environmental economics Crossword Puzzles
International Economics 2024-08-12
Across
- Ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost.
- Rate at which one country's goods exchange for another's.
- A government policy to protect domestic industries.
- The exchange rate between two currencies.
- Restrictions on international trade.
- Model predicting trade based on economic size and distance.
- Curve showing different quantities of a good a country is willing to export.
- A limit on the quantity of imports.
- The total value of goods and services produced in a country.
- Curve showing combinations of two goods yielding same satisfaction.
- Opposite of import.
Down
- The study of the allocation of scarce resources.
- Curve showing maximum combinations of two goods that can be produced.
- Trade between countries.
- Trade within a country.
- Opposite of export.
- A tax on imported goods.
- The difference in value between a country's exports and imports.
- Ability to produce a good more efficiently than another country.
- Graphical representation of economic data.
20 Clues: Opposite of export. • Opposite of import. • Trade within a country. • Trade between countries. • A tax on imported goods. • A limit on the quantity of imports. • Restrictions on international trade. • The exchange rate between two currencies. • Graphical representation of economic data. • The study of the allocation of scarce resources. • ...
MACRO ECONOMICS 2023-03-08
Across
- Rate of people in the civilian labor force who are unemployed and actively seeking.
- Facilitates the transactions between buyers and sellers.
- Total market value of all Final G & S produced in a nation in a 1 year period.
- Number of members of the FED's B.O.G
- Value of a currency expressed in terms of the number of goods or services that one unit of money can buy
- GDP that is more accurate, adjusted for inflation
- measured in current prices.
- The U.S. gov't earns revenue through borrowing from other countries with interest or this method
- Part of GDP, Spending that makes up the largest % of GDP.
- Total # employed + unemployed & actively seeking.
- Index used to measure inflation
- Part of GDP, businesses investing in capital goods.
- Job loss due to a lack of skills, outsourcing or technology
- Stage of the business cycle, Economy has been in decline for 2 quarters
- Job loss due to a downturn in the economy
- Exports minus Imports
- Current chair of the FED
Down
- US central bank, regulates the money supply in the U.S. with its policies
- Economy reaches its lowest point
- A fairly new economic concept that occurs when the amount of a product is reduced in size but not price
- Name given to the leader of the FED's Board of Governors
- Income/money you actually have to spend
- Phase of the business cycle, Economy begins to decline
- Another name for Recovery Stage and a phase of the business cycle
- Highest point of the business cycle - Everything is "good"
- Body that implements fiscal policies
- Prolonged and more severe recession
- Money holds its purchasing power over time
- Unemployment that is a temporary transition between jobs
- Standard denomination of money used by a country
- Period of economic growth, Increase in Real GDP & low unemployment
- Rate on loans the FED charges its member banks
- Unemployment that occurs as seasons change
- Worst type of inflation. Economy is stagnate
- Body of the FED that vote to expand or contract the money supply
- Number of Federal Reserve district banks
- General rise is prices, should be less than 2%
- Policies instituted by the FED that directly affect the money supply
38 Clues: Exports minus Imports • Current chair of the FED • measured in current prices. • Index used to measure inflation • Economy reaches its lowest point • Prolonged and more severe recession • Number of members of the FED's B.O.G • Body that implements fiscal policies • Income/money you actually have to spend • Number of Federal Reserve district banks • ...
Economics Crossword 2023-03-02
Across
- Economy where it's a mix of all three
- A payment to individuals from the federal Government
- Positive effect of a choice
- Increasing productions of goods and services over time
- Economy where the central authorities make the decisions
- The increase in overall price of goods/services.
- Meant to remove some type of burden
- Human-made resources
- Achieved through pursuing_____.
- Driving force of the economy
Down
- Ensuring that all of those who are willing and able to work are able to
- Economy where people make the decision
- Market Economies typically have more_____.
- Small Change
- Resources
- Resources being allocated to their most productive use
- Economy that is passed down generations
- Fairness within the economy
- "all things being equal"
- protecting individuals and firms from risk
- Workers
21 Clues: Workers • Resources • Small Change • Human-made resources • "all things being equal" • Positive effect of a choice • Fairness within the economy • Driving force of the economy • Achieved through pursuing_____. • Meant to remove some type of burden • Economy where it's a mix of all three • Economy where people make the decision • Economy that is passed down generations • ...
Economics vocabulary 2023-05-12
Across
- These factors result from the unique characteristics of a location. These are labor, capital, and land
- The period of social and economic change that transforms a human group from an agrarian society into an industrial society. This involves an extensive re-organization of an economy for the purpose of manufacturing
- A process that links people around the world through technology and an expanding communication network.
- The minimum number of people needed to support a service.
- The maximum distance people are willing to travel to use a service
- A commodity, article, or service brought in from abroad (a foreign country) for sale
- International trade left to its natural course without tariffs, quotas, or other restrictions.
- A decision by a corporation to turn over much of the responsibility for production to independent suppliers
- The transfer of goods or services from one person or entity to another, often in exchange for money. A system or network that allows trade is called a market
- Intellectual services such as research and innovation
- Economic activities that involve the processing of raw materials (primary products
Down
- in cultural, social, environmental, health, and economic connections among countries
- A theory that explains the distribution of services based on the fact that settlements serve as centers of market areas for services; larger settlements are fewer and farther apart than smaller settlements and provide services for a larger number of people who are willing to travel farther
- An industry for which labor costs comprise a high percentage of total expenses
- These factors involve transporting materials to and from a factory. A firm seeks a location that minimizes the cost of transporting inputs to the factory and finished goods to consumers
- The production of services instead of end goods that meet the needs of individuals
- A type of operation or industry that involves extracting or refining natural resources.
- also known as the First Industrial Revolution, was the transition to new manufacturing processes in Europe and the United States, in the period from about 1760 to sometime between 1820 and 1840
- A commodity, article, or service sold abroad (to a foreign country).
- The area surrounding a central place from which people are attracted to use the place’s goods and services (also known as hinterland)
- A market center for the exchange of services by people attracted from the surrounding area
21 Clues: Intellectual services such as research and innovation • The minimum number of people needed to support a service. • The maximum distance people are willing to travel to use a service • A commodity, article, or service sold abroad (to a foreign country). • An industry for which labor costs comprise a high percentage of total expenses • ...
Economics Crossword 2023-05-30
Across
- Something that measures price changes
- Another word for fixed capital
- measures changes in the prices of goods and services in and exported out of the US
- The opposite of the people who are not employed
- These are for types of what;national defense, Social Security, healthcare, and interest payments,
- the rate of people who are not emplyed
- part-time ownership of a fixed dividend
- Constant-price GDP, inflation-corrected GDP, or constant-dollar GDP.
- The opposite of increased government borrowing and spending increases private spending
- The opposite of excess reserves
- lending rate,bank rate, and borrowing rate.
- The opposite of deposit multiplier
Down
- The name of the limit that is put on prices
- the opposite of physical capital
- the opposite of deflation
- Reserves that are left over after required reserves are taken out
- the lowest legal price that can be paid in a market for goods and services, labor, or financial capital
- funds that can be loaned out
- the excess money left over
- money issued by the government
- the opposite of net imports
- The opposite of the monetary policy
- Use, expending, and utilization
- Also referred to as nominal rigidity
- Supply The overall supply of goods and services available from producers to a specific market
25 Clues: the opposite of deflation • the excess money left over • the opposite of net imports • funds that can be loaned out • Another word for fixed capital • money issued by the government • Use, expending, and utilization • The opposite of excess reserves • the opposite of physical capital • The opposite of deposit multiplier • The opposite of the monetary policy • ...
Economics, etc 2023-05-17
Across
- a person who fixes cars
- things we like - candy, phones, toys
- a service we can pay someone to do for us
- a store that sells goods
- things we must have or we will die
- a person who helps people
- needs, wants, goods and services
- the city where the US Government is
- the state you live in today
- the city where the Statue of Liberty is
Down
- a need
- something we need made from cotton
- a word for a house or apartment
- the building where our President lives and works
- the building where our lawmakers work
- things we can buy at a store
- the city you live in today
- a place where goods are made
- something we drink that comes from cows
- a want
- we pay people to do these things for us
21 Clues: a need • a want • a person who fixes cars • a store that sells goods • a person who helps people • the city you live in today • the state you live in today • things we can buy at a store • a place where goods are made • a word for a house or apartment • needs, wants, goods and services • something we need made from cotton • things we must have or we will die • ...
Economics Crossword 2021-09-20
Across
- a tax imposed so that the tax rate is fixed
- refers to an agreement to purchase a product or service with the express promise to pay for it later.
- It is a form of risk management, primarily used to hedge against the risk of a contingent or uncertain loss.
- a type of not-for-profit financial institution controlled by its members, the people who deposit money into it.
- is the amount a lender charges a borrower and is a percentage of the principal—the amount loaned.
- a financial product commonly sold by banks, thrift institutions, and credit unions.
- is the process of allocating capital in a way that reduces the exposure to any one particular asset or risk.
- an open-end professionally managed investment fund that pools money from many investors to purchase securities.
- anything owed by one person to another.
Down
- a tax imposed on individuals or entities in respect of the income or profits earned by them. Income tax generally is computed as the product of a tax rate times the taxable income.
- the future sacrifices of economic benefits that the entity is obliged to make to other entities as a result of past transactions or other past events
- is the interest on a loan or deposit calculated based on both the initial principal and the accumulated interest from previous periods
- is payment from a borrower or deposit-taking financial institution to a lender or depositor of an amount above repayment of the principal sum, at a particular rate.
- a component of the economy which provides short-term funds.
- is any duty on manufactured goods that is levied at the moment of manufacture rather than at sale.
- one where the average tax burden increases with income.
- is a loan where the interest rate doesn't fluctuate during the fixed rate period of the loan.
- the payments a person receives upon retirement
- a thing that motivates or encourages one to do something.
- to allocate money with the expectation of a positive benefit/return in the future.
20 Clues: anything owed by one person to another. • a tax imposed so that the tax rate is fixed • the payments a person receives upon retirement • one where the average tax burden increases with income. • a thing that motivates or encourages one to do something. • a component of the economy which provides short-term funds. • ...
economics vocab 2021-12-03
Across
- a business owned and run by one person
- two or more companies joining together that have businesses that are unrelated
- jobs that require special skills and training in order to do
- a certificate that a corporation gives someone that promises to pay back money they borrowed, at certain times and with interest added to it
- a work stoppage in order to force employers to listen to employee demands
- all people who could possibly go to work; nonmilitary, 16 years old or older
- businesses that do not work for a profit or owners (schools, museums, boys and girls club, etc.)
- money and/or other valuables belonging to a person or to a business
- pay for workers that is not money; paid vacations, retirement pay, health insurance, etc.
- unofficial and invisible barriers that prevent women and people of different races from being promoted at work
Down
- a share of earning paid to the parent company in a franchise
- a legal obligation to pay debts
- laws that make it illegal to force workers to join a union
- a business that is owned and run by a group of people for all of their benefit
- arranging for workers outside a company to do work that somebody inside the company could do
- a business owned by a group of people, but that is considered to act as an individual with a single purpose
- a share or part of a company that can be bought, sold, or traded by a person
- moving some parts of a company's operations to another country
- mutiple people own it
- someone who a manual labor (working with their hands) job, often in a factory, and gets paid by the hour
20 Clues: mutiple people own it • a legal obligation to pay debts • a business owned and run by one person • laws that make it illegal to force workers to join a union • a share of earning paid to the parent company in a franchise • jobs that require special skills and training in order to do • moving some parts of a company's operations to another country • ...
Economics 1 2021-04-22
Across
- of or relating to commercial enterprise
- relating to laws that prevent unfair business practices
- commodities bought from a foreign country
- the ability and desire to purchase goods and services
- a general and progressive increase in prices
- faire a doctrine that government should not interfere in commerce
- a situation in which the state of the economy declines
- wealth in the form of money or property
- a market in which there are many buyers but only one seller
- an excess of liabilities over assets
- offering goods and services for sale
Down
- reduction of economic activity that results in lower prices
- a commodity sold to a foreign country
- a new or reserve supply that can be drawn upon when needed
- an economic system based on private ownership of assets
- productive work, especially physical work done for wages
- the commercial exchange of goods and services
- involving financial matters
- a quantity much larger than is needed
- any good that can be bought and sold
20 Clues: involving financial matters • any good that can be bought and sold • an excess of liabilities over assets • offering goods and services for sale • a commodity sold to a foreign country • a quantity much larger than is needed • of or relating to commercial enterprise • wealth in the form of money or property • commodities bought from a foreign country • ...
Economics XWP 2022-05-23
Across
- An increase in the amount of goods and services produced per head of the population over a period of time.
- Human-made goods that assist in the process of creating a product or service.
- When retailers and others take advantage of spikes in demand by charging exorbitant prices for necessities, often after a natural disaster or other state of emergency.
- A sudden change of the pattern of private expenditure, especially of consumption spending by consumers or of investment spending by businesses.
- The need or want of the economy for something.
- Things that impact the amount of available supply.
- Things given to influence ones decision.
- Incentive but plural
- Machinery and equipment developed from the application of scientific knowledge.
Down
- Assets like education, training, intelligence, skills, health, and other things employers value such as loyalty and punctuality.
- A system of government in which most of the important decisions are made by state officials rather than by elected representatives.
- The amount of available resources.
- An unexpected event that suddenly changes the supply of a product or commodity, resulting in an unforeseen change in price.
- Things that go against people's morals
- Someone's purchasing power in the economy.
- A commodity or service that is provided without profit to all members of a society, either by the government or a private individual or organization.
- A curve that illustrates the possible quantities that can be produced of two products if both depend upon the same finite resource for their manufacture.
- Things that impact the amount of the demand in an economy.
- The ability of an individual or group to carry out a particular economic activity (such as making a specific product) more efficiently than another activity.
- The use of economic tools to deal with traditional problems of political science.
- A stock or supply of money, materials, staff, and other assets that can be drawn on by a person or organization in order to function effectively.
- A government regulation establishing a maximum price to be charged for specified goods and services, especially during periods of war or inflation.
- Gross domestic product divided by midyear population.
- The amount something will cost.
- The effectiveness of someone or something's effort.
- The state of being short in supply.
26 Clues: Incentive but plural • The amount something will cost. • The amount of available resources. • The state of being short in supply. • Things that go against people's morals • Things given to influence ones decision. • Someone's purchasing power in the economy. • The need or want of the economy for something. • Things that impact the amount of available supply. • ...
Economics Exam 2025-01-13
Across
- The human effort used in the production of goods and services.
- The amount of goods or services producers are willing to make and sell.
- The responsiveness of quantity demanded to a change in price.
- A tangible item that satisfies human wants or needs.
- The condition that arises because wants exceed resources.
- The philosopher who wrote "The Wealth of Nations."
- The point where the supply and demand curves intersect.
- The term for natural resources used in production.
- The tools and equipment used in production.
- The agency responsible for managing the U.S. money supply.
- The study of how people allocate scarce resources.
Down
- The type of economy based on customs and traditions.
- The person who takes risks to start a business.
- The term for goods that are used in place of one another.
- The value of the next best alternative forgone.
- A graphical representation of the relationship between price and quantity demanded.
- The economic system where the government makes all major decisions.
- A situation where resources are not being used efficiently.
- A payment made to workers in exchange for their labor.
- The driving force behind competition and innovation in a free market.
20 Clues: The tools and equipment used in production. • The person who takes risks to start a business. • The value of the next best alternative forgone. • The philosopher who wrote "The Wealth of Nations." • The term for natural resources used in production. • The study of how people allocate scarce resources. • The type of economy based on customs and traditions. • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-12-10
Across
- What results in higher costs for transportation businesses, ultimately impacting consumer prices for goods and services?
- How would you classify goods like "housing and rental spaces"?
- What tax is imposed on papers, instruments, loan agreements, and documents showing the approval or change of a contract or right?
- What does the government aim to improve through projects like highways, expressways, and flood control systems?
- What withholding tax acts as the full and final payment of the payee's income tax?
- What type of interest rate is based on a benchmark like forex or the Philippine Stock Exchange?
- What government-run institution serves the private, professional, and informal sectors in the Philippines?
- What term refers to the general increase in prices that reduces the purchasing power of money, which investments can counter by generating profits that match or exceed it?
- What term describes the migration of job seekers from nearby cities to urban areas in search of higher-paying jobs, often resulting in overcrowding?
- What type of interest rate charges a single fixed fee on top of the value of a purchase, regardless of time?
- What tax is imposed on the right of a deceased person to transfer their estate to their heirs?
- What tax is imposed on the free transfer of property between two or more persons living at the time of the transfer?
- What term refers to the growing trend of renting out properties of different sizes and purposes, including the shift of the real estate industry online?
- What is the revenue arising from land ownership and other gifts from nature, where leased objects must be returned in their original state?
- What does the tax reform aim to improve by funding rural health units, barangay health stations, and provincial hospitals?
- What state-run institution provides affordable housing and loan schemes for Filipinos?
- What process do people use to determine if their taxes are correct, which can range from using a calculator to thoroughly reviewing the details?
- What is the value of a nation's currency compared to another nation's currency, which, when higher than the investment's worth, indicates appreciation?
- What term refers to the original amount of money borrowed in a loan?
- How are the inputs required to produce "housing and rental spaces" categorized?
- Tax What tax is imposed on personal income and is based on the profit or income of employees and entities?
- What influences housing demand in the context of real property?
- What term refers to the cost of borrowing money and the earnings from an investment or deposit, excluding inflation?
- What law, also known as the Wage Rationalization Act, aims to establish minimum wages and improve workers' quality of life and job opportunities?
- What sector does the government aim to improve by funding classrooms and teachers through taxes?
- What is the interest rate received or charged on an investment or loan due to compounding for a defined period of time?
- What term refers to the annual cost of borrowing or return on investment, commonly known as the annual percentage rate (APR)?
- What tax is imposed on the production, distribution, or use of goods manufactured for domestic sale?
- What arises from workers shifting industries, necessitating infrastructure and training programs to support the transition?
- What tax is withheld by government agencies and units before making payments to non-VAT registered entities?
Down
- What term refers to the allowance given to employees to help cover the cost of living, often prioritized for those earning less than ₱600 monthly?
- What term refers to the tendency of large businesses to favor big cities with higher minimum wage rates, resulting in fewer businesses in other regions?
- What term refers to the minimum amount of compensation an employer is required to pay workers, set by law or regulation?
- What term describes the trend where high demand for rental properties results in fewer vacancies?
- What is the percentage change in quantity demanded in response to a given percentage change in price, also known as the own price elasticity of demand?
- What is the fixed interest rate typically used by commercial banks called?
- What tax is withheld from individuals earning income exclusively from compensation?
- What term refers to the importance of selecting a location for your business based on factors such as safety, proximity to key establishments, and accessibility?
- What government-run institution caters to the public sector, including government employees and uniformed personnel?
- What term describes the relatively low land prices in Southeast Asia, making it cost-effective to purchase property for lease or rent?
- What pay structure, implemented in 2012, aims to reduce the impact of mandatory minimum wages and enhance efficiency and profit-sharing in the Philippines?
- What type of tax is imposed on certain income payments and can be credited against the payee's income tax?
- What term refers to the percentage change in quantity demanded in response to a given percentage change in price?
- Is determined by subtracting total contributions (SSS/GSIS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG) and other deductions to basic income.
- What government-controlled corporation aims to provide universal health care in the Philippines?
- What term refers to the mandatory charges imposed by the government on individuals, companies, and goods to fund its operations?
- What tax is imposed on the consumption of goods, services, properties, and imported goods?
- What law, signed in 2017, aims to make the Philippine tax system fairer and generate revenue to support government programs and investments?
- What is the term for the growing market in the Philippines for budget to high-end rental properties driven by both local and international demand?
- What can increase both the demand and supply of houses?
- What term refers to the potential for loss or harm that should be considered when deciding to proceed with a rental investment?
- What term refers to the demographic factors of a location that help create a target market for rental properties?
- What term refers to the significant initial investment needed for renting a property, including security deposits and advance payments?
- What happens when the price increase in commodities surpasses the rise in income, resulting in higher poverty?
- What factors can drive an increase in house prices?
- What tax is imposed on earnings from the sale, swap, or disposal of capital assets based in the Philippines?
- What tax is levied on individuals or companies selling or leasing goods, property, or services with total annual profits or receipts not exceeding ₱550,000 and not subject to VAT?
- What term refers to an increase in an object's value over time, often associated with investments growing in wealth for future use?
- What restrictions are imposed by the Local Government Code of 1991?
59 Clues: What factors can drive an increase in house prices? • What can increase both the demand and supply of houses? • How would you classify goods like "housing and rental spaces"? • What influences housing demand in the context of real property? • What restrictions are imposed by the Local Government Code of 1991? • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-12-10
Across
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- enter and settled in foreign country
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- helps the government support
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- occurs when people are in between job
- people who leave one country or region
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
Down
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- can push the price of houses to increase
- which a nations currency price is determined
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- can increase the demand for houses
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- are commercially available goods and services
- housing and rental spaces
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
28 Clues: housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • can push the price of houses to increase • the ratio of export rates and import prices • which a nations currency price is determined • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-12-10
Across
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- enter and settled in foreign country
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- helps the government support
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- occurs when people are in between job
- people who leave one country or region
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
Down
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- can push the price of houses to increase
- which a nations currency price is determined
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- can increase the demand for houses
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- are commercially available goods and services
- housing and rental spaces
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
28 Clues: housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • can push the price of houses to increase • the ratio of export rates and import prices • which a nations currency price is determined • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-12-10
Across
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- enter and settled in foreign country
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- helps the government support
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- occurs when people are in between job
- people who leave one country or region
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
Down
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- can push the price of houses to increase
- which a nations currency price is determined
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- can increase the demand for houses
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- are commercially available goods and services
- housing and rental spaces
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
28 Clues: housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • can push the price of houses to increase • the ratio of export rates and import prices • which a nations currency price is determined • ...
1.2 Economics 2024-12-11
Across
- When the percentage change in demand is exactly equal to the percentage change in price. (7, 10)
- A factor affecting the size and structure of market demand. (10, 6)
- A promotional activity aimed at increasing consumer awareness or demand. (11)
- Goods that have high income elasticity, often considered non-essential. (8)
- Individuals who provide labor in exchange for wages. (7)
- A good that is consumed alongside another, e.g., coffee and sugar. (9)
- Goods for which demand decreases as income rises. (8, 5)
- Laws introduced to regulate market activity. (11)
- What occurs when factors like price increases or bad publicity occur. (6, 5)
- People who purchase goods and services for personal use. (9)
- When demand changes more than proportionally to a change in price. (7, 6)
- The decreasing satisfaction gained from consuming additional units of a good. (10, 8, 7)
- The institution responsible for managing public resources and policies. (10)
- A measure of how much quantity demanded responds to price changes. (5, 10)
- What happens when factors such as income or popularity increase. (6, 5)
- Income adjusted for the effects of inflation. (4, 6)
- The primary goal for consumers and firms in decision-making. (11, 9)
Down
- When demand changes less than proportionally to a change in price. (9, 6)
- A scenario where demand does not change regardless of price. (9, 8, 6)
- A situation where any change in price leads to zero or infinite demand. (9, 7, 6)
- Goods for which demand increases as consumer income rises. (6, 5)
- Essential goods with low income elasticity. (11)
- A trend or preference that can shift demand for goods. (7)
- A good that can replace another in consumption, e.g., tea for coffee. (10)
- The process of choosing the option that offers the greatest benefit compared to cost. (3, 9, 7)
- A graphical representation of the relationship between price and quantity demanded. (6, 5)
- Abbreviation for the responsiveness of demand to changes in income. (3)
- Organizations that produce goods or provide services. (5)
- The quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at a given price. (6)
- Abbreviation for the responsiveness of demand for one good to a change in the price of another. (3)
- Abbreviation for the responsiveness of demand to price changes. (3)
31 Clues: Essential goods with low income elasticity. (11) • Laws introduced to regulate market activity. (11) • Income adjusted for the effects of inflation. (4, 6) • Individuals who provide labor in exchange for wages. (7) • Goods for which demand decreases as income rises. (8, 5) • Organizations that produce goods or provide services. (5) • ...
Economics 11 2025-02-03
Across
- – The total amount of a good or service that producers are willing and able to sell at different price levels.
- Cost – The value of the next best alternative foregone when making a decision.
- Paribus – A Latin phrase meaning "all other things being equal," used in economics to isolate the effect of one variable.
- Elasticity of Demand – A measure of how much the quantity demanded of a good changes in response to a change in price.
- – The study of how individuals, businesses, and governments allocate scarce resources to satisfy their needs and wants.
- – The quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy at different price levels.
- – An individual or group that purchases goods and services for personal use.
- – A group of businesses that produce similar goods or services.
- Economies – An economic system where the government makes all production and distribution decisions.
- – The human effort, both physical and mental, used in the production of goods and services.
- – A place or system where buyers and sellers interact to exchange goods, services, or resources.
- Good – A good that is considered harmful to society and is often over-consumed (e.g., cigarettes, alcohol).
Down
- – The inputs used to produce goods and services, including land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.
- – The condition in which individuals who are willing and able to work cannot find jobs.
- Market – An economic system where prices and production are determined by unrestricted competition between privately owned businesses.
- Control – Government regulations that set a maximum (price ceiling) or minimum (price floor) price for goods and services.
- – An individual or business that creates goods and services for sale.
- Good – A good that is beneficial to society and often under-consumed without government intervention (e.g., education, healthcare).
- – The fundamental economic problem of having limited resources to meet unlimited wants and needs.
- – A financial aid or support provided by the government to encourage the production or consumption of a good or service.
- – A mandatory financial charge imposed by the government on individuals or businesses to fund public services.
21 Clues: – A group of businesses that produce similar goods or services. • – An individual or business that creates goods and services for sale. • – An individual or group that purchases goods and services for personal use. • Cost – The value of the next best alternative foregone when making a decision. • ...
Health Economics 2024-09-14
Across
- a greek word that means "group of people"
- deals with the behavior of individual components
- an economic theory and practice that was dominant from the 16th to the 18th century
- tangible, something that can be touched
- he described tha market mechanism as an "invisible hand"
- deals with the behavior of the economy as a whole
- producing with the least amount of expense, effort, and waste, but not without cost
- provided in numerous ways and are an intangible activity
- a branch pf science that studies the biological, physiological, social, and cultural aspects of human life
- a greek word that means "city or state"
- study pf the proper allocation and efficient use of scarce resources to produce commodities for the maximum satisfaction of unlimited human needs
- a greek word that means society
- branch of economics which deals with care of sickness, promotion, maintenance and improvement of health
- essential for human survival like food, clothing, and shelter
Down
- scientific study of the human behavior
- believed that capitalism would ultimately destroy itself
- theory of practice of controlling the supply of money as the chief method of stabilizing the economy
- ancient greek word that means "management of a household"
- factor of production that consists of all goods which help in the production process
- perhaps the first well developed theory of economics
- the general category of the human effort that is for the production of goods and services
- a social science that focuses on the study of past events
- when there is not enough human wants
- greek word that means soul
- a latin word that means society
- study of the society or groups
- often called "factor of production"
- goods that give more satisfaction and make life more pleasant and worth living
- describes the ground that might be used to build a structure
- a systematic study of the state and government
- a greek word that means "study or science"
31 Clues: greek word that means soul • study of the society or groups • a latin word that means society • a greek word that means society • often called "factor of production" • when there is not enough human wants • scientific study of the human behavior • tangible, something that can be touched • a greek word that means "city or state" • a greek word that means "group of people" • ...
HEALTH ECONOMICS 2024-09-14
Across
- - Plan for healthcare spending.
- - Standard of healthcare services.
- - Moral principles in healthcare.
- - Financial protection for health expenses.
- - Individuals interested in healthcare.
- - Ensuring fairness in healthcare distribution.
- - Government-supported healthcare.
- - Results of healthcare services.
- - Encouragement for specific actions in healthcare.
- - Need for healthcare services.
- - Avoiding illness or injury.
- - Relating to moral decisions in healthcare.
- - Optimal use of health resources.
- - Availability of healthcare services.
- - Calculating healthcare expenses.
- - Maintain healthcare long-term.
Down
- - Availability of health resources.
- - Ability to use healthcare.
- - Resources for healthcare investment.
- - Guidelines for healthcare practices.
- - Care given to manage a health condition.
- - The healthcare economy.
- - Study to improve healthcare.
- - Variety in healthcare populations.
- - Fairness in healthcare distribution.
- - Information for healthcare decisions.
- - Management of money in healthcare.
- - New healthcare methods or products.
- - International health issues.
- - Price of healthcare services.
30 Clues: - The healthcare economy. • - Ability to use healthcare. • - Avoiding illness or injury. • - Study to improve healthcare. • - International health issues. • - Plan for healthcare spending. • - Need for healthcare services. • - Price of healthcare services. • - Maintain healthcare long-term. • - Moral principles in healthcare. • - Results of healthcare services. • ...
Applied economics 2024-10-01
Across
- Curve: relationship between price and quantity demanded.
- Emigrants: are individuals who leave their home countries.
- inflation:refers to a persistent.
- Implicit:opportunity costs of using resources, such as the value of the owner's.
- Consumption: goods and services by individuals or households
- items that satisfy wants.
- judgments about how the economy.
- Refugees:are individuals forced to flee their home countries due to persecution.
- Oligopoly: A market structure with a few dominant sellers.
- Wages: are the lowest legal wage that employers.
- Basic Commodities: are essential goods and services that are necessary.
- Marginal Revenue: The additional revenue from selling.
- Investment: involves committing resources, typically money, to acquire.
- Preference: They are a key factor in determining demand for goods.
- Socialism: It aims to reduce inequality and promote social welfare.
- activities that satisfy wants.
- Factors of production.
- of Input: refers to the expenses incurred by a business.
- The willingness and ability of producers.
- A measure of the responsiveness of one variable to another
- Capital:refers to the resources used in the production.
- refer to individual preferences and desires for goods and services.
- Pull Factors:conditions or opportunities that attract people to new destinations.
- Price Control: This can include price ceilings, price floors, or other measures.
- The value of the next best alternative forgone.
- in Supply: Factors that cause the entire supply curve to shift
- Cost: The additional cost of producing one more unit of output.
- Price Floor: typically used to support producers or workers.
- Shifts in Demand: Factors that cause the entire demand curve
- Human Capital: refers to the skills, knowledge.
- out-of-pocket expenses incurred by busine
- Macro Level:economics examines the economy as a whole.
- refer to a change in position, direction.
- Low Unemployment: refers to a situation where a small percentage of the labor.
- is the opposite of inflation, characterized by a general decrease.
- Deadweight Loss: surplus due to market inefficiencies.
- Slope:It can be used to represent the relationship between two variables.
- Surplus: minimum price a producer.
- Supply Curve: relationship between price and quantity supplied.
- Competition: A market structure with many buyers and sellers.
- A market structure with a single seller and no close substitutes.
- Income Approach: method of calculating national income.
- Micro Level: economics focuses on individual economic decisions.
- are used to protect domestic industries and generate.
Down
- refers to the application of scientific knowledge.
- Price: quantity demanded equals quantity supplied.
- Push Factors: conditions or events that drive people to leave their home countries.
- Immigrants: are individuals who arrive in a new country to live permanently.
- state of lacking the financial resources and essentials.
- of Supply: As price increases, quantity supplied increases
- Equity:refers to fairness and justice in the way people are treated.
- Tax: It is a major source of revenue for governments.
- Migration: refers to the movement of people from one place to another.
- representations of economic phenomena.
- Labor Supply: The willingness and ability of workers to offer their services.
- is the flow of money or other assets that an individual or household.
- a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy over time.
- Population Growth: Can affect labor supply, demand for goods.
- Basic Commodities: Essential goods and services.
- Wages: The price of labor, influenced by supply and demand.
- Inflation: occurs when the cost of production increases.
- Surplus: maximum price a consumer.
- study of individual economic units.
- Land: refers to the solid part of the Earth's surface.
- Remittances: are payments sent by migrants to their families and communities.
- Price Floor: They can lead to surpluses and inefficiencies.
- Equilibrium Quantity: bought and sold at the equilibrium price.
- supplied exceeds quantity demanded.
- Unemployment: refers to the situation where individuals.
- price increases, quantity demanded decrease.
- Monopolistic Competition: A market structure with many sellers.
- Equality: the state of being equal.
- Wage: A legal minimum price that can be paid for labor.
- inflation: occurs when the demand for goods and services.
- The study of the economy as a whole.
- Shortage: exceeds quantity supplied.
- Inclusive Growth: It aims to reduce inequality and ensure that everyone.
- Ceiling: A government-imposed maximum price for a good or service.
- fundamental economic problem of unlimited.
- The willingness and ability of consumers.
- Labor:human effort, both physical and mental, used in the production of goods.
- Self-Interest:Individuals and firms act in their own best interests.
- economic phenomena.
- Price Discrimination: Charging different prices to different customers.
- Commodities: are raw materials, such as agricultural products.
- Price Ceilings:government-imposed maximum prices for goods and services.
- Capitalism:It emphasizes individual initiative, profit maximization.
- Employment:It is a crucial factor in determining individual and household.
- Communism: It aims to create a society free from exploitation.
- Sales tax: It is typically collected by retailers and remitted to the government.
90 Clues: economic phenomena. • Factors of production. • items that satisfy wants. • activities that satisfy wants. • judgments about how the economy. • inflation:refers to a persistent. • Surplus: maximum price a consumer. • Surplus: minimum price a producer. • study of individual economic units. • supplied exceeds quantity demanded. • Equality: the state of being equal. • ...
Economics Crossword 2024-10-02
Across
- The need to feel secure and safe
- Income generated from sales
- Reaching your full potential
- Raw materials from nature
- Economy based on customs and tradition:
- Products that can replace each other
- Money left after expenses are paid
- Plan for income and spending over time
- Items used together
- Necessary items for basic living
- Process of making goods or services
Down
- Need for love and friendship
- Desire to feel valued and respected
- No longer in use, replaced by something
- all the man-made assets that are used to manufacture goods
- Paid help that is not a physical item
- The amount of goods available for sale
- Something you cannot touch
- A combination of market and government
- Basic survival needs
- The exchange of goods or services
- Non-essential but desired item
- One that buys goods or services
- High-end products that aren't essential
- guiding a team to achieve goals
25 Clues: Items used together • Basic survival needs • Raw materials from nature • Something you cannot touch • Income generated from sales • Need for love and friendship • Reaching your full potential • Non-essential but desired item • One that buys goods or services • guiding a team to achieve goals • The need to feel secure and safe • Necessary items for basic living • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-12-10
Across
- this is market Structure
- it would be economical to buy property and put it up for lease or rent
- possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- also known as competitive market
- commonly known as the fixed interest rate
- is the general rise in prices that decrease money's purchasing power
- in cities with weak economies
- are involuntary charges imposed on individuals or companies and imposed by a government
- is the minimum amount of comprehension an employer is required to pay
- renting a property might be less constantly than purchasing a property
- high prices of construction materials and services
- firms have buyers and sellers who are all price takers
- is the percentage change in quantity Supplied
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- properties for lease or rent will not be unoccupied for long
- that have inelastic demand are less sensitive to price change
Down
- a government run social institution that caters to private, professional,and informal sectors
- growing economies will cause an influx of skilled workers
- is the rate at which the prices of goods and services rise
- is essential if you want to attract a good number of tents
- also know as the own price elasticity of demand
- accomodations in the Philippines are comparatively cheaper for foreign nations
- refers to an increase in an objects value over time
- is an ongoing trend of renting out properties regardless of size and use
- considered in deciding to proceed with a rental
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- producing similar or differented products
- is the difference between the net return of a producing factor
- the input needed to create them
- is critical for business it creates a target market for people who are willing to rent
- is characterized by having a few firms selling
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- is an asset or commodity purchased to produce sales or appreciation
33 Clues: this is market Structure • in cities with weak economies • the input needed to create them • also known as competitive market • high demand for houses in growing cities • commonly known as the fixed interest rate • producing similar or differented products • buyers and sellers must accept market prices • is the percentage change in quantity Supplied • ...
IGCSE Economics 2025-03-06
Across
- The regular payment earned by an employee in exchange for their work.
- A payment made by the government to support a business or reduce the price of a good or service.
- goods Goods that are non-excludable and non-rivalrous, meaning they are available to all, like clean air.
- A market structure where one firm controls the entire supply of a product or service.
- The amount by which spending exceeds revenue, resulting in a shortfall.
- The point at which supply equals demand in a market, resulting in a stable price.
- goods Goods that are considered harmful or undesirable by society, often over-consumed.
- Compulsory payments made by individuals or businesses to the government.
- account A record of a country's transactions with the rest of the world, including imports and exports.
- Economic policies that focus on increasing the supply of goods and services through incentives for producers.
- The responsiveness of quantity demanded or supplied to a change in price.
- ceiling A maximum price set by the government, preventing prices from rising above a certain level.
Down
- goods Goods that are considered beneficial for individuals and society, often under-consumed.
- The quantity of a good or service that producers are willing to sell at different prices.
- The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services is rising, reducing purchasing power.
- The quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing to buy at different prices.
- policy Actions by a central bank to manage money supply and interest rates to control inflation and stabilize the economy.
- The system of money used in a country, such as dollars, euros, or yen.
- failure A situation where the market does not efficiently allocate resources, leading to a loss of economic welfare.
- The amount by which revenue exceeds spending, leading to extra funds.
- The amount of money you pay for a product or service.
- policy Government decisions regarding taxation and spending to influence the economy.
- floor A minimum price set by the government, preventing prices from falling below a certain level.
- market The supply and demand for workers, where employers hire and employees offer their services.
24 Clues: The amount of money you pay for a product or service. • The regular payment earned by an employee in exchange for their work. • The amount by which revenue exceeds spending, leading to extra funds. • The system of money used in a country, such as dollars, euros, or yen. • The amount by which spending exceeds revenue, resulting in a shortfall. • ...
Applied Economics 2025-03-08
Across
- – The principle that as prices rise, producers supply more.
- – The willingness and ability of consumers to buy a product or service.
- – Payments made to workers in exchange for their labor.
- – The ability to maximize output while using minimal resources.
- – Putting money into assets or businesses to generate future profit.
- – The framework a society uses to organize production and distribution.
- – Materials, labor, and capital used to produce goods and services.
- – The amount of goods or services available in the market.
- – The method of distributing resources to different uses.
- – The overall expenses involved in producing a good or service.
- – A person or company that creates and supplies goods or services.
- – The value of what is given up when choosing one option over another.
- – The process of selecting the best option among different choices.
- – The steady rise in prices over a period of time.
- – The financial gain a business makes after subtracting costs.
- – Natural resources, such as water, minerals, and forests, used in production.
- – The efficiency of producing goods and services within a given time.
- – The branch of economics that examines individual consumers and businesses.
Down
- – The state where the quantity supplied and demanded are balanced.
- – The act of developing, managing, and growing a business venture.
- – The principle that as prices drop, consumers buy more.
- – The amount of money required to purchase a good or service.
- – The process of planning income and expenses to manage finances.
- – A person who starts and runs a business, taking financial risks.
- – The fair and just allocation of resources in an economy.
- – The study of how people and societies manage limited resources.
- – The process of delivering goods from producers to consumers.
- – The total earnings a business receives from selling goods or services.
- – Using resources in a way that preserves them for the future.
- – A person who buys goods or services for personal use.
- – The increase in a country’s production of goods and services over time.
- – The point at which supply and demand are perfectly balanced.
- – The basic economic issue of having limited resources to meet unlimited wants.
- – The use of goods and services to satisfy needs and wants.
- – The process of making goods and services for consumption.
- – The work and effort provided by people to produce goods and services.
- – The rivalry between businesses to attract customers and increase sales.
- – The study of the overall economy, including national income and growth.
- – Tools, machinery, and equipment used in the production of goods and services.
- – A system where buyers and sellers exchange goods and services.
40 Clues: – The steady rise in prices over a period of time. • – Payments made to workers in exchange for their labor. • – A person who buys goods or services for personal use. • – The principle that as prices drop, consumers buy more. • – The method of distributing resources to different uses. • – The fair and just allocation of resources in an economy. • ...
Applied Economics 2025-03-09
Across
- The processed equipments, machineries.
- Soil, and natural resources that are found in nature and are not manmade.
- Social science study that is concerned with using scarce resources.
- State in which supply and demand are balance.
- Efforts of people involved in a production.
- Materials needed in a production.
- Is when supply is limited.
- The outcome of all the mixing raw materials or input.
- Someone who buys or uses goods and services for personal use.
- ECONOMICS Subject about Economics.
- Study the decision and choices of a certain individual Units.
- An individual who takes the initiative to start a new business.
- economic system based on customs and traditions, rather than money.
- Goods or services are willing to buy at any prices.
- The demand for a good or service is greater than the availability of the good or service..
- Items that satisfy human wants, provide utility or usefulness, and are scarce.
- Shows the various quantities the consumer is willing to buy
- A good that can be used in place of another.
- Refers to any value of the best foregone alternative.
- Refers to the physical or financial assets used to produce goods and services.
- The problem of having unlimited wants and needs in the economy.
- Process of setting prices of goods.
Down
- Another word for human resources.
- He described economics as study of mankind in ordinary business life.
- A situation where the quantity of a good or service demanded by consumers at a given price is greater than the quantity supplied by producers.
- Economic decisions and the pricing of good are based on the interaction of individuals in the economy.
- Process of exchanging goods and services using transaction between buyer and seller.
- Concerned with the overall performance of the entire economy.
- Desires for non-essential items.
- Is when a good is scarce compared to it's demand.
- Things that are often sold or consumed together.
- Another word for Raw Materials.
- Businesses that create and sell goods and services.
- System in which a central governmental authority sets permitted levels of production, as well as the terms of distribution and pricing.
- Is the point at which the quantity of a good or service supplied equals the quantity demanded.
- Show how quantity demanded of a good depends on determinants.
- an economic system that combines elements of command and market economy.
- Essentials that are consumed in a daily basis.
- Amount of product that is offered for sale.
- This are the resources or materials came from nature.
40 Clues: Is when supply is limited. • Another word for Raw Materials. • Desires for non-essential items. • Another word for human resources. • Materials needed in a production. • ECONOMICS Subject about Economics. • Process of setting prices of goods. • The processed equipments, machineries. • Efforts of people involved in a production. • Amount of product that is offered for sale. • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2025-03-15
Across
- Where buyers and sellers meet to trade.
- What you give up when you choose something else.
- Goods that are used together.
- Someone who sells goods or services.
- machines, and buildings used to make things.
- Tangible products.
- When supply equals demand.
- Transactions where goods are exchanged for money.
- Things used to make goods and services.
- The work people do to make goods and services.
- How prices are set based on supply and demand.
- Based on customs and bartering.
- Studying how people use resources to meet needs.
- The government controls what is made and sold.
- The cost of something.
- Someone who starts a business and takes risks.
- People decide what to make and sell based on supply and demand.
- Having alternatives if one product becomes too expensive.
- Things you desire but don't need.
- Choosing between options.
Down
- Making goods or services.
- Studying the whole economy.
- People who buy things for personal use.
- More or fewer people wanting to buy something.
- Studying individual economic decisions.
- How much people want to buy something at different prices.
- The people who work in an organization or economy.
- Essential things like food and shelter.
- Natural resources like soil and minerals.
- Something is completely unavailable.
- a sustained decrease in the general price level of goods and services in an economy
- Not having enough resources to meet everyone's needs.
- A famous economist who studied microeconomics.
- Shifts in what people like or want.
- FUNCTION A formula showing how demand changes with price.
- A rise in the general price level of goods and services over time.
- People who make goods or services to sell.
- A table showing how much people want at different prices.
- How much of something producers are willing to sell.
- RESOURCES Things found in nature like water, minerals, and forests.
40 Clues: Tangible products. • The cost of something. • Making goods or services. • Choosing between options. • When supply equals demand. • Studying the whole economy. • Goods that are used together. • Based on customs and bartering. • Things you desire but don't need. • Shifts in what people like or want. • Someone who sells goods or services. • Something is completely unavailable. • ...
Economics crossword 2023-10-30
Across
- All activities that are completed to produce, consume, or distribute goods/services in a place.
- Any cost that is not foreseen when purchasing a product.
- The economic problem is that we have limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants - we must make choices to satisfy those wants.
- John Maynard Keynes proposed that during recessions, governments should spend money to give people money, driving demand up. An economy can fail if consumers and investors spend too little, and this aims to prevent this through government intervention.
- A more understandable idea of GDP, taking the GDP and dividing it by the number of people in the country.
- States that competition makes products/ services better/cheaper
- The downswing of the economy, characterised by falling income, consumer spending, inflation, business/consumer confidence, and sales. Business failures are increasing.
- A market where the government doesn’t interfere in any way.
- A decision made to select one option over others.
- Money that people place in a bank for a later date.
- A product/service essential for a person to have.
- An economy where all resources and businesses are owned by the government, who decides all of the economic questions. Some services, like healthcare and education, are provided for free.
- The science of how people, businesses, and governments make choices in a market.
- Goods/services that are created in a country that are transferred abroad.
- A good/service that is difficult to find - that is, it is scarce.
- A product sold that is not physical, where something is done for someone.
- The uppermost turning point of the economy, characterized by increased employment, inflation, demand, and resource costs.
- Any natural resource using in producing a product/service
- The producers of the economy. They provide the household sector with wages in return for consumption and labour.
- The firm creating a product or service in exchange for money.
- An economy that is part capitalist, part socialist. It values private property, but also allows governments to shape economic activity.
- Money given to employees by businesses in exchange for labour.
- Any human service in producing a product/service. This includes employees and their physical/intellectual abilities, discussed in terms of quantity (number/type of workers), and quality (training).
- A market is competitive if firms have to work against each other for customers. It has a larger number of buyers and sellers. This is positive as it keeps prices lower and allows for higher-quality goods/services to be produced.
- Any good or service obtained by exchange, usually money.
- Products that are not necessary, but we have a desire for.
- The authority of the economy. They receive taxation in exchange for government expenditure.
- Money that the government changes to people in order to spend it on resources for the general population.
Down
- Two or more goods/services bought and used together.
- The initiative behind a business to make profit off of goods/services.
- When you make a choice, you must always forego something else - this is an opportunity cost.
- Banks and financial institutions of the economy. They receive saving in exchange for investments.
- An economy based on bartering/trading. Decisions are made with traditions in mind. Little surplus is produced, and if there is, it is typically given to authority/landowners.
- An upswing in the economy, characterised by rising consumer demand, sales, investment, interest rates, inflationary pressure. The labour market tightens and unemployment lowers. Shortages begin to appear near the end of this phase.
- Money that the government spends (that they receive as a result of taxation) on resources for the population.
- A product that fulfills a person’s wants/needs.
- investment made in equipment, machinery, etc.
- Goods/services brought in from another country.
- The consumers of the economy. They give labour and consumption to the firm sector in return for wages.
- An individual or a company buying a product or service from a business, the producer.
- A considered conclusion made.
- The lowermost point of the economy, where GDP reaches its lowest. An economy is in recession if GDP contracts for 2 successive quarters.
- The international trade of the economy. It receives imports in exchange for exports.
- A piece of data used to predict investment possibilities.
- cost The amount you pay upfront for a good/service.
- The four factors of production are the things that make a business run and be able to produce goods/services: They are land, labour, capital, and enterprise/entrepreneurship.
- A sum of money a firm, usually a financial institution, loans to another firm in exchange for a share of profits.
- Wants that are never satisfied, and as such are permanent.
- A product or service is scarce if the demand for it is greater than its supply.
- The economic questions are questions consumers and businesses ask before purchasing a product. They are: what to buy, where to buy, and how to pay.
- The total market value of all of the goods and services produced in a country, usually measured yearly. The RBA uses production measure (total value of all goods produced by industry), income measure (all profits and wages from employees/business after tax), and expenditure measure (total value of all goods and services bought by government and individuals).
- An economy based around private enterprise - goods/service production is owned and operated by individuals or groups of individuals. Products are supplied based on demand.
52 Clues: A considered conclusion made. • investment made in equipment, machinery, etc. • A product that fulfills a person’s wants/needs. • Goods/services brought in from another country. • A decision made to select one option over others. • A product/service essential for a person to have. • Money that people place in a bank for a later date. • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2024-01-23
Across
- - goods and services
- - the rights of individual to own property with in an economic system
- - a business organization made up of a legal entity owned by individual stockholders
- freedom - the right to make your own economic decisions
- - a business organization owned by two or more people
- - the flow of resources and finished products between businesses and households
- economic system with centrally planed economy and government control
- - a curve that shows alternative ways to use economic resources
- - offering that encourages people to behave in a certain way
- income - rent, wages, interest, and profit
Down
- - using fewer resources than an economy is capable of using
- limited quantities of resources to meet unlimited wants
- expenditure - money spent by households to purchase products
- - economic system with evenly distributed wealth and combined government control and private ownership
- - The market in which households are sellers and businesses are buyers
- - using resources in such a way as to maximize the production of goods and services
- - the market in which businesses are sellers and household are buyers
- - economic cost of choices
- - Land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship
- - economic system with private ownership and very little government intervention
- - the flow of money as income and consumer expenditures between households and businesses
- - the struggle among producers to gain the business of consumers
- - the model showing the flow between households and businesses
- - the sector of the economy that purchases resources and provide products
- - the sector of the economy that provides resources and purchases products
25 Clues: - goods and services • - economic cost of choices • - Land, labor, capital, entrepreneurship • income - rent, wages, interest, and profit • - a business organization owned by two or more people • limited quantities of resources to meet unlimited wants • freedom - the right to make your own economic decisions • - using fewer resources than an economy is capable of using • ...
D: Economics 2024-11-01
Across
- length of time of unemployment
- percentage of export income paid in interest
- wages determind by a system of enterprise
- an economy with high levels of real per capita income
- control of an overseas subsidiary by a domestic firm
- where central bank alters a fixed exchange rates
- central bank intervention in foreign exchange markets
- financial securities deriverd from primary financial security products
- sources of imports and destinations of export of a country
- where the equilibrium level of income is less than full employment level
- a fall in price level over time
- rise in the price level caused by excess aggregate demand
- countries with low levels of industrialisation and low real per capita income
Down
- pattern of wealth shares for equal proportions of the population
- issue of government securities
- producers alter output according to changes in consumer demand and technology over time
- removal of government regulation over markets
- rural-urban drift in LDC
- demand for productive inputs derived from the demand for final output
- an economy with low levels of real per capita income
- manner in which income and wealth are distributed
- industralised countries with high levels of real per capita income
- DY
- differences in real per capita incomes
- level of debt where consumption exceeds income
- pattern of income shares for equal proportions of the population
- exchange rate quotation of the number of units of domestic currency needed to buy one unit of foreign currency
- loss of purchasing power or value of the exchange rate
28 Clues: DY • rural-urban drift in LDC • length of time of unemployment • issue of government securities • a fall in price level over time • differences in real per capita incomes • wages determind by a system of enterprise • percentage of export income paid in interest • removal of government regulation over markets • level of debt where consumption exceeds income • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-24
Across
- A 1% change in price will result to exactly the same change in quantity supplied
- A 1% change in price will result in a less than 1% change in quantity supplied
- Is the value of a nation's currency against another nation's currency
- The amount a creditor charges for the use of assets expressed as a percentage of the principal amount
- A tax levied on the production, distribution,or use of a good in a country
- A state-run social institution that provides affordable housing and loan schemes for Filipinos
- If income elasticity of demand is positive the good is
- Is determined by subtracting total contribution (SSS/GSIS,PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG) and other deduction to basic income
- A tax on the right of a deceased person to transfer their estate at the time of death to their rightful heirs and recipients
- If income elasticity of demand is negative the good is
- To keep on place
- Measures the relative responsiveness of quantity demanded to changes in the price of another good
- Refers to an increase in an object's value over time
- The minimum amount of compensation an employer is required to pay its workers for work performed within a particular time
- Is an asset or commodity obtained to produce sales or appreciation
- Revenue arising from land ownership and other gifts from nature
- The rate at which the prices of goods and services rise
- Also known as competitive market
- Housing and rental spaces are
- A predefined fee or payment on top of the value of the purchase
- This is characterized by a few sellers producing similar or differentiated products
- A 1% change in price will result in a more than 1% change in quantity demanded
- A sales tax levied on the consumption of the sale of goods, services, properties, and imported goods
- A government-controlled corporation that seeks to provide universal health care in the Philippines
- Measure of responsiveness
- This is a market structure where there is a single seller of a particular product or type of product in the market
- If the cross price elasticity of the two goods is negative,then the goods are
- A price elasticity of demand equal to infinity exhibits a horizontal demand curve
- A government-run social institution that caters to private, professional,and informal sectors
- Refers to the original sum of money borrowed into a loan
- A government-run social institution that caters to the private sector, including government employees and uniformed personnel
Down
- The law Republic Act No. 6727 also known as
- If the cross price elasticity of demand of the two goods is positive, then the goods are
- A measure of the amount of value an asset from influential factors affecting its market value
- Law of supply,law of demand,labor market, labor demand, market equilibrium and equilibrium is
- This interest rate does not have a set rate for a commodity
- A 1% change in price will result in a less than 1% change in quantity demanded
- Measures the relative responsiveness of quantity demanded when income changes
- The tax withheld by persons earning taxes solely from compensation
- Commonly known as the fixed interest rate
- Are involuntary charges imposed on individuals or companies and imposed by a government agency to fund government operations, whether local, regional, or national
- A 1% change in price will result in a more than 1% change in quantity supplied
- Also known as the own price elasticity of demand
- A 1% change in price will result in exactly the same change in quantity demanded
- Cities with higher income also have higher prices for their
- Possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- Real property taxes in the Philippines are fixed by the
- The deliberate downward adjustment of the value of a country's money relative to another currency or standard
- The input needed to create them are
- A price elasticity of demand equal to zero exhibits a vertical demand curve
- This is the interest rate received or changed on an investment,loan,or other financial transaction owning to the compounding result for a defined period of time
- A tax on papers, instruments,loan agreements,and documentation showing the approval, assignment, settlement,or change of a contract or right
- A corporate tax levied on individuals or companies selling or leasing goods, property or services
- Financial institutions license to received deposit and loan
- This is the percentage change in quantity supplied in response to a given percentage change in price
- Is the general rise in prices taht decreases money's purchasing power
- A tax levied on earnings that the purchase believed to have been earned on the sale,swap,or other disposals of the Philippine-based capital assets, including retro sale and different types of conditional transaction
- Causes an increase in personal income
- A tax on personal income. This is usually levied to employees and entities and is based on respective profit or income
- A tax on a donation or gift and is imposed on the free transfer of property between two or more persons living at the time of the transfer
60 Clues: To keep on place • Measure of responsiveness • Housing and rental spaces are • Also known as competitive market • The input needed to create them are • Causes an increase in personal income • Commonly known as the fixed interest rate • The law Republic Act No. 6727 also known as • Also known as the own price elasticity of demand • ...
Applied economics 2024-11-28
Across
- The original sum of money invested or loaned, before interest or other charges.
- A good that is used in conjunction with another good, such as printers and ink.
- A simplified representation of an economic process or system used to analyze and predict economic behavior.
- A situation where the quantity demanded of a good remains unchanged regardless of the price change.
- A market structure where numerous small firms sell identical products, and no single firm can influence the market price. There are no barriers to entry or exit.
- The stated interest rate on a loan or investment, without adjusting for inflation.
- A good for which demand decreases as income rises, and increases as income falls.
- A tax imposed on the transfer of property by gift or donation.
- A tax on specific goods, often imposed on products like alcohol, tobacco, and gasoline.
- A compensation system where employees are paid different rates depending on certain factors such as experience or position.
- A market structure where a single firm dominates the market and has significant control over prices and supply.
- A situation where the quantity demanded of a good changes very little in response to a price change.
- Items that are purchased for investment purposes, often for their rarity, condition, or historical value, like art, coins, or antiques.
- Banks that primarily serve businesses and corporations, providing services like business loans, treasury management, and cash management.
- The organizational characteristics of a market, including the number of firms, product differentiation, and the level of competition.
- Securities that represent ownership in a corporation and constitute a claim on part of the corporation’s assets and earnings.
- Banks that provide services directly to individuals, including checking and savings accounts, personal loans, and mortgages.
- Mandatory contributions levied on individuals or businesses by a government to fund public expenditures.
- Investment funds that pool money from multiple investors to purchase a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities.
- A term used to describe a situation where the quantity demanded of a good changes significantly in response to a price change.
- The percentage charged on a loan or paid on an investment over a period of time.
- A situation where the quantity demanded of a good changes exactly in proportion to the price change.
Down
- A type of digital or virtual currency that uses cryptography for security, making it difficult to counterfeit or double-spend.
- The responsiveness of the quantity demanded for one good to a change in the price of another good.
- A measure of how much the quantity demanded of a good changes in response to a change in price.
- Goods that are produced and consumed by the end consumer, not used to produce other goods.
- Goods that are used in the production of other goods, not sold directly to consumers.
- A market structure dominated by a few large firms, where each firm has significant influence over the market.
- The total income generated by a business from the sale of goods or services.
- Investment funds that pool money from multiple investors to purchase a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities.
- The lowest legal wage that an employer can pay an employee, often set by the government.
- Financial institutions that accept deposits from the public, offer loans, and provide other financial services.
- A market structure characterized by many firms offering differentiated products that are not perfect substitutes.
- A tax on the value of real estate or personal property, typically levied by local governments.
- A tax on the value of real estate or personal property, typically levied by local governments.
- The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises, leading to a decrease in purchasing power.
- A sudden and dramatic increase in the price of a good or service, often caused by external factors such as supply shortages or market disruptions.
- A company that must accept the prevailing prices in the market of its products, its own transactions being unable to affect the market price.
- The actual rate of interest earned or paid on a loan or investment after accounting for the effect of compounding.
- A good for which demand increases as income rises, and decreases as income falls.
- A situation where any small change in price results in an infinite change in the quantity demanded.
- A payment made by a tenant to a landlord for the use of land or property.
- The increase in the value of an asset over time, often due to market demand or improvements in the asset's condition.
- The allocation of resources (such as money or capital) into assets or projects that are expected to generate income or appreciation over time.
- A tax levied by governments on individuals’ or businesses’ earnings.
45 Clues: A tax imposed on the transfer of property by gift or donation. • A tax levied by governments on individuals’ or businesses’ earnings. • A payment made by a tenant to a landlord for the use of land or property. • The total income generated by a business from the sale of goods or services. • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-30
Across
- housing and rental spaces
- producing similar or differented products
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- the input needed to create them
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- helps the government support
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- people who leave one country or region
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- high prices of construction materials and services
- can push the price of houses to increase
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- growing economies will cause an influx of skilled workers
- this is market Structure
Down
- also know as the own price elasticity of demand
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- occurs when people are in between job
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- can increase the demand for houses
- possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- is the percentage change in quantity Supplied
- is characterized by having a few firms selling
- goods that have inelastic demand are less sensitive to price change
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- in cities with weak economies
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- also known as competitive market
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- are commercially available goods and services
- which a nations currency price is determined
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- firms have buyers and sellers who are all price takers
- enter and settled in foreign country
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
44 Clues: this is market Structure • housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • in cities with weak economies • the input needed to create them • also known as competitive market • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-30
Across
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- housing and rental spaces
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- can push the price of houses to increase
- also known as competitive market
- people who leave one country or region
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- producing similar or differented products
- high prices of construction materials and services
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- in cities with weak economies
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
- growing economies will cause an influx of skilled workers
- goods that have inelastic demand are less sensitive to price change
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- enter and settled in foreign country
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- this is market Structure
Down
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- occurs when people are in between job
- can increase the demand for houses
- helps the government support
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
- are commercially available goods and services
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- which a nations currency price is determined
- the input needed to create them
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
40 Clues: this is market Structure • housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • in cities with weak economies • the input needed to create them • also known as competitive market • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-30
Across
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- which a nations currency price is determined
- growing economies will cause an influx of skilled workers
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- occurs when people are in between job
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- are commercially available goods and services
- this is market Structure
- also know as the own price elasticity of demand
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
- housing and rental spaces
- can increase the demand for houses
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- enter and settled in foreign country
- firms have buyers and sellers who are all price takers
- is characterized by having a few firms selling
- can push the price of houses to increase
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- that have inelastic demand are less sensitive to price change
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
Down
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
- high prices of construction materials and services
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- producing similar or differented products
- people who leave one country or region
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- in cities with weak economies
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- also known as competitive market
- helps the government support
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- the input needed to create them
- is the percentage change in quantity Supplied
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
44 Clues: this is market Structure • housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • in cities with weak economies • the input needed to create them • also known as competitive market • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-30
Across
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- which a nations currency price is determined
- growing economies will cause an influx of skilled workers
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- occurs when people are in between job
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- an average spike in the price of commodities
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- are commercially available goods and services
- this is market Structure
- also know as the own price elasticity of demand
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
- housing and rental spaces
- can increase the demand for houses
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- enter and settled in foreign country
- firms have buyers and sellers who are all price takers
- is characterized by having a few firms selling
- can push the price of houses to increase
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- that have inelastic demand are less sensitive to price change
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
Down
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- has both positive and negative implications for the company
- high prices of construction materials and services
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- producing similar or differented products
- people who leave one country or region
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- in cities with weak economies
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- also known as competitive market
- helps the government support
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- the input needed to create them
- is the percentage change in quantity Supplied
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
44 Clues: this is market Structure • housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • in cities with weak economies • the input needed to create them • also known as competitive market • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-30
Across
- are commercially available goods and services
- helps the government support
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- can push the price of houses to increase
- producing similar or differented products
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- in cities with weak economies
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- can increase the demand for houses
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- housing and rental spaces
- is characterized by having a few firms selling
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
Down
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- occurs when people are in between job
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
- enter and settled in foreign country
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- people who leave one country or region
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- this is market Structure
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
30 Clues: this is market Structure • housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • in cities with weak economies • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • can push the price of houses to increase • high demand for houses in growing cities • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-11-30
Across
- housing and rental spaces
- this is market Structure
- also known as competitive market
- occurs when people are in between job
- it is the amount of individuals from one place to another
- also know as the own price elasticity of demand
- high prices of construction materials and services
- The amount of labor that employees wish to hire at a given time
- producing similar or differented products
- helps the government support
- known as suit and tie workers who do professionals
- buyers and sellers must accept market prices
- the ratio of export rates and import prices
- are products that serve as important needs for consumer lives and survival Primecommodities are products that are not considered to be basic necessities but are necessary to consumer
- goods that have elastic demand are sensitive to price change
- which a nations currency price is determined
- arrangement where the employee will provide services for the employer
- can push the price of houses to increase
- It is a major components of every economy in commodities and services markets
- in cities with weak economies
- is characterized by having a few firms selling
Down
- big loans promote inflation and if inflation is high
- are workers who engages in hard manual labor
- the input needed to create them
- growing economies will cause an influx of skilled workers
- people who leave one country or region
- these are people from the Philippines who live work
- possesses the features of both monopoly and perfect competition
- negative reasons that cause people to leave their homes
- Fewer people will work if the wage rate is low
- can increase the demand for houses
- enter and settled in foreign country
- high demand for houses in growing cities
- The point at which labor demand and labor supply converge and intersect
- the price of every unit of a foreign currency
- Amount of labor offered for hire within a given period
- are commercially available goods and services
- to different products,service,and financial assets
- positive aspects that attract people to move to another region or location
39 Clues: this is market Structure • housing and rental spaces • helps the government support • in cities with weak economies • the input needed to create them • also known as competitive market • can increase the demand for houses • enter and settled in foreign country • occurs when people are in between job • people who leave one country or region • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-27
Across
- of problem in their former home.
- tax- cannot be shifted.
- it is a low currency.
- tax- taxes take a larger proportion of an individual's gross income.
- Responsiveness.
- cost- Sum of VC&FC.
- inflation- Buying capacity grows compared to other currencies.
- without specific purpose.
- is an specific to imported good.
- tax- It is from lgu.
- Mutual fund- allow you to get good returns and opportunities.
- theory- It is a populations grows.
- is a movement of individual from one place to another.
- valorem-its a standard.
- determines the tax by applying the tax rate to the taxable base amount.
- of trade- The ratio of export rates and import rates.
- Do not have work.
- tax- can be past.
- tax-Taxes can be classified on the basis of the object of taxation.
- It is an employee.
- It is an available goods and services.
Down
- fund-tracks the stock market as a whole.
- cost- It is a cost unchangeable.
- who live one country or region to settle in another.
- it is an decrease price.
- force- It is a sum of employed and unemployed.
- factors-Positive aspect.
- Enter and settle in a foreign country.
- factors-Negative reasons.
- is a high currency.
- It is an opportunity cost of engaging.
- tax-the ones paid to the government through the Bureau of. Internal Revenue (BIR).
- demand- It is an employee wishes to hire.
- not changeable.
- cost- It is a cost changeable.
- structure- degree of competition of the market.
- economic term of being secure and safe.
- coupons payment
- it is a power to enforce contributions to raise gov. fund.
- rate- It is an price of every unit of a foreign currency valued.
- The Bureau of Internal Revenue.
- dept- it is a big loans promote inflation.
- money set aside for future use and not spent immediately.
- supply- It is an offered to hire.
- market- It is a major component of every economy.
- tax-Governments impose income taxes on financial income.
- goods- outputs.
- matter-capitalization tax.
- goods- inputs.
- it is a gov funds.
50 Clues: goods- inputs. • Responsiveness. • not changeable. • coupons payment • goods- outputs. • Do not have work. • tax- can be past. • it is a gov funds. • It is an employee. • is a high currency. • cost- Sum of VC&FC. • tax- It is from lgu. • it is a low currency. • tax- cannot be shifted. • valorem-its a standard. • it is an decrease price. • factors-Positive aspect. • factors-Negative reasons. • ...
Applied economics 2024-11-27
Across
- Economic concept that describes the responsiveness of one variable to changes in another variable.
- wage The lowest amount of money that employers can legally pay their employees for a given period of work.
- Is any factor that could negatively impact a company's finances or operations, such as lost profits or failure.
- Intangible products that are the result of one or more people's work.
- Is a good or service that a business sells to consumers.
- Are used in business to measure change and express quantity in relation to a whole.
- Is away to motivate employees to increase productivity, improve relationships, and increase profits.
- The effect of your actions, decisions, products, or services on your organization's performance, goals, and stakeholders.
- The indirect costs or benefits that affect people or entities outside of a business transaction.
- The value of the business's balance sheet is at least a starting point for determining the business's worth.
- Is apredetermined target that a business or individual plans to achieve in a set period of time.
- The total amount of satisfaction experienced when a product or service is consumed.
- Is a statistical term that designates the pool from which a sample is drawn for a study.
- Is imposed on the net income of corporations, partnerships, and other entities engaged in business activities.
- Is an amount of money earned that exceeds that which is economically or socially necessary.
- Is amarket structure where a small number of companies control the market and limit competition.
Down
- Can refer to a company changing its tax residence or the movement of people for employment.
- The amount available at a specific price or the amount available across a range of prices if displayed on a graph.
- Is a plan to put money to work today to obtain a greater amount of money in the future. It is also the primary way people save for major purchases or retirement.
- The performance difference of a business and those of other businesses.
- The business of granting to any person rights to use any goods other than books whether pursuant to a lease bailment or licence or otherwise.
- The total quantity of a product or service that consumers are willing and able to purchase at a given price and time.
- Is a limited availability of resources, products, or opportunities relative to the demand or desire for them.
- People often demand higher wages to prepare for future price increases when they expect prices to rise.
- market Is a specific group of potential customers who a business aims to reach with its products or services.
- The physical premises where it conducts its operations.
- rate Is a pricing strategy that charges customers a predetermined fee for a specific product or service, regardless of the time spent or resources utilized.
- Rates The amount charged on top of the principal by a lender to a borrower for the use of assets.
- The money it has available to fund its day-to-day operations and to bankroll its expansion for the future.
- Is a market structure where a single company or group controls the supply of a product or service, and has little to no competition.
30 Clues: The physical premises where it conducts its operations. • Is a good or service that a business sells to consumers. • Intangible products that are the result of one or more people's work. • The performance difference of a business and those of other businesses. • Are used in business to measure change and express quantity in relation to a whole. • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-27
Across
- - is the rate at which the prices of goods and services rise.
- -which is a measure of how the average price of a basket of goods and services changes over time
- -A system where a par value is set between the domestic and the foreign currency by the central bank
- - the amount of money left over after spending and other obligations are deducted from earnings.
- - a corporate tax levied on individuals or companies selling orleasing goods, property, or services in the context of a transaction
- -a person (as an individual or corporation) that pays or is liable for a tax
- - is an asset or commodity obtained to produce sales or appreciation.
- -is the rate at which the prices of goods and services rise.
- -the amount of money an employee is paid for their work, usually expressed as a weekly, hourly, or annual figure
- - the gradual decline in the economic value of an asset over tim
- e = 0
- - the interest rate before taking inflation into account.
- - is the amount a lender charges for the use of assets
- - a fixed amount of money paid to an employee by their employer on a regular basis, usually monthly
- - overall expansion
- -the money an individual or business receives for their work, services, investments, or the sale of goods.
- input / to produce fonal goods
- - refers to an increase in an object's value over time.
- - is revenue arising from land ownership and other gifts from nature.
- - the original amount of money borrowed, or the amount still owed on a loan, before interest and fees are added.
- - are compulsory charges by the government used to fund its different operations.
- -the tax imposed by the government on imported goods from other countries.
- - e = 1
- - This interest rate does not have a set rate for a commodity
- - is the amount a creditor charges for the use of assets expressed asa percentage of the principal amount.
- - the money used to build, run, or grow a business
- - a tax levied on the production, distribution, or use of a good in acountry.
- - is the general rise in prices that decreases money's purchasingpower
- - a tax on personal income. This is usually levied to employees andentities and is based on respective profit or income.
- - a metric that measures the average income earned per person in a given area over a specific period of time
- - an alien who has not passed the green card test or the substantial presence test.
Down
- - a person who is legally living or working in a particular loca
- - is the minimum amount of compensation an employer is required to payits workers for work performed within a particular time.
- - a sales tax levied on the consumption of the sale of goods,services, properties, and imported goods
- - a relative price of one currency expressed in terms of another currency (or group of currencies).
- - output
- - a government-controlled corporation that seeks to provide universalhealth care in the Philippines.
- - the increase in value of an asset over time.
- - is a predefined fee or payment on top of the value of the purchase. It merelycharges a single fixed fee for a servic
- - is determined by subtracting total contributions (SSS/GSIS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG) and otherdeductions to basic income.
- - the interest rate on a loan or investment before adjusting for inflation, fees, or compounding
- - a tax levied on earnings that the purchaser believed to have beenearned on the sale, swap, or other disposals of the Philippine-based capital assets,
- - e < 1
- - a state-run social institution that provides affordable housing and loanschemes for Filipinos.
- - a tax on the right of a deceased person to transfer their estate at thetime of death to their rightful heirs and recipients.
- -a measure of the total value of all goods and services produced by a country's residents and businesses in a given period of time, usually a year.
- - measure of responsive
- - the interest rate charged for a home loan.
- -A system in which a nation's currency price is determined based on supply and demand of other currencies in the forex market.
- - a statistical measurement of how two or more variables change in relation to each other
- -borrowing costs become cheaper
- - e > 1
- - e = infinite
- - a tax on a donation or gift and is imposed on the free transfer ofproperty between two or more persons living at the time of the transfer.
- - a tax on papers, instruments, loan agreements, anddocumentation showing the approval, assignment, settlement, or change of acontract or right.
- - a non-U.S. citizen who is born in a foreign country and lives in the U.S.
- - a sudden and significant increase in interest in something:
- - refers to the original sum of money borrowed into a loan. Interest isthe charge of using cash, and time is the duration until the loan matures.
- - financial institutions
- - an amount of money that is paid to an employee,. for each hour worked
60 Clues: e = 0 • - e < 1 • - e > 1 • - e = 1 • - output • - e = infinite • - overall expansion • - measure of responsive • - financial institutions • input / to produce fonal goods • -borrowing costs become cheaper • - the interest rate charged for a home loan. • - the increase in value of an asset over time. • - the money used to build, run, or grow a business • ...
Applied Economics 2024-11-28
Across
- A term used to describe a situation where the quantity demanded of a good changes significantly in response to a price change.
- The process of distinguishing a product or service from others to make it more attractive to a particular target market.
- A market structure dominated by a few large firms, where each firm has significant influence over the market.
- An agreement between firms to fix prices or limit competition in order to achieve a favorable market outcome.
- (PPF): A curve that shows the maximum feasible amount of two goods that an economy can produce given its resources and technology.
- A payment made by a tenant to a landlord for the use of land or property.
- A situation where the quantity demanded of a good changes very little in response to a price change.
- Goods that are produced and consumed by the end consumer, not used to produce other goods.
- A situation where any small change in price results in an infinite change in the quantity demanded.
- Items that are purchased for investment purposes, often for their rarity, condition, or historical value, like art, coins, or antiques.
- A situation where the quantity demanded of a good remains unchanged regardless of the price change.
- A tax imposed on the transfer of property by gift or donation.
- The value of access to specific geographic areas, often used in property or real estate valuation.
- The allocation of resources (such as money or capital) into assets or projects that are expected to generate income or appreciation over time.
- The rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises, leading to a decrease in purchasing power.
- A good for which demand increases as income rises, and decreases as income falls.
- The actual rate of interest earned or paid on a loan or investment after accounting for the effect of compounding.
- The total income generated by a business from the sale of goods or services.
- A simplified representation of an economic process or system used to analyze and predict economic behavior.
- A measure of how much the quantity demanded of a good changes in response to a change in price.
- A market structure where a single firm dominates the market and has significant control over prices and supply.
- Mandatory contributions levied on individuals or businesses by a government to fund public expenditures.
- The organizational characteristics of a market, including the number of firms, product differentiation, and the level of competition.
- The original sum of money invested or loaned, before interest or other charges.
- A good that is used in conjunction with another good, such as printers and ink.
- The responsiveness of the quantity demanded for one good to a change in the price of another good.
Down
- Banks that primarily serve businesses and corporations, providing services like business loans, treasury management, and cash management.
- A tax on specific goods, often imposed on products like alcohol, tobacco, and gasoline.
- The lowest legal wage that an employer can pay an employee, often set by the government.
- The increase in the value of an asset over time, often due to market demand or improvements in the asset's condition.
- A market structure characterized by many firms offering differentiated products that are not perfect substitutes.
- A situation where the quantity demanded of a good changes exactly in proportion to the price change.
- Financial institutions that accept deposits from the public, offer loans, and provide other financial services.
- The percentage charged on a loan or paid on an investment over a period of time.
- A tax levied by governments on individuals’ or businesses’ earnings.
- Goods that are used in the production of other goods, not sold directly to consumers.
- A good for which demand decreases as income rises, and increases as income falls.
- A tax on the value of real estate or personal property, typically levied by local governments.
- A market structure where numerous small firms sell identical products, and no single firm can influence the market price. There are no barriers to entry or exit.
- Investment funds that pool money from multiple investors to purchase a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities.
- The stated interest rate on a loan or investment, without adjusting for inflation.
- Banks that provide services directly to individuals, including checking and savings accounts, personal loans, and mortgages.
- A tax on an individual’s salary or income, typically withheld by an employer.
- A type of digital or virtual currency that uses cryptography for security, making it difficult to counterfeit or double-spend.
- Securities that represent ownership in a corporation and constitute a claim on part of the corporation’s assets and earnings.
45 Clues: A tax imposed on the transfer of property by gift or donation. • A tax levied by governments on individuals’ or businesses’ earnings. • A payment made by a tenant to a landlord for the use of land or property. • The total income generated by a business from the sale of goods or services. • ...
APPLIED ECONOMICS 2024-12-04
Across
- The offers addresses in recognized business districts, instantly
- values are standards of behavior that outline what is acceptable business practice.
- The individuals and businesses that purchase goods and services from another business.
- The goals for growth and explains how you will achieve them.
- Is a strategic process that helps businesses set a direction, anticipate growth, and prepare for challenges.
- Is a specific group of people or businesses that are most likely to buy your products or services.
- Is a period of time when a business focuses on immediate operational needs and short-term solutions.
- Is a document that outlines a company's goals, strategies, and financial projections.
- The offers financial and operational planning and analytics that create a connected enterprise experience.
- Is a central bank's strategy for managing the money supply and interest rates to control inflation and promote economic growth.
- Is a competitive exchange among rival companies who lower the price points on their products, in a strategic attempt to undercut one another and capture greater market share.
- provided by a government and funded through taxes.
- Is a home business plan from Synergy that is for premises where the electricity is used for both residential and general purposes, and the circuit wiring is not separate.
- The income statement, the cash flow projection, the balance sheet, and the statement of shareholders' equity.
- Is a secret agreement between competitors to gain an unfair advantage in the market.
- Is a government's use of taxation and spending to influence the economy, and it's not directly related to a business plan.
- Is one of the three core financial statements that are used to evaluate a business.
Down
- The process of dividing a company's target market into groups of customers with similar needs and behaviors.
- A company ceasing operations following its inability to make a profit or to bring in enough.
- The economy will not grow as quickly as it could, and it may start to slow down.
- An organization's assets and are thus the basic building blocks of the organization.
- In a business plan is the point where supply and demand are balanced, and prices are stable.
- Is typically measured by its net worth, which is also known as shareholders' equity or book value.
- The profit you make as a result of your investments.
- A business plan is when a business has more cash coming in than going out.
- Is an economic condition where inflation and stagnation occur simultaneously.
- Governments can fund this money back into the economy in the form of loans or other funding forms.
- Is a process where prices of consumer goods and services fall and money increases in value.
- The people that are employed in a company and contribute to its operations through their skills.
- Is an incentive given by the government to individuals or businesses in the form of cash, grants, or tax breaks that improve the supply of certain goods and services.
30 Clues: provided by a government and funded through taxes. • The profit you make as a result of your investments. • The goals for growth and explains how you will achieve them. • The offers addresses in recognized business districts, instantly • A business plan is when a business has more cash coming in than going out. • ...
macro economics 2025-05-05
Across
- gap, when aggregate demand exceeds full employment output
- sum of frictional and structural unemployment when the economy is at full capacity
- Inflation adjusted to remove volatile items like food and fuel
- central bank policies affecting interest rates and money supply.
- a good that is non-excludable and non-rivalrous
- – The total amount of money available in the economy
- when aggregate demand equals aggregate supply
- unemployment caused by downturns in the business cycle
- raw inflation figure including all items such as food and energy
- portion of extra income that is spent
- a gap occurs when aggregate demand is less than full employment output
- general increase in prices over time
- indicator that predicts future economic activity
- A record of all economic transactions with the rest of the world
- reduction in the rate of inflation
- unemployment during job transitions
- type of inflation caused by increased demand in the economy
- a phase with increasing economic activity and growth
- a severe and prolonged economic downturn
Down
- Total demand for goods and services in the economy
- expenditure that occurs regardless of income levels.
- two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth
- ratio of change in GDP to an initial change in spending
- an account that records trade in goods/services income and transfers
- working fewer hours than desired or in jobs below skill level
- a phase of the economic cycle with declining growth
- combination of stagnant economic growth and high inflation
- Introduction of income into the economy
- measures changes in the price level of a basket of consumer goods and services.
- government policies on spending and taxation to influence the economy
- fair allocation of income across society
- government spends more than it earns
- a curve which shows the inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation
- sustained decrease in the general price level of goods and services.
- supply total output of goods and services in the economy
- GDP measured at current market prices, without adjusting for inflation
- type of inflation caused by rising production costs
37 Clues: reduction in the rate of inflation • unemployment during job transitions • government spends more than it earns • general increase in prices over time • portion of extra income that is spent • Introduction of income into the economy • fair allocation of income across society • a severe and prolonged economic downturn • when aggregate demand equals aggregate supply • ...
macro economics 2025-05-05
Across
- raw inflation figure including all items such as food and energy
- an account that records trade in goods/services income and transfers
- a gap occurs when aggregate demand exceeds full employment output
- general increase in prices over time
- combination of stagnant economic growth and high inflation
- when aggregate demand equals aggregate supply
- sustained decrease in the general price level of goods and services.
- GDP measured at current market prices, without adjusting for inflation
- type of inflation caused by rising production costs
- government policies on spending and taxation to influence the economy
- A record of all economic transactions with the rest of the world
- Introduction of income into the economy
- Inflation adjusted to remove volatile items like food and fuel
- fair allocation of income across society
- total output of goods and services in the economy
- government spends more than it earns
- a curve which shows the inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation
- central bank policies affecting interest rates and money supply.
- a good that is non-excludable and non-rivalrous
Down
- a phase of the economic cycle with declining growth
- working fewer hours than desired or in jobs below skill level
- sum of frictional and structural unemployment when the economy is at full capacity
- a gap occurs when aggregate demand is less than full employment output
- indicator that predicts future economic activity
- a severe and prolonged economic downturn
- a phase with increasing economic activity and growth
- two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth
- expenditure that occurs regardless of income levels.
- unemployment during job transitions
- The total amount of money available in the economy
- portion of extra income that is spent
- reduction in the rate of inflation
- ratio of change in GDP to an initial change in spending
- type of inflation caused by increased demand in the economy
- measures changes in the price level of a basket of consumer goods and services.
- unemployment caused by downturns in the business cycle
- Total demand for goods and services in the economy
37 Clues: reduction in the rate of inflation • unemployment during job transitions • general increase in prices over time • government spends more than it earns • portion of extra income that is spent • Introduction of income into the economy • a severe and prolonged economic downturn • fair allocation of income across society • when aggregate demand equals aggregate supply • ...
Economics Max 2024-03-12
Across
- factors that make it difficult to enter a market
- the ability to control prices
- the idea that every customer has a maximum price that they would pay
- enables a monopolistically competitive seller to profit from the differences between their product and the competitors
- agreement to illegally set prices and production levels
- also known as perfect competition
- agreement to sell at a similar price
- the government no longer decides what role each company can play
- companies in the same market but their products aren't identical
- a monopoly created by the government
- a market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all the output
Down
- Factors that cause costs to drop and production to rise
- expenses that a business must pay before it can begin production
- a product that is considered the same regardless of whoever makes them
- competition for the lowest price
- granting firms the right to operate a business
- gives a company exclusive rights to sell a new good or service
- an agreement among firms to coordinate prices and production
- similar to a cartel
- when a market is dominated by a few firms
- when competitors cut their prices to win business
- local authority gives a single firm rights to sell there goods
- when two companies join to make a single firm
- laws government policies
- a single seller that controls an entire market
25 Clues: similar to a cartel • laws government policies • the ability to control prices • competition for the lowest price • also known as perfect competition • agreement to sell at a similar price • a monopoly created by the government • when a market is dominated by a few firms • when two companies join to make a single firm • granting firms the right to operate a business • ...
Economics Crossword 2024-02-26
Across
- a product or service that consumers see as essentially the same or similar-enough to another product
- an economic theory that predicts how the price of goods and services affects their supply
- table that shows the quantity demanded of a good or service
- the change in output that results from employing an added unit of labor
- a good that experiences an increase in demand due to an increase in a consumer's income
- the static quantity of a good or service when its price changes
- a table that shows the quantity supplied at each price
- the use of population data as a way to study the patterns of behavior among groups of people that impact the economy
- a direct or indirect payment to individuals or firms, usually in the form of a cash payment from the government or a targeted tax cut
- a graphical representation of the relationship between the price of a good or service and the quantity demanded for a given period of time
- average fixed cost equals the total variable cost per unit of produced quantity
- the total amount of money that a company earns through the selling of its goods and services, over a time period
- taxes levied on specific goods or services like fuel, tobacco, and alcohol
- the change in total production cost that comes from making or producing one
- an item that becomes less desirable as the income of consumers increases
- the cost that is required to produce a product
- measures how much the quantity supplied of a good or service changes when there is a price change
- an economic concept used to measure the change in the aggregate quantity demanded of a good or service in relation to price movements of that good or service
- ongoing expenses incurred from the normal day-to-day of running a business
- a tabulation of the quantity of a good that all consumers in a market will purchase at a given price
- adding an additional factor of production results in smaller increases in output
- takes place when the demand and subsequent sales numbers for a particular product decrease as the result of a price increase
Down
- the degree to which demand responds to a change in an economic factor
- as the price of a good or service increases, the quantity of goods or services increases
- the number of goods or services that suppliers will produce and sell at a given market price
- the quantity purchased varies inversely with price
- describes how an increase in income can change the quantity of goods that consumers will demand
- a table that lists the quantity supplied for a good or service that suppliers throughout the whole economy are willing and able to supply at all possible prices
- an expense that changes in proportion to production output or sales
- The scenario where the additional unit of a variable factor of production results in higher output per unit, given that all other factors are constant
- indicators that show us the current trends in the economy
- all variables are the same
- costs that are independent of volume
- rules that limit who can enter a business (entry controls) and what prices they may charge
- a given percentage change in price leads to an equal percentage change in quantity demanded or supplied
- a graph that shows the relationship between price and supply
- the increase in revenue that results from the sale of one additional unit of output
- a good that adds value to another good when they are consumed together
- a graph that shows the relationship between price and supply
- An increase in orders and shipments of capital good
40 Clues: all variables are the same • costs that are independent of volume • the cost that is required to produce a product • the quantity purchased varies inversely with price • An increase in orders and shipments of capital good • a table that shows the quantity supplied at each price • indicators that show us the current trends in the economy • ...
Economics BJV 2022-01-08
Across
- Necessary for survival
- The idea that it is necessary for some companies to fail, and others to succeed, to have a healthy economy (2)
- creating new and better products
- Part of GDP. Something you do for others
- How many goods and services a country makes in a year (3)
- Something that motivates someone to do something
- A tax on trade
- The next best thing you give up when you make a choice (2)
- Investing in multiple companies (2)
- The money you make off an investment
- Trying to help companies in your own country, and hurt foreign competition
- as price goes up people buy less (3)
- Number of people needed to make various products such as a pencil
- When the value of your money decreases
Down
- Supply is greater than demand
- shipping products to other countries
- Tells us how the economy is doing overall (2)
- Country with third highest GDP
- How much people want something
- Doing something that leads to a unexpected result; often trying to make something better but making it worse (2)
- Focusing on one thing and becoming really good at it
- Limited resources
- Who or what sets prices (2)
- The work force. A factor of production
- products brought into your country
- Nations are always better off when they trade (2)
- Buying assets with the goal of making a profit
- Makes nations and people richer
- Lower prices and leads to newer and better products
- Owning part of a company
30 Clues: A tax on trade • Limited resources • Necessary for survival • Owning part of a company • Who or what sets prices (2) • Supply is greater than demand • Country with third highest GDP • How much people want something • Makes nations and people richer • creating new and better products • products brought into your country • Investing in multiple companies (2) • ...
Basic Economics 2024-04-12
Across
- a system in which answers to the basic economic questions are produced by the decisions of buyers and sellers freely exchanging goods and services in the marketplace
- alternatives we give up when we choose one course of action over another
- something people must have to survive, like air, food, and shelter
- the limited amounts of resources to meet unlimited desires.
- a cost that rises or falls depending on the quantity of good produced
- the study of how people choose from limited resources to meet their needs and wants.
- something that people would like to have but is not necessary for survival.
- the amount of a good or service that is available to consumers
- The benefit of adding one more unit of anything, such as one more hour of studying
- Fixed and variable costs together
- property owned by a person and not a government
- Economists call the resources used to make goods and service
- the cost of producing one more unit of a good
- an economy is using resources in such a way as to maximize the production of goods and services
Down
- work for which people receive pay.
- occurs when a good or service is unavailable
- are people who put together land, labor, and capital to create new businesses.
- A nation’s economy must grow in order to improve its level of prosperity
- the central government, rather than individual producers and consumers in markets, answers the key economic questions about production and consumption
- objects, like cars and clothes
- says that as the price of one good rises, people are likely to choose a substitute good
- a cost that does not change, no matter how much the business produces
- the method a society uses to produce and distribute goods and services
- the struggle between producers for the dollars of consumers
- What goods and services should be produced? How should these goods and services be produced? Who consumes these goods and services?
- an arrangement that allows buyers and sellers to exchange goods and services
- the most desirable alternative given up.
- which relies on custom to make most economic decisions
- deciding about adding or subtracting one unit of a resource
- the desire to own something and the ability to pay for it.
- combining free markets with some government involvement.
- actions that people do for others, such as teaching
- a human-made resource used to produce other goods and services
33 Clues: objects, like cars and clothes • Fixed and variable costs together • work for which people receive pay. • the most desirable alternative given up. • occurs when a good or service is unavailable • the cost of producing one more unit of a good • property owned by a person and not a government • actions that people do for others, such as teaching • ...
Economics Crossword 2024-04-18
Across
- The total value of all goods and services produced in an economy in a given period.
- The market price at which the quantity of a good demanded by consumers equals the quantity supplied by producers.
- The opposite of Quantitative Easing
- When MSC > MSB
- Defined as less than $2.15 a day at PPP
- The study of how individuals and firms make decisions and allocate resources in markets.
- A measure of the general level of prices in an economy.
- When temporary shocks have permanent effects
- A tax on an import
- A situation where one party has more information than another, leading to market inefficiencies.
Down
- A situation where the quantity of a good demanded exceeds the quantity supplied at a given price.
- Actions taken by the government to influence economic activity, such as taxation and spending.
- When government actions result in outcomes worse than if they had not intervened at all.
- A tax system where the average tax rate increases as income increases.
- Actions taken by the government to control the money supply and interest rates to influence economic activity.
- When prices are rising at a decreasing rate
- The name of the effect when asset prices change affecting animal spirits
- A measure of how responsive quantity demanded is to a change in price.
- The study of the overall economy, including factors like inflation, unemployment, and economic growth.
- A market structure characterized by a single seller of a unique product with significant barriers to entry.
- 1/1-MPC
- A system where goods and services are exchanged, and prices are determined by supply and demand.
22 Clues: 1/1-MPC • When MSC > MSB • A tax on an import • The opposite of Quantitative Easing • Defined as less than $2.15 a day at PPP • When prices are rising at a decreasing rate • When temporary shocks have permanent effects • A measure of the general level of prices in an economy. • A tax system where the average tax rate increases as income increases. • ...
Economics Vocab 2024-04-19
Across
- an activity that someone is paid to perform
- Scottish economist who came up with the idea of capitalism. He is known as the father of modern economics, wrote the Wealth of Nations, and influenced the Founding Fathers of the United States.
- the way people earn and spend money
- a person who buys goods and services
- the money received in payment for goods or services (rent, wages, interest)
- the founder of a business. Someone who assumes the risk of organizing resources to produce goods and services. Someone who sees an opportunity to make money and takes it.
- an economic system where businesses and property are privately owned. The price and amount of goods traded are based on supply and demand and has little government regulation.
- the money left over after all expenses are paid
- an economic system where property and business are owned by the government. The government makes choices about producing and pricing. The consumers have no choice.
- the government’s job is to protect property rights.
Down
- individuals own businesses and property rather than the government
- people or businesses offering goods for sale
- the right to make decisions for an individual’s business or property
- the amount the seller has to sell at a particular price
- the name of Adam Smith’s idea of a free market economy
- the government’s right to take private property for public use as long as they pay a fair price to the owner
- what consumers are willing to buy at a given price
- the things that people sell
- the person who makes the goods
- when different businesses compete for consumers’ money such as Walmart v. Target or Microsoft v. Apple.
20 Clues: the things that people sell • the person who makes the goods • the way people earn and spend money • a person who buys goods and services • an activity that someone is paid to perform • people or businesses offering goods for sale • the money left over after all expenses are paid • what consumers are willing to buy at a given price • ...
Economics Crossword 2024-04-22
26 Clues: cobra • claim • policy • perdiem • premium • benefits • coverage • Insurance • uninsured • inpatient • deduction • negligence • Deductible • enrollment • telehealth • coinsurance • beneficiary • prescription • contribution • policyholder • compensation • personalrisk • liabilityrisk • outofpocketmaximum • primarycareprovider • flexiblespendingaccount
Economics Vocabulary 2021-08-24
Across
- When people depend on one another- often goes along with specialization
- When a good or service is in short supply. (Having a limited amount of something)
- The stop of all trade between two countries. This is usually done for political reasons (war with a country, not agreeing with their government, not supporting terrorism)
- Total percentage of people in a population who can read and write
- Tax on goods imported or exported
- Someone who makes/produces a good
- High GDP, high literacy rate, high investment in the four productive resources
- Taking a risk to start his/her own business
- When you make a choice between two or more things, what you DON'T choose would be this
- Changing from one type of currency to another in order to purchase goods across the world market
- Factories, machinery, roads, buildings
- Human Capital, Capital, Natural Resources, Entrepreneurship
- Something you have
- Any kind of work performed for others
- The economy of aborigines, they produce only what they need to survive and produce things that same way they did in the past
- Having a limited amount of something
- Low GDP, low literacy rate, low investment or no investment in the four productive resources
- A person who purchases goods and services for personal use
Down
- When you or a company is a professional at a certain task. Then everyone comes together to produce something
- If the supply is high, the demand is low. If the supply is low the demand is high
- Government-imposed restrictions on international trade (Goods being imported/exported)
- Total amount of all goods and services produced in a country in a year
- What to produce, how to produce, for whom to produce
- A nation's form of money
- Any kind of merchandise you can purchase
- An economy where both the government and consumers decide what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce
- An economy where consumers answer the basic questions and prices are set by supply and demand
- Something you want
- An economy where the government owns everything and decides what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce
- Education, healthcare, training of workers
- A limit on the amount of foreign goods that can be imported. This protects domestic goods (goods made in the home country)
- Resources that come from nature
- The degree of wealth and material comfort. Housing, food, health care, educational opportunities, and income available to the people in a country
- To trade NOT using money---Ex: I will trade 2 goats for 3 chickens. Often done in traditional economies
34 Clues: Something you want • Something you have • A nation's form of money • Resources that come from nature • Tax on goods imported or exported • Someone who makes/produces a good • Having a limited amount of something • Any kind of work performed for others • Factories, machinery, roads, buildings • Any kind of merchandise you can purchase • Education, healthcare, training of workers • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2021-08-24
Across
- When people depend on one another- often goes along with specialization
- When a good or service is in short supply. (Having a limited amount of something)
- The stop of all trade between two countries. This is usually done for political reasons (war with a country, not agreeing with their government, not supporting terrorism)
- Total percentage of people in a population who can read and write
- Tax on goods imported or exported
- Someone who makes/produces a good
- High GDP, high literacy rate, high investment in the four productive resources
- Taking a risk to start his/her own business
- When you make a choice between two or more things, what you DON'T choose would be this
- Changing from one type of currency to another in order to purchase goods across the world market
- Factories, machinery, roads, buildings
- Human Capital, Capital, Natural Resources, Entrepreneurship
- Something you have
- Any kind of work performed for others
- The economy of aborigines, they produce only what they need to survive and produce things that same way they did in the past
- Having a limited amount of something
- Low GDP, low literacy rate, low investment or no investment in the four productive resources
- A person who purchases goods and services for personal use
Down
- When you or a company is a professional at a certain task. Then everyone comes together to produce something
- If the supply is high, the demand is low. If the supply is low the demand is high
- Government-imposed restrictions on international trade (Goods being imported/exported)
- Total amount of all goods and services produced in a country in a year
- What to produce, how to produce, for whom to produce
- A nation's form of money
- Any kind of merchandise you can purchase
- An economy where both the government and consumers decide what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce
- An economy where consumers answer the basic questions and prices are set by supply and demand
- Something you want
- An economy where the government owns everything and decides what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce
- Education, healthcare, training of workers
- A limit on the amount of foreign goods that can be imported. This protects domestic goods (goods made in the home country)
- Resources that come from nature
- The degree of wealth and material comfort. Housing, food, health care, educational opportunities, and income available to the people in a country
- To trade NOT using money---Ex: I will trade 2 goats for 3 chickens. Often done in traditional economies
34 Clues: Something you want • Something you have • A nation's form of money • Resources that come from nature • Tax on goods imported or exported • Someone who makes/produces a good • Having a limited amount of something • Any kind of work performed for others • Factories, machinery, roads, buildings • Any kind of merchandise you can purchase • Education, healthcare, training of workers • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2021-08-24
Across
- Any kind of merchandise you can purchase
- Human Capital, Capital, Natural Resources, Entrepreneurship
- A person who purchases goods and services for personal use
- When you make a choice between two or more things, what you DON'T choose would be this
- Education, healthcare, training of workers
- High GDP, high literacy rate, high investment in the four productive resources
- Any kind of work performed for others
- Total percentage of people in a population who can read and write
- The economy of aborigines, they produce only what they need to survive and produce things that same way they did in the past
- If the supply is high, the demand is low. If the supply is low the demand is high
- Taking a risk to start his/her own business
- Low GDP, low literacy rate, low investment or no investment in the four productive resources
- Total amount of all goods and services produced in a country in a year
- Having a limited amount of something
- What to produce, how to produce, for whom to produce
- The degree of wealth and material comfort. Housing, food, health care, educational opportunities, and income available to the people in a country
Down
- The stop of all trade between two countries. This is usually done for political reasons (war with a country, not agreeing with their government, not supporting terrorism)
- Someone who makes/produces a good
- Resources that come from nature
- A nation's form of money
- Factories, machinery, roads, buildings
- An economy where consumers answer the basic questions and prices are set by supply and demand
- Tax on goods imported or exported
- When you or a company is a professional at a certain task. Then everyone comes together to produce something
- Something you want
- When people depend on one another- often goes along with specialization
- Something you have
- To trade NOT using money---Ex: I will trade 2 goats for 3 chickens. Often done in traditional economies
- An economy where the government owns everything and decides what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce
- An economy where both the government and consumers decide what to produce, how to produce, and for whom to produce
- Changing from one type of currency to another in order to purchase goods across the world market
- Government-imposed restrictions on international trade (Goods being imported/exported)
- A limit on the amount of foreign goods that can be imported. This protects domestic goods (goods made in the home country)
33 Clues: Something you want • Something you have • A nation's form of money • Resources that come from nature • Someone who makes/produces a good • Tax on goods imported or exported • Having a limited amount of something • Any kind of work performed for others • Factories, machinery, roads, buildings • Any kind of merchandise you can purchase • Education, healthcare, training of workers • ...
economics vocab 2021-06-02
Across
- income, especially when of a company or organization and of a substantial nature.
- the process of concentrating on and becoming expert in a particular subject or skill.
- means by which societies or governments organize and distribute available resources, services, and goods across a geographic region or country.
- the gap between limited resources and theoretically limitless wants. This situation requires people to make decisions about how to allocate resources efficiently, in order to satisfy basic needs and as many additional wants as possible
- a regular gathering of people for the purchase and sale of provisions, livestock, and other commodities.
- the state of being a partner or partners.
- a state of limited competition, in which a market is shared by a small number of producers or sellers.
- the exclusive possession or control of the supply of or trade in a commodity or service.
- the right to the possession, use, or disposal of something; ownership.
- the state or quality of producing something, especially crops.
- a stock or supply of money, materials, staff, and other assets that can be drawn on by a person or organization in order to function effectively.
- a person who is the exclusive owner of a business, entitled to keep all profits after tax has been paid but liable for all losses
- a company or group of people authorized to act as a single entity (legally a person) and recognized as such in law.
- the state of being unemployed.
Down
- a system of money in general use in a particular country.
- a cycle or series of cycles of economic expansion and contraction.
- relating to government revenue, especially taxes.
- the activity of setting up a business or businesses, taking on financial risks in the hope of profit.
- the action of spending funds.
- the action of inflating something or the condition of being inflated.
- the amount of a good or service offered for sale
- the minimum interest rate set by the Federal Reserve for lending to other banks.
- the loss of potential gain from other alternatives when one alternative is chosen.
- exchange (goods or services) for other goods or services without using money.
- the desire of purchasers, consumers, clients, employers, etc., for a particular commodity, service, or other item.
25 Clues: the action of spending funds. • the state of being unemployed. • the state of being a partner or partners. • the amount of a good or service offered for sale • relating to government revenue, especially taxes. • a system of money in general use in a particular country. • the state or quality of producing something, especially crops. • ...
Business Economics 2025-07-16
Across
- Vertical demand curve shows it is
- luxuries usually have____ demand
- Goods ready to be sold
- Total amount producers are willing to sell
- The study of how businesses allocate resources
- More price = more supply, less price = less supply
- Measures responsiveness of quantity demanded to price change
- Desires backed by ability to pay
- The curve which shows all combinations of two giving same level of satisfaction
- Supply is directly related to this factor
- An individual who uses goods and services
- Demand of necessity goods is generally
- Supply curve usually slopes
Down
- Price * Quantity = Total ___
- The law explaining inverse relation between price and demand
- Goods that replace each other like tea and coffee
- Study of individual economic units
- Luxuries usually have ___ demand
- point where budget line & IC are tangent
- Goods consumed together
- If elasticity = 1, demand is
- A graph showing demand and price relationship
- Demand curve usually slopes
- When demand changes more than proportionately with price
- A graph showing supply and price relationship
25 Clues: Goods ready to be sold • Goods consumed together • Demand curve usually slopes • Supply curve usually slopes • Price * Quantity = Total ___ • If elasticity = 1, demand is • luxuries usually have____ demand • Luxuries usually have ___ demand • Desires backed by ability to pay • Vertical demand curve shows it is • Study of individual economic units • ...
Economics Terms 2022-10-20
Across
- a set of actions to control a nation's overall money supply and achieve economic growth
- the amount a lender charges a borrower and is a percentage of the principal
- occurs when securities are on the rise
- a condition or state in which economic forces are balanced
- a period of increased commercial activity within either a business, market, industry, or economy as a whole
- the value or benefit given up by engaging in that activity, relative to engaging in an alternative activity
- when a company or business grows so large that the costs per unit increase.
- the average tax rate, or amount of tax paid as a percentage of income, decreases as income increases
- the use of government spending and taxation to influence the economy
Down
- monetary measure of the market value of all the final goods and services produced and sold in a specific time period by countries.
- the cost advantages that enterprises obtain due to their scale of operation
- a good that is both non-excludable and non-rivalrous
- commodities that the public sector provides free or cheaply because the government wishes to encourage their consumption.
- a principle of economics that captures the consumer's desire to buy the product or service
- the rate of increase in prices over a given period of time
- occurs when securities fall for a sustained period of time
- a tax where the. average tax rate, or the total amount of. tax paid as a percentage of income, increases as the taxpayer's income. increases.
- when a supplier sets a fixed price for a good or service for a certain time period
- a significant decline in economic activity spread across the market
- the total amount of a given product or service a supplier offers to consumers at a given period and a given price level.
20 Clues: occurs when securities are on the rise • a good that is both non-excludable and non-rivalrous • the rate of increase in prices over a given period of time • occurs when securities fall for a sustained period of time • a condition or state in which economic forces are balanced • a significant decline in economic activity spread across the market • ...
Economics Terms 2022-10-20
Across
- a set of actions to control a nation's overall money supply and achieve economic growth
- the amount a lender charges a borrower and is a percentage of the principal
- occurs when securities are on the rise
- a condition or state in which economic forces are balanced
- a period of increased commercial activity within either a business, market, industry, or economy as a whole
- the value or benefit given up by engaging in that activity, relative to engaging in an alternative activity
- when a company or business grows so large that the costs per unit increase.
- the average tax rate, or amount of tax paid as a percentage of income, decreases as income increases
- the use of government spending and taxation to influence the economy
Down
- monetary measure of the market value of all the final goods and services produced and sold in a specific time period by countries.
- the cost advantages that enterprises obtain due to their scale of operation
- a good that is both non-excludable and non-rivalrous
- commodities that the public sector provides free or cheaply because the government wishes to encourage their consumption.
- a principle of economics that captures the consumer's desire to buy the product or service
- the rate of increase in prices over a given period of time
- occurs when securities fall for a sustained period of time
- a tax where the. average tax rate, or the total amount of. tax paid as a percentage of income, increases as the taxpayer's income. increases.
- when a supplier sets a fixed price for a good or service for a certain time period
- a significant decline in economic activity spread across the market
- the total amount of a given product or service a supplier offers to consumers at a given period and a given price level.
20 Clues: occurs when securities are on the rise • a good that is both non-excludable and non-rivalrous • the rate of increase in prices over a given period of time • occurs when securities fall for a sustained period of time • a condition or state in which economic forces are balanced • a significant decline in economic activity spread across the market • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2022-08-30
Across
- An example of the means of production in an economy
- In this type of economy, the government owns the factories
- new or recent
- France and Spain are on this continent
- In this type of government, power is passed down through families
- one of the two countries that engaged in the Cold War
- Under communism, there is no private
- the way something is made to happen; resources
- Washington, D.C. is closest to this ocean
- Democracy is the system in the U.S.
- In this economic system, the government does not get involved in the economy
- Adam Smith used this phrase to describe competition in the marketplace
Down
- In a capitalist society, the means of production are owned
- things people buy and sell
- capital
- A time of big changes
- Earning money for work is known as wage
- Capitalism is based on a free
- In socialist economies, wealth is divided
- A large land mass
- Voting is an important element of this type of government
- people living together in an organised community
- Japan and Hawaii are islands in this ocean
23 Clues: capital • new or recent • A large land mass • A time of big changes • things people buy and sell • Capitalism is based on a free • Democracy is the system in the U.S. • Under communism, there is no private • France and Spain are on this continent • Earning money for work is known as wage • In socialist economies, wealth is divided • Washington, D.C. is closest to this ocean • ...
Business Economics 2022-10-31
Across
- Coal is an example of __ factors of production
- Type of economy that uses elements of all three
- level of income
- How much something is worth
- Created as a result of process
- of money
- A person who employ workers to producer goods
- The type of money that circulates in different
- Macroeconomics deals with
- Consumer's desire and willingness to pay a price
- Putting money aside to spend on a later date
- Valuable things to pay some goods or service
- The money used to start a business
- A picture or a symbol representing a business
Down
- Action of buying and selling goods and services
- services
- Knowledge about the production, consumption,
- People who buy your product
- Where buyers and sellers interact
- Goods and services sold to other countries
- The study of individual
- The sudden rise in price
- necessary for survival
- good
- Amount of money required to pay for a good or
- The situation that exists when there are not enough resources to meet human wants
- A luxury item
- Reward paid for unskilled labour
- The money paid to the government depending on
- Input factor classified as skilled, semiskilled and unskilled
30 Clues: good • services • of money • A luxury item • level of income • necessary for survival • The study of individual • The sudden rise in price • Macroeconomics deals with • People who buy your product • How much something is worth • Created as a result of process • Reward paid for unskilled labour • Where buyers and sellers interact • The money used to start a business • ...
Business Economics 2022-10-31
Across
- Coal is an example of __ factors of production
- Type of economy that uses elements of all three
- level of income
- How much something is worth
- Created as a result of process
- of money
- A person who employ workers to producer goods
- The type of money that circulates in different
- Macroeconomics deals with
- Consumer's desire and willingness to pay a price
- Putting money aside to spend on a later date
- Valuable things to pay some goods or service
- The money used to start a business
- A picture or a symbol representing a business
Down
- Action of buying and selling goods and services
- services
- Knowledge about the production, consumption,
- People who buy your product
- Where buyers and sellers interact
- Goods and services sold to other countries
- The study of individual
- The sudden rise in price
- necessary for survival
- good
- Amount of money required to pay for a good or
- The situation that exists when there are not enough resources to meet human wants
- A luxury item
- Reward paid for unskilled labour
- The money paid to the government depending on
- Input factor classified as skilled, semiskilled and unskilled
30 Clues: good • services • of money • A luxury item • level of income • necessary for survival • The study of individual • The sudden rise in price • Macroeconomics deals with • People who buy your product • How much something is worth • Created as a result of process • Reward paid for unskilled labour • Where buyers and sellers interact • The money used to start a business • ...
Business Economics 2022-10-31
Across
- Coal is an example of __ factors of production
- Type of economy that uses elements of all three
- level of income
- How much something is worth
- Created as a result of process
- of money
- A person who employ workers to producer goods
- The type of money that circulates in different
- Macroeconomics deals with
- Consumer's desire and willingness to pay a price
- Putting money aside to spend on a later date
- Valuable things to pay some goods or service
- The money used to start a business
- A picture or a symbol representing a business
Down
- Action of buying and selling goods and services
- services
- Knowledge about the production, consumption,
- People who buy your product
- Where buyers and sellers interact
- Goods and services sold to other countries
- The study of individual
- The sudden rise in price
- necessary for survival
- good
- Amount of money required to pay for a good or
- The situation that exists when there are not enough resources to meet human wants
- A luxury item
- Reward paid for unskilled labour
- The money paid to the government depending on
- Input factor classified as skilled, semiskilled and unskilled
30 Clues: good • services • of money • A luxury item • level of income • necessary for survival • The study of individual • The sudden rise in price • Macroeconomics deals with • People who buy your product • How much something is worth • Created as a result of process • Reward paid for unskilled labour • Where buyers and sellers interact • The money used to start a business • ...
Basic Economics 2022-02-01
Across
- The amount of money paid for an item
- What is the most common form of economy in the world today?
- rivalry creates __________
- The ____ economy has public ownership of all resources
- When wants can not be satisfied or something runs out
- When supply raises and demand stays the same the price will ___________
- an example of a natural resource
- people in a command economy have no ____ choice
- Change economic behavior (and student behavior!)
- Factors of production that are used to produce goods and services
- The three basic _____ of economics are: What, For whom, and Who
Down
- A worker at a restaurant is known as a _____ resource
- consumers are MOST important in what economy?
- What is given up when a choice is made
- The _____ controls the means of production in a command economy.
- The combining of resources to produce goods and services
- The free market economy has ______ ownership of all resources
- Consumer sovereignty means that consumers
- Tools, machinery and money are examples of ______ resources
- When supply drops and demand stays the same the price will _______
20 Clues: rivalry creates __________ • an example of a natural resource • The amount of money paid for an item • What is given up when a choice is made • Consumer sovereignty means that consumers • consumers are MOST important in what economy? • people in a command economy have no ____ choice • Change economic behavior (and student behavior!) • ...
Economics Test 2022-01-26
Across
- Someone or business who creates goods.
- The study of distribution of wealth and goods and services.
- During the Industrial Revolution James Hargreaves invented what?
- When there is more than enough of a resource.
- Long-lasting goods are known as _______ goods.
- The former Soviet Union is known as present day_______.
- Where did the Industrial Revolution begin?
- Who wrote the Wealth of Nations?
- The most measured tool for success in a capitalist economy is _____ gain.
- When there is not enough of a resource.
- Who wrote the Communist Manifesto?
Down
- During the Industrial Revolution Thomas Newcomen invented what?
- Things people must have to live.
- Marxism gives it's rulers absolute______.
- A person who buys and uses things.
- Adam Smith developed the idea of what?
- Things people have to make their lives more enjoyable.
- What economic system uses bartering?
- Goods that are replaced often.
- The limited supply of something.
- In what economic system does the government control everything?
21 Clues: Goods that are replaced often. • Things people must have to live. • The limited supply of something. • Who wrote the Wealth of Nations? • A person who buys and uses things. • Who wrote the Communist Manifesto? • What economic system uses bartering? • Someone or business who creates goods. • Adam Smith developed the idea of what? • When there is not enough of a resource. • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2022-04-25
Across
- A person who buys goods and services
- The amount the seller has to sell at a particular price.
- An economic system where property and business are owned by the government. The government makes choices about producing and pricing. The consumers have no choice.
- Individuals own businesses and property rather than the government.
- An economic system where businesses and property are privately owned. The price and amount of goods traded are based on supply and demand and has little government regulation.
- The government's right to take private property for public use as long as they pay a fair price to the owner.
- Scottish economist who came up with the idea of Capitalism. He is known as the father of modern economics, wrote The Wealth of Nations and influenced the Founding Fathers of the United States.
Down
- The name of Adam Smith's idea of a free market economy.
- The government's job is to protect property rights.
- When different businesses compete for consumers' money.
- what consumers are willing to buy at a given price
- The way people earn and spend money
- The things that people sell.
- people or businesses offering goods for sale.
- The money received in payment for goods or services (rent, wages, interest, or profit)
- An activity that someone is paid to perform
- The person who makes the goods
- The right to make decisions for an individual's business or property.
- The founder of a business. Someone who assumes the risk of organizing resources to produce goods and services. Someone who sees an opportunity to make money and takes it.
- The money left over after all expenses are paid
20 Clues: The things that people sell. • The person who makes the goods • The way people earn and spend money • A person who buys goods and services • An activity that someone is paid to perform • people or businesses offering goods for sale. • The money left over after all expenses are paid • what consumers are willing to buy at a given price • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2022-04-25
Across
- when there is not enough supply, but a great demand
- extra money set aside "just in case"
- the way you bring in income to buy goods and services
- wealth supplied by nature, like soil, sunlight, timber, and water
- people who make goods or provide services
- people who use goods and services
- someone who works to produce goods and services
- to receive products from abroad, usually from foreign countries
- the number of people that would like to buy a particular good or service
- to ship merchandise abroad, particularly to foreign countries
Down
- things that people would like to have but don't need to survive
- the amount of money a good or service costs
- food, shelter, air, clothing, and water
- the extra money left after a business pays all costs or production
- a good that is made to help produce other goods
- trading goods and services instead of using money
- the money you earn
- the quantity of a commodity (something of use) or service that is available
- things people do for others
- things people must have to live
- money you spend
21 Clues: money you spend • the money you earn • things people do for others • things people must have to live • people who use goods and services • extra money set aside "just in case" • food, shelter, air, clothing, and water • people who make goods or provide services • the amount of money a good or service costs • a good that is made to help produce other goods • ...
Economics Terms 2023-01-03
Across
- A security that provides ownership rights
- A security that promises repayment to a lender
- The act of exchanging goods and services
- Karl ______
- Revenue in excess of costs (revenue - costs)
- Gross ______ Product
- The relationship between price and quantity.
- Warren _______ the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway
- A payment for using money.
- When a few large sellers dominate the market
- A company's overall income
- A tax on trade
- Payment of profits to shareholders
Down
- ______ cost Next best alternative
- When inflation and unemployment increase
- There aren't enough resources for everyone
- Purchasing Power ________
- The condition of not having a job
- The tools and equipment used in production.
- Everything that is owned by an individual.
- The usefulness or satisfaction of doing something
- A general increase in the overall price level.
- The ability to buy a good or service
23 Clues: Karl ______ • A tax on trade • Gross ______ Product • Purchasing Power ________ • A payment for using money. • A company's overall income • ______ cost Next best alternative • The condition of not having a job • Payment of profits to shareholders • The ability to buy a good or service • When inflation and unemployment increase • The act of exchanging goods and services • ...
Economics Vocab 2022-12-13
Across
- An industry in which the inputs weigh more than the final products.
- A service that primarily meets the needs of other businesses, including professional, financial, and transportation services.
- A community’s collection of basic businesses.
- Manufacturing based in homes rather than in factories, most common prior to the Industrial Revolution.
- area The area surrounding a central place from which people are attracted to use the place’s goods and services (also known as hinterland).
- the transition to new manufacturing processes in Europe and the United States, in the period from about 1760 to sometime between 1820 and 1840.
- A market center for the exchange of services by people attracted from the surrounding area.
- The minimum number of people needed to support a service.
- Shipment of parts and materials to arrive at a factory moments before they are needed.
- A service that primarily meets the needs of individual consumers, including retail, education, health, and leisure services.
- A decision by a corporation to turn over much of the responsibility for production to independent suppliers.
- A theory that explains the distribution of services based on the fact that settlements serve as centers of market areas for services; larger settlements are fewer and farther apart than smaller settlements and provide services for a larger number of people who are willing to travel farther.
- These factors result from the unique characteristics of a location. These are labor, capital, and land.
Down
- These factors involve transporting materials to and from a factory. A firm seeks a location that minimizes the cost of transporting inputs to the factory and finished goods to consumers.
- An industry for which labor costs comprise a high percentage of total expenses.
- The area surrounding a central place from which people are attracted to use the place’s goods and services (also known as market area).
- The period of social and economic change that transforms a human group from an agrarian society into an industrial society. This involves an extensive re-organization of an economy for the purpose of manufacturing
- International trade left to its natural course without tariffs, quotas, or other restrictions.
- Makes something that gains volume or weight during production.
- The transfer of goods or services from one person or entity to another, often in exchange for money. A system or network that allows trade is called a market.
- A business that sells its products or services primarily to consumers outside the settlement.
21 Clues: A community’s collection of basic businesses. • The minimum number of people needed to support a service. • Makes something that gains volume or weight during production. • An industry in which the inputs weigh more than the final products. • An industry for which labor costs comprise a high percentage of total expenses. • ...
Economics crossword 2022-12-01
Across
- the total amount demanded by consumers
- where buyers and sellers get together to trade
- an alternative good
- indviduals or households who buy goods and services for their own use or for others
- where the quantity demanded increases as income increases
- where there is a change in ownership from the public to the private sector
- a good consumed with another
- things that re necessary for survival such as food
- where it is possible to stop someone from consuming a good or service
- resources are scarce so individuals firms and governments have to consider alternatives
Down
- demand that is supported by the ability to pay
- where the quantity demanded increases as increases
- where it is possible to stop someone from consuming a good or service
- the goods and services that people may like to have but are not always realised
- a factor of production human resources available in an economy
- when two goods are consumed together
- the data from which a demand curve is drawn on graph
- all the stages of a product's progress from raw materials production and distribution until it reaches the consumer
- any business that hires factors of production to produce goods and services
- inputs available for the production of goods and services
- the quantity of a product that producers are willing and able to sell at different prices within a time period other things equal
- a simplified view of reality used to explain economic problems and issues
22 Clues: an alternative good • a good consumed with another • when two goods are consumed together • the total amount demanded by consumers • demand that is supported by the ability to pay • where buyers and sellers get together to trade • where the quantity demanded increases as increases • things that re necessary for survival such as food • ...
Economics Crossword 2022-09-08
Across
- No true__________ or free _________ economy exists (same word in both blanks)
- Businesses trying to provide the best products and services at the lowest prices
- Cars, clothing, electronics, and steel are examples of this
- Flying mammal
- Economic & political system where a country's trade & industry are controlled by private owners for profit
- The average income earned per person in a given area per year (3 words)
- A downturn in economic activity
- When the government owns the productive resources in a society, and controls the distribution of goods
Down
- Goods that are leaving, or exiting a country
- Goods that are coming in to a country
- The total value of goods and services produced by a country in a given year (abbreviation)
- Most modern economies are this
- Money demanded by a govt. for its support or for specific services, collected from incomes, sales, etc.
- A rise in prices of goods and services
- Man's best friend
- The amount of a product available and the desire of buyers for it (3 words)
- Large marsupialSocialism When the productive resources in a society are owned by the people, and distributed equally
- A tax imposed on imported goods
- Has a trunk
- Healthcare, education, and banking are examples of this term
- Likes to chase mice
21 Clues: Has a trunk • Flying mammal • Man's best friend • Likes to chase mice • Most modern economies are this • A tax imposed on imported goods • A downturn in economic activity • Goods that are coming in to a country • A rise in prices of goods and services • Goods that are leaving, or exiting a country • Cars, clothing, electronics, and steel are examples of this • ...
Economics Crossword 2022-08-30
Across
- the phase of the business cycle where real gross domestic product (GDP) grows for two or more consecutive quarters, moving from a trough to a peak.
- Make (something) on a large scale using machinery.
- a state in which opposing forces or influences are balanced.
- A person who purchases goods and services for personal use.
- Put (money) into financial schemes, shares, property, or a commercial venture with the expectation of achieving a profit.
- People who are in the labour force that are currently looking for a job but doesn't have one.
- resources are resources that are drawn from nature
- Bring (goods or services) into a country from abroad for sale.
- Send (goods or services) to another country for sale.
- the state of being scarce or in short supply; shortage.
- make or become smaller or fewer in size, amount, intensity, or degree.
- a person's regular occupation, profession, or trade.
- Merchandise or possessions.
- A person who provide goods and services.
- tools, buildings, machinery, and any other goods people make to produce goods and provide services.
- the exclusive possession or control of the supply of or trade in a commodity or service.
Down
- Money received, especially on a regular basis, for work or through investments.
- Intangible items that can be bought and sold.
- stands for gross domestic product.
- the propensity of an individual to behave creatively, act with foresight, use intuition, and be alert to new opportunities.
- Commercial transactions conducted electronically on the internet.
- a phase of the business cycle in which the economy as a whole is in decline.
- An estimate of income and expenditure for a set period of time.
- The total income produced by a given source.
- The amount by which something, especially a sum of money, is too small.
- Money paid regularly at a particular rate for the use of money lent, or for delaying the repayment of a debt.
- a rise in the size, amount, or degree of something.
- at the highest level
- a period of temporary economic decline during which trade and industrial activity are reduced, generally identified by a fall in GDP in two successive quarters.
- the branch of knowledge concerned with the production, consumption, and transfer of wealth.
- physical work.
- An international financial institution that provides loans and grants to the governments of low- and middle-income countries for the purpose of pursuing capital projects.
32 Clues: physical work. • at the highest level • Merchandise or possessions. • stands for gross domestic product. • A person who provide goods and services. • The total income produced by a given source. • Intangible items that can be bought and sold. • Make (something) on a large scale using machinery. • resources are resources that are drawn from nature • ...
Economics Crossword 2022-09-08
Across
- Jobs replaced by machinery
- People bouncing between jobs
- transfer of goods and services from one person or entity to another
- As profits go up, your payback will increase
- Amount of people in a certain place
- Importation of materials to be used for the product
- An amount the lender charges a borrower and is a percentage of the principle = the amount loaned
- When people are optimistic and pessimistic about their future spending
- Few competitors selling product who are generally price makers
- an item used that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services
- any resource owned or controlled by a business or an economic entity
- efficiency of production of goods or services
- A person who purchases goods and services for certain uses
- The people who work in for a business
- Limited resources irrespective to our unlimited wants
- anything that has utility and adds value to your life
- Receiving goods from overseas
- quantity of a good that consumers are willing purchase at various prices during a given period of time and place.
- Not Having a Job
- Being unemployed longer than a year
- amount paid to employees wages
- temporary economic decline
- fairness in economics
Down
- Changes in climate that affect supplies
- Loss of other alternatives for the best option
- replacing a product for a similar product e.g sprit instead of fanta
- Increase in Income received after interest rate goes down
- lack Of AD
- Sending Goods overseas to buyers
- the amount paid or charged for something
- income remaining after deduction of taxes
- monetary measure of the market value of all the final goods and services
- Unique seller of the one product, the price maker
- paying others to handle products
- an organization that provides something needed such as a product
- Having a job over the age of 15
- Amount of money that a government requires people to pay according to their income
- More than what is needed (more supplies than demand)
- studies of production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.
- converting one currency to another
- Term used to designate the situation of those who are able to find employment only for shorter than normal periods
41 Clues: lack Of AD • Not Having a Job • fairness in economics • Jobs replaced by machinery • temporary economic decline • People bouncing between jobs • Receiving goods from overseas • amount paid to employees wages • Having a job over the age of 15 • Sending Goods overseas to buyers • paying others to handle products • converting one currency to another • Amount of people in a certain place • ...
Economics Crossword 2022-09-21
Across
- An item which is able to be seen and/or touched (ex.pencil)
- satisfy the same set of goals or preferences (ex.Hamburger and pork)
- An item which is not necessary for survival but adds pleasure/comfort to life (ex.playstation)
- An expensive item that can be seen/touched but is not necessary for survival (ex.sports car)
- Assistance provided which satisfied needs/wants of people/businesses but is not a product that can be touched (ex.babysitting)
- Things that can not be perceived by touch (ex.copyright)
- State of the economy where there are large unemployment rates, a decrease in income, and standard of living decreases (ex.Great Depression)
- The production and/or sale of goods and/or services to satisfy the needs, wants, and demands of consumers with a purpose of making a profit
- To come up with a new unique idea, thought, or production for a new object, device, or process, which a person has not seen or heard of before (ex.light bulb)
- An essential item for survival which can be seen and/or touched (ex.food)
- Equipment, building, money, which is used to produce goods and services (ex.vehicles)
Down
- Means through which goods and services are made available to consumers (ex.land)
- People who work to produce goods/services in a business (ex.training)
- State of the economy where there is an increase in output, income, employment, prices and profit
- Amount of goods/services businesses are willing and able to sell at certain prices
- People/businesses which buy goods/services (ex.people)
- Goods that are a result of changed conditions, can replace each other in use or consumption (ex.Coke vs Pepsi)
- Goods which are used together (ex.phone+data)
- Goods that help complete another in some way (ex. ketchup and hamburger buns)
- An item which is necessary for survival (ex.water)
- Using new technology, materials or processes to improve existing products, or on how they are produced and distributed (ex.electric cars)
- A type of economy where a combination of consumers, businesses and government make the decisions (Ex.Canada)
- An individual who purchase goods or services (ex.customers)
- A product/service that consumers no longer want as it is outdated/outmoded or has been replaced by a new/improved product (ex.layer disk)
- An individual or business whcih makes a product (ex.McDonalds)
- Raw materials we get from earth, water and air (ex.cotton)
- The amount of goods/services people are willing to buy at certain prices
- General increase in the price of goods and services over a period of time
28 Clues: Goods which are used together (ex.phone+data) • An item which is necessary for survival (ex.water) • People/businesses which buy goods/services (ex.people) • Things that can not be perceived by touch (ex.copyright) • Raw materials we get from earth, water and air (ex.cotton) • An item which is able to be seen and/or touched (ex.pencil) • ...
Economics Vocab 2025-10-08
Economics HMH 2025-09-23
Across
- businesses where people make finished products from raw materials
- the process in which countries are increasingly linked to each other through culture and trade
- the value of all goods and services produced within a country in a single year (GDP)
- businesses that provide services rather than goods
- the removal of trade barriers between nations
- any law that limits free trade between nations
- the human time, effort, skills, and talent needed to produce goods and services
- is used to make other goods—like machinery being used by a farmer
- government goods and services that the public consumes; highways are an example
- provide the raw materials needed to make goods
- motivation, or reason to do something
- an economic system based on free trade and competition
- an economic system in which the central government makes all economic decisions
- an economy that is a combination of command, market, and traditional economies
- a person who organizes, manages, and assumes the risk of a business
Down
- businesses that focus on growing crops and raising livestock
- an economic system in which businesses can compete freely with one another with little government intervention; capitalism
- culture traits that are well known and widely accepted
- countries with strong economies and a high quality of life
- countries with less productive economies and a lower quality of life
- an economy in which production is based on customs and tradition and in which people often grow their own food, make their own goods, and use barter to trade
- businesses that sell directly to final customers
- businesses that sell to businesses
23 Clues: businesses that sell to businesses • motivation, or reason to do something • the removal of trade barriers between nations • any law that limits free trade between nations • provide the raw materials needed to make goods • businesses that sell directly to final customers • businesses that provide services rather than goods • ...
Economics Vocabulary 2025-11-04
Across
- where the proportion of income paid in tax rises as the income of the taxpayer rises
- Tax on imported goods (brought from other countries)
- A sustained increase in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over time
- government’s spending and revenue plans for the next year
- When people who are willing and able to work cannot find a job.
- taxes levied on spending, such as VAT
- decisions about government spending, taxation and levels of borrowing that affect aggregate demand in the economy
- tax on some goods and services – businesses pay value-added tax on most goods and services they buy and if they are VAT registered, charge value-added tax on the goods and services they sell
- amount by which government revenue exceeds government spending
- poverty that is defined relative to existing living standards for the average individual
- An increase in the output of goods and services in an economy over time
- fiscal measures designed to reduce demand in the economy
- where people do not have enough resources to meet all of their basic human needs
- Tax on the money you earn from working.
Down
- rate of interest set by government or regional central banks for lending to other banks, which in turn influences all other rates in the economy
- Tax on company profits
- The difference between a country’s exports and imports of goods, services, and income flows
- amount by which government spending exceeds government revenue
- tools governments use to implement their policies, such as interest rates, rates of taxation, levels of government spending
- tax system that places the burden of the tax more heavily on the poor
- amount of money circulating in the economy
- differences in income that exist between the different groups of earners in society, that is, the gap between the rich and the poor
- graphical representation of the degree of income or wealth inequality in a country
- Tax paid by people who live in houses or apartments to help local services (like garbage collection)
- legal arrangement where you borrow money from a financial institution in order to buy land or a house, and you pay back the money over a period of years; if you do not make your regular payments, the lender normally has the right to take the property and sell it in order to get back their money
- total amount of money owed by a country
- fiscal measures designed to stimulate demand in the economy
- use of interest rates and the money supply to control aggregate demand in the economy
- price of borrowing money
- taxes levied on the income earned by firms and individuals
- particular costs, such as taxes or interest payments, seen as a problem, especially when they are high
31 Clues: Tax on company profits • price of borrowing money • taxes levied on spending, such as VAT • total amount of money owed by a country • Tax on the money you earn from working. • amount of money circulating in the economy • Tax on imported goods (brought from other countries) • fiscal measures designed to reduce demand in the economy • ...
Applied Economics 2025-10-16
Across
- Is the portion of income earned that is not spent on consumption or taxes.
- Is where securities of corporations are traded.
- Is a person's liking or preference.
- Payment for public goods and services by citizens.
- Refers to the competitive environment in which buyers and sellers operate.
- Refers to the purchasing power of a person's money income. This is the amount of goods and services one can buy with the income.
- Is a good which a consumer tends to buy more of when income increases.
- Is a means of interaction between buyers and sellers for trading or exchange. It is where the consumer buys and the seller sells.
- Is a Filipino who works in a foreign country.
- Is a market where there is a sole producer of a product, for which there are no close substitutes.
- Shows the different quantities the seller is willing to sell at various prices.
- Are factors other than price that also can influence the demand for or supply of a good.
- Is a market where a few sellers account for most of or total production.
- Refers to the quantity of goods that a seller is willing to offer for sale.
- Measures how the quantity demanded changes as consumer income changes.
- This measures the responsiveness of demand to a change in the price of the good.
Down
- Is a change in the entire demand or supply curve, due to a change in a non price determinant of demand or supply.
- Exists when quantity demanded is equal to quantity supplied.
- Exists when there are many buyers and sellers who are too small to affect price and who offer a homogenous or highly similar good in the market.
- Work for less than 40 hours.
- Payment for the use of land belonging to a landowner.
- Is a type of imperfect competition where firms sell differentiated products which are highly substitutable but are not perfect substitutes.
- Government-provided facilities for public use that society and the economy cannot do without.
- The highest price that the seller can charge for the good being sold, normally set by the government.
- Are those which are used in place of each other.
- Basic factors of production enabling the processing of products towards higher stages.
- Refers to the surge in the demand for housing and residential property.
- Is a fixed regular payment, typically paid on a daily or weekly basis, made by an employer to an employee.
- Includes all the inhabitants of a particular town, area, or country.
- Refers to the lowest wage permitted by law below which if paid by employer will subject him to penalty from the government.
30 Clues: Work for less than 40 hours. • Is a person's liking or preference. • Is a Filipino who works in a foreign country. • Is where securities of corporations are traded. • Are those which are used in place of each other. • Payment for public goods and services by citizens. • Payment for the use of land belonging to a landowner. • ...
Economics 101 2025-11-09
Across
- to protect a resource so it doesn’t run out.
- people who do the work to make goods or provide services.
- to exchange an item or service for something you don’t have.
- is anyplace where two or more parties can meet to engage in an economic transaction.
- the act of using goods and services.
- a source of supply, support or help. (Take a look around you. We are surrounded by resources. Ex. desk, bath, phone etc).
- is a perceived worth of a good or service.
- the economic problem of having limited resources to meet unlimited wants and needs.
- the potential benefits that an individual, business, or investor misses out on when choosing one alternative choice over another.
- Capital resources are tools that a business uses to manufacture goods and provide services.
- is the total satisfaction or benefit derived from consuming a good or service.
- how well a business produces or makes its products.
- not tangible or measurable costs such as time and resources that could have been used in another way.
- how much people want a resource.
- the amount of available resources.
- is any item or verifiable record that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services and repayment of debts.
Down
- is any individual or organization that purchases goods or services for use rather than for resale or further production.
- a community, of people of any kind, that produces, trades, and consumes. Production + Trade + Consumption.
- the state of owing money.
- the science that deals with the production, distribution, and consumption of wealth, and with various related problems of labor, finance, and taxation.
- is the willingness to rely on another party or situation involving risk.
- people focus on making certain things better or doing certain jobs well.
- direct payments for goods or services. In other words, costs you can count.
- when there are more of a good or service available than people want to buy.
- Natural resources are raw materials found on and below the Earth’s surface. They are naturally occurring materials formed without any human intervention.
- to produce or make something. idea + Resources + labor + capital
- non-material or intangible goods that are used to satisfy consumer needs and wants.
- items produced to satisfy the needs and wants of consumers.
28 Clues: the state of owing money. • how much people want a resource. • the amount of available resources. • the act of using goods and services. • is a perceived worth of a good or service. • to protect a resource so it doesn’t run out. • how well a business produces or makes its products. • people who do the work to make goods or provide services. • ...
Economics crossword 2025-10-31
Across
- adam smith taught here
- what was keynes occupation
- when was keynes born
- what is priming the pump
- used keynes strategies
- what to produce
- when did keynes die
- adam smith was born here
- where is keynes from
- adam smith most influential book
- keynes book
- wealth of nations
Down
- what is deficit spending
- where did keynes study
- TINSTAAFL
- for whole to produce
- is adam smith an economist
- how to produce
- what did he negotiate there
- what did he establish there
- where was wealth of nations written
- is adam smith a philosopher
- what did he become after the war
- father of economics
- what war did keynes use his strategies
- adam smith graduated from
- when was his final work
- let it be
- laissez-faire
29 Clues: TINSTAAFL • let it be • keynes book • laissez-faire • how to produce • what to produce • wealth of nations • father of economics • when did keynes die • for whole to produce • when was keynes born • where is keynes from • where did keynes study • adam smith taught here • used keynes strategies • when was his final work • what is deficit spending • what is priming the pump • adam smith was born here • ...
Economics Review 2025-12-11
Across
- A person, company, or country that makes, grows, or supplies goods or commodities for sale
- tax: A tax on people's earnings
- people not working who have looked for work during previous 4 weeks
- off: told that you no longer have a job because there is not enough work for you to do
- When a company comes up with new ideas or products.
- Security: tax paid by workers to cover government programs
- A share of ownership in a business or company.
- economy: Economic decisions are made by individuals based on consumer demand
- force: the total number of workers, including both the employed and the unemployed
- Things we would like to have, such as entertainment, vacations, and items that make life comfortable and enjoyable
- economy: Producers don't compete because everyone works to meet the community's survival needs.
- money taken out of your paycheck to pay for your current healthcare
- card: A bank card that automatically deducts the amount of a purchase from the checking account of the cardholder
- account: a bank account that earns interest
- the difference between the amount earned and the amount spent producing something
- the desire to own something and the ability to pay for it
- The study of how individuals and nations make choices about ways to use scarce resources to fulfill their needs and wants
- a formal contract to repay borrowed money
- A system by which goods and services are produced and distributed
- The amount of goods available
- the area where things are bought and sold
Down
- A slowdown in a nation's economy
- A reason to act a certain way or to make a certain choice
- When a business tries to convince you to buy their product over another company.
- Economy: has different aspects of the other types of economies (some government regulations)
- The things you would not survive without.
- taxes to pay for the health care of the elderly
- Forces: supply and demand
- A person who purchases goods and services for personal use
- economy: An economic system in which the government controls a country's economy.
- card: plastic card used to buy things on loan with interest
- Limited quantities of resources to meet unlimited wants
- forced to leave a job
- work performed by a person for someone else
- to set aside money for a certain time so that it can be used later.
- cost: whatever must be given up to obtain some item
- Earnings from work or investment
37 Clues: forced to leave a job • Forces: supply and demand • The amount of goods available • tax: A tax on people's earnings • A slowdown in a nation's economy • Earnings from work or investment • The things you would not survive without. • a formal contract to repay borrowed money • the area where things are bought and sold • work performed by a person for someone else • ...
The words 2022-12-01
16 Clues: tyg • Hörn • kudde • nämna • prickig • lockande • ockupera • mönstrad • blandning • Matlagning • lyckligtvis • quilt lapptäcke • 13 bli/fylla 13 • kind of vilket slags • aware of makaronilåda • economics huslig ekonomi
Module 1: The Study of Economics 2023-05-02
Across
- ____economics: The study of an overall economy and its up and down trends
- Anything that can be used to produce something else
- A system for coordinating a society's productive and consumptive activities
- ____ Analysis: The study of the costs and benefits of doing a little bit more of an activity versus a little bit less
- The study of scarcity and choice
- Rights Ownership of and the ability to freely trade goods and services with other entities
- ____ Economics: Makes prescriptions about the way an economy should work
- The effort of workers
- ____ Economics: Economic Analysis that describes the way an economy actually works
- All resources that come from nature
- A person who utilizes the other factors of production to produce final goods and services
Down
- Economic ____: Economic measures that summarize data across many different markets
- ____ Economy: An economy in which decisions are made by the government, and there are few property rights
- Manufactured goods used to make other goods and services
- ____economics: The study of how individuals, households, and firms make decisions
- ____ Economy: An economy in which decisions are made by producers and consumers, with little government involvement
- ____ Cost: The cost of the next best alternative
- A resource that is limited in availability to meet the needs of its demand
- Rewards or punishments that motivate particular choices
19 Clues: The effort of workers • The study of scarcity and choice • All resources that come from nature • ____ Cost: The cost of the next best alternative • Anything that can be used to produce something else • Rewards or punishments that motivate particular choices • Manufactured goods used to make other goods and services • ...
“No Free Lunch” 2022-03-14
Across
- is the study of how we make decisions in a world in which resources are limited
- the demand for a good or service is greater than the availability of the good or service, the problem of limited resources
- trees, metals, and fuel are examples
- there is a fixed amount of something
- the purchase or use of a good or service
- off Decision that must be made when choosing between items
- the act of making a good
- necessary for survival
Down
- cost value of the next best alternative that was given up when an economic choice was made
- the movement of goods and services
- because of scarcity, we make these every day
- the law of economics that states businesses will produce more when things can be sold at a higher price and fewer things when prices are low
- there is an endless amount of something
- the law of economics that says buyers will buy more when prices are low and buy less when prices are high
- economic system in which the means of production are owned by private citizens
- something we would like to have but do not have to have
16 Clues: necessary for survival • the act of making a good • the movement of goods and services • trees, metals, and fuel are examples • there is a fixed amount of something • there is an endless amount of something • the purchase or use of a good or service • because of scarcity, we make these every day • something we would like to have but do not have to have • ...
“No Free Lunch” 2022-03-14
Across
- something we would like to have but do not have to have
- cost value of the next best alternative that was given up when an economic choice was made
- trees, metals, and fuel are examples
- the demand for a good or service is greater than the availability of the good or service, the problem of limited resources
- the movement of goods and services
- economic system in which the means of production are owned by private citizens
Down
- there is an endless amount of something
- there is a fixed amount of something
- the purchase or use of a good or service
- the act of making a good
- necessary for survival
- because of scarcity, we make these every day
- the law of economics that says buyers will buy more when prices are low and buy less when prices are high
- is the study of how we make decisions in a world in which resources are limited
- the law of economics that states businesses will produce more when things can be sold at a higher price and fewer things when prices are low
- Decision that must be made when choosing between items
16 Clues: necessary for survival • the act of making a good • the movement of goods and services • there is a fixed amount of something • trees, metals, and fuel are examples • there is an endless amount of something • the purchase or use of a good or service • because of scarcity, we make these every day • Decision that must be made when choosing between items • ...
Impact of Global Consumerism 2024-10-23
Across
- : The condition of being free from illness, which can be impacted by pollution and environmental damage.
- : The species responsible for most environmental damage through consumption.
- : The reduction of this atmospheric layer due to harmful chemicals like CFCs.
- : The large-scale clearing of forests, often to make way for agriculture or urban development.
- : A place where trash is dumped and buried.
- : A widely used material that is non-biodegradable and contributes to pollution.
- : The culture trend of buying and using goods in excess.
- : The increase in the Earth's temperature due to human activity.
- : A way of producing goods that minimizes harm to the environment and conserves resources for the future.
- : The effect or influence of an action, often seen in environmental damage.
- : A gas commonly produced by factories and cars that contributes to global warming.
Down
- : Dirty air or water that can harm the planet.
- : The process of converting waste materials into reusable objects.
- : The release of gases into the atmosphere, often from cars and factories, contributing to global warming.
- : The average weather conditions of a region, affected by global warming.
- : Devices like phones and computers that contribute to e-waste when discarded.
- : A method to save energy and reduce waste by using products again.
- : The materials that are thrown away after use.
- : The growing desire for products and services that leads to overproduction and environmental strain.
- : The planet we live on that is affected by pollution and overconsumption.
20 Clues: : A place where trash is dumped and buried. • : Dirty air or water that can harm the planet. • : The materials that are thrown away after use. • : The culture trend of buying and using goods in excess. • : The increase in the Earth's temperature due to human activity. • : The process of converting waste materials into reusable objects. • ...
Philosophy puzzle 2025-09-28
Across
- Duty of humans to care for and protect nature
- Natural disaster caused by sudden movement of the earth’s crust
- Idea that Earth behaves like a living organism
- Excessive use of resources causing depletion
- Environmental harm caused by human activities
- Ethical analysis of global warming responsibilities
- Cutting down forests for timber or profit
- Analyzes the link between social problems and environmental issues
- Environmentalist emphasizing the intrinsic value of all life
- Concept balancing human development with environmental protection
- View that values ecosystems and all living communities
- Fairness in the use of natural resources
- Contamination of the air from factories, vehicles, and smoke
- Study of beauty and order in nature
- Branch of philosophy studying human moral duty toward the environment
Down
- Principle ensuring resources are available for future generations
- Major Philippine law passed in 1999 to reduce air pollution
- Careful use of resources to maximize output and reduce waste
- Sudden rise of water that floods areas
- Trash thrown carelessly in public spaces
- Human-centered view of the environment
- Wise decision-making and careful actions
- Humans are connected to nature, not separate from it
- Cycle between plants and animals involving oxygen and carbon dioxide
- Island nations threatened by rising sea levels
- Principle of fair distribution of environmental benefits and burdens
- Extreme weather with strong winds and rain
- Person who protects natural resources for future generations
- Large forest home to many species
- Heat-trapping gases causing global warming
30 Clues: Large forest home to many species • Study of beauty and order in nature • Sudden rise of water that floods areas • Human-centered view of the environment • Trash thrown carelessly in public spaces • Wise decision-making and careful actions • Fairness in the use of natural resources • Cutting down forests for timber or profit • Extreme weather with strong winds and rain • ...
Vocabulario de unidad 3 - El tiempo y la escuela 2022-10-04
18 Clues: - Art • - Easy • - Time • - Never • - Always • - Science • - Spanish • - History • - Everyday • - At night • - economics • - Sometimes • - In the morning • - In the afternoon • - What time is it? • - Hard or Difficult • - American Government • - At what time is...?
Unit Vocab Project 2022-09-20
15 Clues: relic • proof • origin • result • commoner • textbook • lifestyle • principles • background • progression • moneymaking • type of study • interactionist • survivors' account • type of government
Round - 2 2025-07-28
Across
- – Country allowing broad corporate data collection without opt-in consent.
- A human rights-based approach to addressing the unequal impacts of climate change
- – Indian activist known for work on digital rights and data protection
- – Indian judge who authored the right to privacy judgment in the Puttaswamy case.
- – Refers to monitoring of online activity by states or private entities.
- SDG 2’s aim to end food insecurity
- – Lowest ranked country in Internet Freedom Index (2024).
- – First Asian country to adopt GDPR-like data protection law.
- Loss of home or land due to development, conflict, or climate impacts
- – Country ranked highest in the 2024 Freedom on the Net report.
Down
- – A digital right derived from the right to privacy.
- – CEO questioned by U.S. Congress during the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
- Movement of people due to climate, conflict, or economics
- Legal principle that assigns environmental liability to the damaging party
- – Country with a "Social Credit System" tied to online activity.
- is the destruction of the environment by humans.
- – Petitioner in the case that struck down Section 66A of the IT Act.
- is the process of moving people to a new location, often due to displacement, conflict, or other compelling circumstances
- Global intergovernmental body that adopted both the UDHR and the SDGs
- – Current (2025) UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.
- – Foundational international document protecting human and digital rights.
- – Indian digital identity program impacted by the Puttaswamy judgment.
22 Clues: SDG 2’s aim to end food insecurity • is the destruction of the environment by humans. • – A digital right derived from the right to privacy. • – Current (2025) UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. • Movement of people due to climate, conflict, or economics • – Lowest ranked country in Internet Freedom Index (2024). • ...
Crossword Puzzle Geography Terms & ESPN 2022-09-27
Across
- an area of low land between hills or mountains
- A large body of salt water
- A piece of land that is surrounded by water on three sides.
- A deep valley with steep rocky walls
- system in society we use to get our wants and needs, money, prices, bartering, etc.
- a large body of water surrounded by land
- how we interact with others; culture, language, education, religion, beliefs, etc.
- one of the seven large landmasses on the earth
- map map that shows political boundaries and cities, usually capitals
- A landform with high elevation and high relief.
- A vent in Earth's crust through which molten rock flows
Down
- Height above sea level.
- an area of flat or gently rolling land
- a natural elevation of the earth's surface that is smaller than a mountain
- map map that shows natural geography such as mountains, rivers, lakes, elevations and shades
- map map that shows important physical features of terrain like bodies of water, and elevation changes with contour lines
- steep, high wall of rock, earth, or ice
- government, laws, and rights that are involved in managing our system in society known as government.
- climate, weather, geography, resources, natural occurrences
- land that receives less than 10 inches of rain in 1 year
- large body of water, usually salt water, completely or partly surrounded by land
- land that is surrounded on all sides by water
- A large area of flat land elevated high above sea level
23 Clues: Height above sea level. • A large body of salt water • A deep valley with steep rocky walls • an area of flat or gently rolling land • steep, high wall of rock, earth, or ice • a large body of water surrounded by land • land that is surrounded on all sides by water • an area of low land between hills or mountains • one of the seven large landmasses on the earth • ...
economics crossword 2022-11-23
Across
- the rate that prices increase but salaries don't
- a rate set by the reserve bank
- the economics of countries and large businesses
- GDP
- CPI
- where you buy and sell shares
Down
- when the price of a product increases and the consumers go for the cheaper option
- the budget of the country
- the amount of money you receive
- dollars
- the process by which products are promoted and sold
- money that you spent but don't have
- the economics of individuals and small businesses
- a small card that lets you access money in in your bank account
- money that is spent
15 Clues: GDP • CPI • dollars • money that is spent • the budget of the country • where you buy and sell shares • a rate set by the reserve bank • the amount of money you receive • money that you spent but don't have • the economics of countries and large businesses • the rate that prices increase but salaries don't • the economics of individuals and small businesses • ...
Amelia Strochine economics puzzle 2020-09-10
Across
- of production economics call land labor and capital resources
- using a product or service completes the want satisfaction chain
- resources are building tools and machines that are used
- economy that relies on trade
- process of getting a product or service to consumers
- Social science that studies how people, acting individually and in groups.
- fines or punishment
- exchanging of something
- physical and mental efforts people use to create goods and services
- study of individual consumers and businesses
- allows buyers and sellers to make exchanges
- extra or additional costs
Down
- study of economics
- process that combines economic resources so the result is a good service that is available for sale.
- wants or available recources
- highest valued alternative that given up as a result of making a choice
- positive rewards
- losses
- positive difference
- imagination and manager skills
- gains
- where we get our natural items
22 Clues: gains • losses • positive rewards • study of economics • positive difference • fines or punishment • exchanging of something • extra or additional costs • wants or available recources • economy that relies on trade • imagination and manager skills • where we get our natural items • allows buyers and sellers to make exchanges • study of individual consumers and businesses • ...
Megan Scott´s economic puzzle 2020-09-10
Across
- fines or punishments
- positive difference
- using a product or service
- process which combines economic resources so the result is a good service or available for sale
- gains
- extra cost
- the land, labor, and capital resources used to produce goods and services
- positive rewards
- resources that are buildings, tools, and machines
- natural resources that are unaltered gifts of nature, such as soil, minerals, timber, and fresh water
- an inequality that exists between wants and availability
Down
- study of economics as a whole
- the imagination, innovative thinking and management skills needed to start and operate a business
- the process of getting a product or service to consumers
- study of individual consumers
- economy economy that relies on voluntary trade
- an arrangement that allows buyers and sellers to make a trade
- highest valued alternative given up due to a choice
- a social science that studies how people decide to use resources, in order to get what they want
- human resources
- exchanging
- losses
22 Clues: gains • losses • extra cost • exchanging • human resources • positive rewards • positive difference • fines or punishments • using a product or service • study of economics as a whole • study of individual consumers • economy economy that relies on voluntary trade • resources that are buildings, tools, and machines • highest valued alternative given up due to a choice • ...
For DaddyLuke 2017-12-24
Across
- Won Nobel Peace Prize for Behavioral Economics
- “Thinking Fast and ____” book on Behavioral Economics and irrational psychology
- water fountain, in navy
- anti-apartheid revolutionary
- “We hold these truths to be ____’
- ‘I go out walking after midnight’ singer
- First stop on our Botswana safari
- city where cruise ship rode by as we ate dinner
- an Italian dessert
- ‘Singing in the ____’
- street where Lukie came to be
Down
- housed in what used to be Nashville post office
- Grandmommy’s favorite animal…wouldn’t leave Botswana without seeing one
- high society for Charleston folk, of which you are a member
- I’m a rambling wreck from
- what was covering Sophie and my tent/ a prank
- flip-flop put em in a pot
- end of the chromosome, what Serena studied at Vanderbilt
- ‘How is ___?’
- a helluva, helluva
- “I’m just looking ___”
- small Italian city known for horse race
22 Clues: ‘How is ___?’ • a helluva, helluva • an Italian dessert • ‘Singing in the ____’ • “I’m just looking ___” • water fountain, in navy • I’m a rambling wreck from • flip-flop put em in a pot • anti-apartheid revolutionary • street where Lukie came to be • “We hold these truths to be ____’ • First stop on our Botswana safari • small Italian city known for horse race • ...
Industrial Revolution and Imperialism-Emily Charles 2024-02-21
Across
- leader of the Berlin conference
- changing to a machine powered world
- country taken over by Europe
- prejudice toward one specific group
- rapid movements of people to cites
- workers who were not wealthy but not unskilled labores
- free choice of economics
- native
- taking over a less developed country
- fenced in farmland
- exploited during the imperialism- natural
- big company owned by smaller parts
Down
- to decide how to split up Africa
- cloth and thread
- process of changing to machines
- free market of economics
- moving crops from year to year
- groups of people joining together to gain something
- worker refusing to work unless granted what is being wished
- natural selection
- Embarrassed the idea of capitalism
- created marxism-communism
- groups of workers
- not allowed to have privately owned property
- government intervention in the economy
25 Clues: native • cloth and thread • natural selection • groups of workers • fenced in farmland • free market of economics • free choice of economics • created marxism-communism • country taken over by Europe • moving crops from year to year • leader of the Berlin conference • process of changing to machines • to decide how to split up Africa • rapid movements of people to cites • ...
Econ Final 2024-05-08
Across
- letting things take their own course without interference
- Wrote “The Wealth of Nations”/father of modern economics (Adam)
- Government answers questions
- a factor of production that uses natural resources
- amendment about income tax
- have to pay higher taxes than credit unions
- when prices rise faster than income
- Shares of companies you buy
- life insurance that's more expensive than term
- market does poorly
- (collar) office workers
- Consumer answers basic questions/decides everything
Down
- Both consumer and government answer questions
- merger where two like companies merge
- (collar) manual labor
- market does well
- type of advertising that uses stories from real consumers
- the study of economics on an individual level
- Stock dividing and paying out to you
- merger where one company buys another that is not the same thing
- When economy suffers, government should influx money (John Maynard)
- the more you make the more you’re taxed
22 Clues: market does well • market does poorly • (collar) manual labor • (collar) office workers • amendment about income tax • Shares of companies you buy • Government answers questions • when prices rise faster than income • Stock dividing and paying out to you • merger where two like companies merge • the more you make the more you’re taxed • have to pay higher taxes than credit unions • ...
Economic Concepts 2022-11-15
Across
- Something’s usefulness and the degree
- The total amount of goods and
- The reality that people’s wants always exceed
- One who actually uses the product or service
- Choosing between two things that can’t be
- The making of products from raw materials
- A good or service that has a benefit (or
- The loss of potential gain from among
- The increase in the general level of prices
- Economics is the study of how individuals
- The decrease in the general level of prices
Down
- The using of goods and services by people
- The physical assets used to produce
- All the components needed for production
- The study of the behavior, performance,
- The study of behavior and decision-
- Reducing the amount of money spent
- Desire for goods, services or intangible
- To categorize, sort, and transport goods
- Materials and substances found in
- Desires that don’t require money to
21 Clues: The total amount of goods and • Materials and substances found in • Reducing the amount of money spent • The physical assets used to produce • The study of behavior and decision- • Desires that don’t require money to • Something’s usefulness and the degree • The loss of potential gain from among • The study of the behavior, performance, • ...
Fundamental Economic Concepts To Know 2023-02-03
Across
- a useful, tangible item
- accumulation of products and money
- capability of being useful
- last for years, used regularly
- peoples effort, abilities, and skills
- where you buy factors of production
- dollar value of final goods and services
- natural resources
- used to produce goods
- stuff used to make stuff
- last fewer than 3 years
- where you buy final products
Down
- not necessary to live ,nice to have
- intended for final use by individual
- resources required to produce things
- nonnecessities with high values
- sum of peoples skills
- necessary to live
- amount of goods and services produced in a certain amount of time
- work performed for someone
- worth of something
- people who start a company
- study of how people spend money
- The basic problem in economics
- location where people buy and sell stuff
25 Clues: necessary to live • natural resources • worth of something • sum of peoples skills • used to produce goods • a useful, tangible item • last fewer than 3 years • stuff used to make stuff • capability of being useful • work performed for someone • people who start a company • where you buy final products • last for years, used regularly • The basic problem in economics • ...
Commerce 2021-04-19
Across
- He criticised speculative philosophy, equating metaphysics with ideology
- Principles of Economics
- Death on 30/10/2011
- Founder of The Boring Company
- Father of Modern Economics
Down
- Abolished License Raj System in India
- The Snowball (Biography)
- Website Launched on 4/2/2004
- founder of jumboking
- The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money
10 Clues: Death on 30/10/2011 • founder of jumboking • Principles of Economics • The Snowball (Biography) • Father of Modern Economics • Website Launched on 4/2/2004 • Founder of The Boring Company • Abolished License Raj System in India • The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money • He criticised speculative philosophy, equating metaphysics with ideology
APPLIED ECONOMIC 2024-01-22
Across
- Soil and natural resources
- the limited nature of resources,
- Man-made resources used in the production of goods
- from two old Greek words - ‘oikon’,
- Resources came from nature that are used in production,
- the essentials of life,
Down
- desires for non-essential items
- Resources the processed materials, equipment,
- economics application of economic
- Testing hypotheses
- Physical and human effort exerted in production.
11 Clues: Testing hypotheses • the essentials of life, • Soil and natural resources • desires for non-essential items • the limited nature of resources, • economics application of economic • from two old Greek words - ‘oikon’, • Resources the processed materials, equipment, • Physical and human effort exerted in production. • Man-made resources used in the production of goods • ...
