Econ Chp 1 (combo) – Flashcards

question
normative economics
answer
An approach to economics that analyzes outcomes of economic behavior, evaluates them as good or bad, and may prescribe courses of action. Also called policy economics.
question
example of positive economics
answer
"A poor coffee harvest will raise coffee prices and people will drink more tea" "The moon is made of green cheese."
question
example of normative economics
answer
"We should redistribute wealth from the rich to the poor"
question
descriptive economics
answer
The compilation of data that describe phenomena and facts.
question
economic theory
answer
A statement or set of related statements about cause and effect, action and reaction.
question
model
answer
A formal statement of a theory, usually a mathematical statement of a presumed relationship between two or more variables.
question
variable
answer
A measure that can change from time to time or from observation to observation.
question
Ockham's razor
answer
The principle that irrelevant detail should be cut away.
question
Which of the following statements is correct? a. The aggregate price level is a subject of concern in microeconomics. b. A study of employment in the semiconductor industry would be categorized as a microeconomic study. c. The production and growth of output in the domestic economy is a microeconomic concern. d. Microeconomics is an in-depth study of aggregate economic behavior. e. Microeconomics includes the study of fiscal and monetary policies, or government policies designed to steer the economy in the right direction.
answer
b.
question
Behavioral economics
answer
uses psychological theories relating to emotions and social context to help understand economic decision making and policy. Much of the work in behavioral economics focuses on the biases that individuals have that affects the decisions they make.
question
Comparative economic systems
answer
examines the ways alternative economic systems function. What are the advantages and disadvantages of different systems?
question
Economic development
answer
focuses on the problems of low-income countries. What can be done to promote development in these nations? Important concerns of development for economists include population growth and control, provision for basic needs, and strategies for international trade.
question
Economic history
answer
traces the development of the modern economy. What economic and political events and scientific advances caused the Industrial Revolution? What explains the tremendous growth and progress of post-World War II Japan? What caused the Great Depression of the 1930s?
question
Environmental economics
answer
studies the potential failure of the market system to account fully for the impacts of production and consumption on the environment and on natural resource depletion. Have alternative public policies and new economic institutions been effective in correcting these potential failures?
question
Finance
answer
examines the ways in which households and firms actually pay for, or finance, their purchases. It involves the study of capital markets (including the stock and bond markets), futures and options, capital budgeting, and asset valuation.
question
Health economics
answer
analyzes the health care system and its players: government, insurers, health care providers, and patients. It provides insight into the demand for medical care, health insurance markets, cost-controlling insurance plans (HMOs, PPOs, IPAs), government health care programs (Medicare and Medicaid), variations in medical practice, medical malpractice, competition versus regulation, and national health care reform.
question
The history of economic thought
answer
which is grounded in philosophy, studies the development of economic ideas and theories over time, from Adam Smith in the eighteenth century to the works of economists such as Thomas Malthus, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes. Because economic theory is constantly developing and changing, studying the history of ideas helps give meaning to modern theory and puts it in perspective.
question
Industrial organization
answer
looks carefully at the structure and performance of industries and firms within an economy. How do businesses compete? Who gains and who loses?
question
International economics
answer
studies trade flows among countries and international financial institutions. What are the advantages and disadvantages for a country that allows its citizens to buy and sell freely in world markets? Why is the dollar strong or weak?
question
Labor economics
answer
deals with the factors that determine wage rates, employment, and unemployment. How do people decide whether to work, how much to work, and at what kind of job? How have the roles of unions and management changed in recent years?
question
Law and economics
answer
analyzes the economic function of legal rules and institutions. How does the law change the behavior of individuals and businesses? Do different liability rules make accidents and injuries more or less likely? What are the economic costs of crime?
question
Public economics
answer
examines the role of government in the economy. What are the economic functions of government, and what should they be? How should the government finance the services that it provides? What kinds of government programs should confront the problems of poverty, unemployment, and pollution? What problems does government involvement create?
question
Urban and regional economics
answer
studies the spatial arrangement of economic activity. Why do we have cities? Why are manufacturing firms locating farther and farther from the center of urban areas?
question
If you apply your own values to judge economic decisions, which category of economics would you be applying?
answer
normative economics
question
ceteris paribus, or all else equal
answer
A device used to analyze the relationship between two variables while the values of other variables are held unchanged.
question
How is ceteris paribus useful?
answer
is one part of the process of abstraction. In formulating economic theory, the concept helps us simplify reality to focus on the relationships that interest us.
question
Economic models are:
answer
Simplifications of reality that focus only on key relationships and ignore less relevant details.
question
Methods of expressing the quantitative relationship between two variables:
answer
graphing and equations
question
post hoc, ergo propter hoc
answer
Literally, "after this (in time), therefore because of this." A common error made in thinking about causation: If Event A happens before Event B, it is not necessarily true that A caused B.
question
fallacy of composition
answer
The erroneous belief that what is true for a part is necessarily true for the whole.
question
empirical economics
answer
The collection and use of data to test economic theories.
question
Criteria for judging economic outcomes:
answer
1. Efficiency 2. Equity 3. Growth 4. Stability
question
efficiency
answer
In economics, allocative efficiency. An efficient economy is one that produces what people want at the least possible cost.
question
equity
answer
Fairness.
question
economic growth
answer
An increase in the total output of an economy.
question
stability
answer
A condition in which national output is growing steadily, with low inflation and full employment of resources.
question
Which of the following criteria for judging economic outcomes refers to producing what people want at the least possible cost?
answer
efficiency
question
graph
answer
is a two-dimensional representation of a set of numbers, or data.
question
time series graph
answer
shows how a single measure or variable changes over time.
question
Cartesian Coordinate System
answer
constructed by drawing two perpendicular lines: a vertical axis (the Y-axis) and a horizontal axis (the X-axis). Each axis is a measuring scale.
question
Economics
answer
The study of how individuals and societies choose to use the scarce resources that nature and previous generations have provided.
question
Opportunity Cost, Marginalism, Efficient Market
answer
Three fundamental concepts of economics.
question
Opportunity Cost
answer
The best alternative that we forgo, or give up, when we make a choice or a decision.
question
Marginalism
answer
The process of analyzing the additional or incremental costs or benefits arising from a choice or decision.
question
Sunk costs
answer
Costs that cannot be avoided because they have already been incurred.
question
Efficient Market
answer
A market in which profit opportunities are eliminated almost instantaneously.
question
Industrial Revolution
answer
The period in England during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in which new manufacturing technologies and improved transportation gave rise to the modern factory system and a massive movement of the population from the countryside to the cities.
question
Microeconomics
answer
The branch of economics that examines the functioning of individual industries and the behavior of individual decision-making units—that is, firms and households.
question
Macroeconomics
answer
The branch of economics that examines the economic behavior of aggregates—income, employment, output, and so on—on a national scale.
question
Behavioral Economics
answer
uses psychological theories relating to emotions and social context to help understand economic decision making and policy. Much of the work in behavioral economics focuses on the biases that individuals have that affects the decisions they make.
question
Comparative Economic Systems
answer
examines the ways alternative economic systems function. What are the advantages and disadvantages of different systems?
question
Econometrics
answer
applies statistical techniques and data to economic problems in an effort to test hypotheses and theories.
question
Economic Development
answer
focuses on the problems of low-income countries. What can be done to promote development in these nations? Important concerns of development for economists include population growth and control, provision for basic needs, and strategies for international trade.
question
Environmental Economics
answer
studies the potential failure of the market system to account fully for the impacts of production and consumption on the environment and on natural resource depletion
question
Health Economics
answer
analyzes the health care system and its players: government, insurers, health care providers, and patients. It provides insight into the demand for medical care, health insurance markets, cost-controlling insurance plans (HMOs, PPOs, IPAs), government health care programs (Medicare and Medicaid), variations in medical practice, medical malpractice, competition versus regulation, and national health care reform.
question
Positive Economics
answer
An approach to economics that seeks to understand behavior and the operation of systems without making judgments. It describes what exists and how it works.
question
Normative Economics
answer
An approach to economics that analyzes outcomes of economic behavior, evaluates them as good or bad, and may prescribe courses of action. Also called policy economics.
question
Descriptive Economics
answer
The compilation of data that describe phenomena and facts.
question
Economic Theory
answer
A statement or set of related statements about cause and effect, action and reaction.
question
Model
answer
A formal statement of a theory, usually a mathematical statement of a presumed relationship between two or more variables.
question
Variable
answer
A measure that can change from time to time or from observation to observation.
question
Ockham's Razor
answer
The principle that irrelevant detail should be cut away.
question
Ceteris Paribus
answer
A device used to analyze the relationship between two variables while the values of other variables are held unchanged.
question
Ceteris Paribus
answer
All Else Equal
question
Fallacy of Composition
answer
The erroneous belief that what is true for a part is necessarily true for the whole.
question
Post Hoc, Ergo propter hoc
answer
Literally, "after this (in time), therefore because of this." A common error made in thinking about causation: If Event A happens before Event B, it is not necessarily true that A caused B.
question
Empirical Economics
answer
The collection and use of data to test economic theories.
question
Efficiency
answer
In economics, allocative efficiency. An efficient economy is one that produces what people want at the least possible cost.
question
Equity
answer
Fairness
question
Economic Growth
answer
An increase in the total output of an economy.
question
Stability
answer
A condition in which national output is growing steadily, with low inflation and full employment of resources.
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question
normative economics
answer
An approach to economics that analyzes outcomes of economic behavior, evaluates them as good or bad, and may prescribe courses of action. Also called policy economics.
question
example of positive economics
answer
"A poor coffee harvest will raise coffee prices and people will drink more tea" "The moon is made of green cheese."
question
example of normative economics
answer
"We should redistribute wealth from the rich to the poor"
question
descriptive economics
answer
The compilation of data that describe phenomena and facts.
question
economic theory
answer
A statement or set of related statements about cause and effect, action and reaction.
question
model
answer
A formal statement of a theory, usually a mathematical statement of a presumed relationship between two or more variables.
question
variable
answer
A measure that can change from time to time or from observation to observation.
question
Ockham's razor
answer
The principle that irrelevant detail should be cut away.
question
Which of the following statements is correct? a. The aggregate price level is a subject of concern in microeconomics. b. A study of employment in the semiconductor industry would be categorized as a microeconomic study. c. The production and growth of output in the domestic economy is a microeconomic concern. d. Microeconomics is an in-depth study of aggregate economic behavior. e. Microeconomics includes the study of fiscal and monetary policies, or government policies designed to steer the economy in the right direction.
answer
b.
question
Behavioral economics
answer
uses psychological theories relating to emotions and social context to help understand economic decision making and policy. Much of the work in behavioral economics focuses on the biases that individuals have that affects the decisions they make.
question
Comparative economic systems
answer
examines the ways alternative economic systems function. What are the advantages and disadvantages of different systems?
question
Economic development
answer
focuses on the problems of low-income countries. What can be done to promote development in these nations? Important concerns of development for economists include population growth and control, provision for basic needs, and strategies for international trade.
question
Economic history
answer
traces the development of the modern economy. What economic and political events and scientific advances caused the Industrial Revolution? What explains the tremendous growth and progress of post-World War II Japan? What caused the Great Depression of the 1930s?
question
Environmental economics
answer
studies the potential failure of the market system to account fully for the impacts of production and consumption on the environment and on natural resource depletion. Have alternative public policies and new economic institutions been effective in correcting these potential failures?
question
Finance
answer
examines the ways in which households and firms actually pay for, or finance, their purchases. It involves the study of capital markets (including the stock and bond markets), futures and options, capital budgeting, and asset valuation.
question
Health economics
answer
analyzes the health care system and its players: government, insurers, health care providers, and patients. It provides insight into the demand for medical care, health insurance markets, cost-controlling insurance plans (HMOs, PPOs, IPAs), government health care programs (Medicare and Medicaid), variations in medical practice, medical malpractice, competition versus regulation, and national health care reform.
question
The history of economic thought
answer
which is grounded in philosophy, studies the development of economic ideas and theories over time, from Adam Smith in the eighteenth century to the works of economists such as Thomas Malthus, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes. Because economic theory is constantly developing and changing, studying the history of ideas helps give meaning to modern theory and puts it in perspective.
question
Industrial organization
answer
looks carefully at the structure and performance of industries and firms within an economy. How do businesses compete? Who gains and who loses?
question
International economics
answer
studies trade flows among countries and international financial institutions. What are the advantages and disadvantages for a country that allows its citizens to buy and sell freely in world markets? Why is the dollar strong or weak?
question
Labor economics
answer
deals with the factors that determine wage rates, employment, and unemployment. How do people decide whether to work, how much to work, and at what kind of job? How have the roles of unions and management changed in recent years?
question
Law and economics
answer
analyzes the economic function of legal rules and institutions. How does the law change the behavior of individuals and businesses? Do different liability rules make accidents and injuries more or less likely? What are the economic costs of crime?
question
Public economics
answer
examines the role of government in the economy. What are the economic functions of government, and what should they be? How should the government finance the services that it provides? What kinds of government programs should confront the problems of poverty, unemployment, and pollution? What problems does government involvement create?
question
Urban and regional economics
answer
studies the spatial arrangement of economic activity. Why do we have cities? Why are manufacturing firms locating farther and farther from the center of urban areas?
question
If you apply your own values to judge economic decisions, which category of economics would you be applying?
answer
normative economics
question
ceteris paribus, or all else equal
answer
A device used to analyze the relationship between two variables while the values of other variables are held unchanged.
question
How is ceteris paribus useful?
answer
is one part of the process of abstraction. In formulating economic theory, the concept helps us simplify reality to focus on the relationships that interest us.
question
Economic models are:
answer
Simplifications of reality that focus only on key relationships and ignore less relevant details.
question
Methods of expressing the quantitative relationship between two variables:
answer
graphing and equations
question
post hoc, ergo propter hoc
answer
Literally, "after this (in time), therefore because of this." A common error made in thinking about causation: If Event A happens before Event B, it is not necessarily true that A caused B.
question
fallacy of composition
answer
The erroneous belief that what is true for a part is necessarily true for the whole.
question
empirical economics
answer
The collection and use of data to test economic theories.
question
Criteria for judging economic outcomes:
answer
1. Efficiency 2. Equity 3. Growth 4. Stability
question
efficiency
answer
In economics, allocative efficiency. An efficient economy is one that produces what people want at the least possible cost.
question
equity
answer
Fairness.
question
economic growth
answer
An increase in the total output of an economy.
question
stability
answer
A condition in which national output is growing steadily, with low inflation and full employment of resources.
question
Which of the following criteria for judging economic outcomes refers to producing what people want at the least possible cost?
answer
efficiency
question
graph
answer
is a two-dimensional representation of a set of numbers, or data.
question
time series graph
answer
shows how a single measure or variable changes over time.
question
Cartesian Coordinate System
answer
constructed by drawing two perpendicular lines: a vertical axis (the Y-axis) and a horizontal axis (the X-axis). Each axis is a measuring scale.
question
Economics
answer
The study of how individuals and societies choose to use the scarce resources that nature and previous generations have provided.
question
Opportunity Cost, Marginalism, Efficient Market
answer
Three fundamental concepts of economics.
question
Opportunity Cost
answer
The best alternative that we forgo, or give up, when we make a choice or a decision.
question
Marginalism
answer
The process of analyzing the additional or incremental costs or benefits arising from a choice or decision.
question
Sunk costs
answer
Costs that cannot be avoided because they have already been incurred.
question
Efficient Market
answer
A market in which profit opportunities are eliminated almost instantaneously.
question
Industrial Revolution
answer
The period in England during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in which new manufacturing technologies and improved transportation gave rise to the modern factory system and a massive movement of the population from the countryside to the cities.
question
Microeconomics
answer
The branch of economics that examines the functioning of individual industries and the behavior of individual decision-making units—that is, firms and households.
question
Macroeconomics
answer
The branch of economics that examines the economic behavior of aggregates—income, employment, output, and so on—on a national scale.
question
Behavioral Economics
answer
uses psychological theories relating to emotions and social context to help understand economic decision making and policy. Much of the work in behavioral economics focuses on the biases that individuals have that affects the decisions they make.
question
Comparative Economic Systems
answer
examines the ways alternative economic systems function. What are the advantages and disadvantages of different systems?
question
Econometrics
answer
applies statistical techniques and data to economic problems in an effort to test hypotheses and theories.
question
Economic Development
answer
focuses on the problems of low-income countries. What can be done to promote development in these nations? Important concerns of development for economists include population growth and control, provision for basic needs, and strategies for international trade.
question
Environmental Economics
answer
studies the potential failure of the market system to account fully for the impacts of production and consumption on the environment and on natural resource depletion
question
Health Economics
answer
analyzes the health care system and its players: government, insurers, health care providers, and patients. It provides insight into the demand for medical care, health insurance markets, cost-controlling insurance plans (HMOs, PPOs, IPAs), government health care programs (Medicare and Medicaid), variations in medical practice, medical malpractice, competition versus regulation, and national health care reform.
question
Positive Economics
answer
An approach to economics that seeks to understand behavior and the operation of systems without making judgments. It describes what exists and how it works.
question
Normative Economics
answer
An approach to economics that analyzes outcomes of economic behavior, evaluates them as good or bad, and may prescribe courses of action. Also called policy economics.
question
Descriptive Economics
answer
The compilation of data that describe phenomena and facts.
question
Economic Theory
answer
A statement or set of related statements about cause and effect, action and reaction.
question
Model
answer
A formal statement of a theory, usually a mathematical statement of a presumed relationship between two or more variables.
question
Variable
answer
A measure that can change from time to time or from observation to observation.
question
Ockham's Razor
answer
The principle that irrelevant detail should be cut away.
question
Ceteris Paribus
answer
A device used to analyze the relationship between two variables while the values of other variables are held unchanged.
question
Ceteris Paribus
answer
All Else Equal
question
Fallacy of Composition
answer
The erroneous belief that what is true for a part is necessarily true for the whole.
question
Post Hoc, Ergo propter hoc
answer
Literally, "after this (in time), therefore because of this." A common error made in thinking about causation: If Event A happens before Event B, it is not necessarily true that A caused B.
question
Empirical Economics
answer
The collection and use of data to test economic theories.
question
Efficiency
answer
In economics, allocative efficiency. An efficient economy is one that produces what people want at the least possible cost.
question
Equity
answer
Fairness
question
Economic Growth
answer
An increase in the total output of an economy.
question
Stability
answer
A condition in which national output is growing steadily, with low inflation and full employment of resources.
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