of decisions on the margin, meaning a little more or a little less from the status quo.
Normative Statement
Statement which describes how the world should be.
Opportunity Cost
Measures cost by what we give up/forfeit in exchange; opportunity cost measures the value of the forgone alternative.
Opportunity Set
All possible combinations of consumption that someone can afford given the prices of goods and the individual’s income.
Positive Statement
Statement which describes the world as it is.
Production possibilities Frontier (PPF)
A diagram that shows the productively efficient combinations of two products that an economy can produce given the resources it has available.
Productive Efficiency
When it is impossible to produce more of one good (or service) without decreasing the quantity produced of another good (or service).
Sunk Costs
Costs that we make in the past that we cannot recover.
Utility
Satisfaction, usefulness, or value one obtains from consuming goods and services.