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Econ Review chp 3-4

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  • What is supply?
    The amount of goods and services business firms are willing and able to provide at different prices.
  • Give one method to eliminate a surplus involving demand.
    Get the demand curve to shift right through advertising or eliminating substitutes.
  • What three factors could lead to a change in supply?
    Changes in technology, changes in production costs, changes in prices of related goods.
  • Name two possible solutions to a shortage.
    Increase supply or allow the price to rise to equilibrium.
  • What condition causes a shortage, and what are its possible solutions?
    A shortage occurs when the price is held below equilibrium. Solutions include increasing supply, decreasing demand, or allowing prices to rise.
  • What are carrying costs?
    Costs associated with holding large inventories.
  • Who identified the principle of diminishing marginal utility?
    The principle was identified by economists including William Stanley Jevons and others in the Marginalist revolution.
  • What does a supply schedule show?
    A table listing various quantities produced at various prices.
  • What is the simplest solution to a surplus?
    Allow the market to work by lowering the price until equilibrium is restored.
  • What happens when the price is set below the equilibrium price?
    A shortage occurs, with demand exceeding supply.
  • At what point do supply and demand intersect?
    At the market equilibrium point, where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.
  • What is the economic definition of demand?
    The quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices, other things held constant.
  • What happens when the price is set above the equilibrium price?
    A surplus occurs, with excess unsold products.
  • What is a price ceiling?
    A government-mandated maximum price that can cause shortages if set below equilibrium.
  • Why is allowing the market to adjust prices often the best solution to surpluses or shortages?
    Because it naturally restores equilibrium without causing long-term distortions.
  • Which way does a supply curve slope and why?
    It slopes upward because higher prices incentivize producers to supply more of the product.
  • How can a Christian show Christ to others during a surplus or shortage?
    By demonstrating patience, fairness, and compassion, helping others in need, and encouraging ethical behavior in market dealings.
  • What occurs when the price of a product is higher than the equilibrium price?
    A surplus occurs—quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded.
  • Name one example of a change in technology that can affect supply.
    Improvements like computers or automation.
  • What is market equilibrium price?
    The price at which consumers want to buy exactly the quantity suppliers want to sell.
  • What happens to supply when the price of related goods changes?
    Supply of the original good may decrease if resources shift to producing a higher-priced substitute.
  • What four conditions may change the demand for a product?
    Changes in income, prices of related goods, tastes and preferences, and expectations about the future.
  • What does the principle of diminishing marginal utility state?
    People receive less additional satisfaction from each extra unit of a good or service consumed over a period of time.
  • What is a price floor?
    A minimum price set by government above equilibrium that can cause surpluses.
  • What does a shift in the supply curve represent?
    A change in supply, caused by factors other than price, shifting the curve left or right.
  • What happens to quantity supplied when the price changes?
    A change in price results in a change in the quantity supplied.
  • How do production costs affect supply?
    If production costs rise, the firm decreases the quantity supplied at the same price.
  • What are the three functions of prices?
    Transmit information, provide incentives, redistribute income.
  • State the law of demand.
    Other things being held constant, the lower the price of a good or service, the greater the quantity demanded; the higher the price, the lower the quantity dema
  • State the law of supply.
    Other things held constant the higher the price buyers are willing to pay the greater the quantity a firm will produce; the lower the price, the smaller the q s