Midterm Flashcards
Invisible Hand
Adam Smith, c. 1750s, The “unseen” Direction of the market to which is most agreeable to the interest of the whole society.
Law of Accumulation
Adam Smith, c. 1750s, The idea that the accumulation of profit leads to greater investment in technologies such as machinery which leads to capital flow
Law of Population
Adam Smith, c. 1750s, An increase in employment will lead to an increase in birthrate which eventually leads to lower wages and a decline in birthrate
Division of Labor
Adam Smith c. 1750s, A greater efficiency in production by way of specialization, as opposed to an individual effort. Pin-Factory Example
Dialectical Materialism
Karl Marx, c. 1850s, The idea of inherent change in physical and material realities.
Base
Karl Marx c. 1850s The reality that humans must organize to clothe, feed and house themselves
Superstructure
Karl Marx. c. 1850s The system of laws, religion, and philosophy which reflect the foundation of society.
Class
Karl Marx c. 1850s groups of individuals who stand in relation to forms of production. Can rise up or fall.
Unearned Increment
Karl Marx c. 1850s The process of an employer profiting off the the unpaid labor of a worker. Laborer works for 10 hours but only gets pair for 6 hours
Labor theory of Value
Karl Marx c. 1850s, The identification of a kind of social system in which labor-power becomes a commodity
Paradox of Thrift
John Maynard Keynes c. 1920s The idea that the economy stagnates when people save their money instead of investing it.
Spiral of Contraction
John Maynard Keynes c. 1920s When savings do not become invested by expanding business firms, incomes will decline. An elevator could move up or down or stand still.
Wants v. Demands
John Maynard Keynes c. 1920s Wants are as large as dreams, demands are small like a pocketbook
Priming the Pump
John Maynard Keynes c. 1920s The act of government spending to serve as a stimulus to bolster the nation’s buying power.
Entrepreneurs
Joseph Schumpter c. 1940s The innovator who is responsible for combining the factors of production in new ways.