environmental economics Crossword Puzzles
Human Impact on Earth Systems 2025-05-14
Across
- – Eco-friendly way for fans to reach games
- – Natural resource heavily used in soccer stadiums
- – Water shortage due to overuse
- – Common waste product from stadium drinks
- – Type of pollution increased by fan travel to matches
- – Population change increasing resource use
- – Energy-efficient lighting
- – Measure of individual or event environmental impact
- – Used in making soccer balls and cleats
- – Planet affected by human activity
- – Materials like water, air, and minerals that humans use from the environment
- – Environmental practice to reduce waste
Down
- – Leo Messi’s current U.S. soccer club
- – Group of individuals of the same species living in a specific area
- – Who is playing in the 2025 Champions League final? PSG vs ____
- – Reigning men's World Cup champion
- – Renewable energy powering some stadiums
- – Short for tools that can monitor stadium energy
- – Grass alternative used in many soccer fields
- – One factor that affects population growth
- – Strategy to reduce waste in stadiums
- Clues
- – Gas released during transportation to games
23 Clues: Clues • – Energy-efficient lighting • – Water shortage due to overuse • – Reigning men's World Cup champion • – Planet affected by human activity • – Leo Messi’s current U.S. soccer club • – Strategy to reduce waste in stadiums • – Used in making soccer balls and cleats • – Environmental practice to reduce waste • – Renewable energy powering some stadiums • ...
Philosophy 2025-09-22
Across
- Fairness in solving climate crisis.
- Ecosystems and nature are central.
- Save or switch to clean energy.
- Study of humans and nature.
- Environmental Aesthetics
- Balance development with protection
- Protects and wisely uses natural resources.
- Action to solve environmental issues.
- Humans are part of nature.
- Avoid waste, use only what’s needed.
- Save resources for future generations.
- Surroundings where life exists.
- Human-centered view of nature.
- Nature has value beyond human use.
- Using resources wisely.
Down
- Earth acts like a living system.
- Keep environment healthy.
- Study of life, values, and existence.
- Careful, wise decision-making.
- Greenhouse gases released.
- Live in harmony with nature.
- Deals to cut emissions fairly.
- Useful materials from nature.
- Global agreement for cleaner environment.
- Design cities for clean, healthy living.
- Duty to care for the environment.
- Cutting down forests.
- All living things have value.
- Nature is important (for life or itself).
- Eco-friendly items.
30 Clues: Eco-friendly items. • Cutting down forests. • Using resources wisely. • Environmental Aesthetics • Keep environment healthy. • Greenhouse gases released. • Humans are part of nature. • Study of humans and nature. • Live in harmony with nature. • Useful materials from nature. • All living things have value. • Careful, wise decision-making. • Deals to cut emissions fairly. • ...
Rising: Dispatches from the New American Shore 2025-11-08
Across
- Bird being affected by changing sea level
- Many of Rush’s interviewees live in this kind of zone
- Author of Rising
- Repeated image of what’s vanishing from the coast
- City in Rhode Island where Rush observes rising tides
- Southern city in Rising known for its vulnerability to storms
- Coastal ecosystem often threatened by flooding
- Residents of Isle de Jean Charles identify as this group
- Tidal wetland plant featured in the book
- Type of barrier often eroded by storm surges
- Government program that purchases flooded properties
Down
- Term for forced movement due to environmental change
- Shallow place in a body of water where land and sea meet and mingle
- Main environmental issue explored in Rising
- State where Rush interviews residents of the Gulf Coast
- Type of storm surge or high-water event
- Federal agency offering relocation funds
- A raised barrier or mound used to protect an area or redirect water
- State where the book’s Staten Island stories take place
- Material that builds and erodes shorelines
20 Clues: Author of Rising • Type of storm surge or high-water event • Federal agency offering relocation funds • Tidal wetland plant featured in the book • Bird being affected by changing sea level • Material that builds and erodes shorelines • Main environmental issue explored in Rising • Type of barrier often eroded by storm surges • ...
Decision 2023-04-06
Across
- Seraphim's birth name
- Descriptive-decisionism
- "_ County's pointed out as kinda square"
- Ian's least favorite nation
- German-Italian diminuitive for Joseph
- "Join me in _"
- my medicine
- "Last_in Paris"
- acronym of 1st SS
Down
- _ House Prison, where Joe Hill was shot
- Swiss-German-Jurist
- "It's so cold in_"
- Russian for "nothing"
- Shamrock is half
- Carlyle called economics the _ science
- Girl who stooges for Phil Church
16 Clues: my medicine • "Join me in _" • "Last_in Paris" • Shamrock is half • acronym of 1st SS • "It's so cold in_" • Swiss-German-Jurist • Seraphim's birth name • Russian for "nothing" • Descriptive-decisionism • Ian's least favorite nation • Girl who stooges for Phil Church • German-Italian diminuitive for Joseph • Carlyle called economics the _ science • _ House Prison, where Joe Hill was shot • ...
Chapter 1 Lesson 1 Vocab Quiz 2026-01-08
Across
- A system used to manage limited resources for the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
- the branch of economics that uses objective analysis to find out how the economy actually works
- a way to compare the costs of an action with the benefits of that action; if benefits exceed costs, then the action is worth taking
Down
- the branch of economics that applies value judgments to data in order to recommend actions or policies. The goal is to advise how things ought to be done.
- something that motivates a person to take a particular course of action
- The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants
- the exchange of one benefit or advantage for another that is thought to be better
- the condition that results because people have limited resources but unlimited wants
8 Clues: something that motivates a person to take a particular course of action • the exchange of one benefit or advantage for another that is thought to be better • the condition that results because people have limited resources but unlimited wants • The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants • ...
Money crossword 2024-12-05
12 Clues: Cost • Greed • no charge • Making money • Spending plan • system of money • ticket to get rich • A large amount of money • Money owed to government • When someone is low on money • A person who gets hired by a boss • Production, distribution and consumption
Chapter 1 Lesson 1 2026-01-08
Across
- the exchange of one benefit or advantage for another that is thought to be better
- the branch of economics that applies value judgments to data in order to recommend actions or policies. The goal is to advise how things ought to be done.
- something that motivates a person to take a particular course of action
- the branch of economics that uses objective analysis to find out how the economy actually works
Down
- a way to compare the costs of an action with the benefits of that action; if benefits exceed costs, then the action is worth taking
- The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants
- the condition that results because people have limited resources but unlimited wants
- A system used to manage limited resources for the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
8 Clues: something that motivates a person to take a particular course of action • the exchange of one benefit or advantage for another that is thought to be better • the condition that results because people have limited resources but unlimited wants • The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants • ...
Evolution vocab 2022-03-09
Across
- death of the species
- Ability to survive and reproduce
- A supercontinent that exist a long time ago which all the continents were joined together
- Same function, but not related, same structure that faced environmental pressure
- Too much fertilizer that cause algal bloom
- A group of organisms
- Different function, the same feature
Down
- number of species in the area
- A species with high risk of entinction
- Done by female and mating male
- the remains of the species
- environmental selection determines the selection of traits be increased or decreased in population for the survival of species over time
- How organisms become fit to the environment
- early development of species
- Changes if species characteristic, traits, and appearance over time
15 Clues: death of the species • A group of organisms • the remains of the species • early development of species • number of species in the area • Done by female and mating male • Ability to survive and reproduce • Different function, the same feature • A species with high risk of entinction • Too much fertilizer that cause algal bloom • How organisms become fit to the environment • ...
(World Geo) UNIT 8: Sustainability & The Future 2025-02-14
Across
- Economic growth that preserves environmental and social well being
- Reduction or removal of carbon emissions
- Use of natural resources faster than they can be replaced
- Meeting present needs without compromising future generations
- Actions taken to reduce environmental harm
- Costs or benefits not reflected in market prices
- System that minimizes waste through reuse and recycling
- Variety of life within an ecosystem
- Measure of human demand on Earths ecosystems
Down
- Limits of human activity that Earth systems can safely tolerate
- Damage to the environment through resource depletion or pollution
- Maximum population an environment can sustain
- Ability of a resource to naturally replenish over time
- Caused by human activity
- Ability of a system to absorb disturbances and recover
15 Clues: Caused by human activity • Variety of life within an ecosystem • Reduction or removal of carbon emissions • Actions taken to reduce environmental harm • Measure of human demand on Earths ecosystems • Maximum population an environment can sustain • Costs or benefits not reflected in market prices • Ability of a resource to naturally replenish over time • ...
Social Studies, Geography & Mapping 2021-09-16
Across
- The study of Earth's surface and the way people use it
- the way people use resources to meet their needs, often money
- The five themes of Geography are human-environment interaction, region, place, location & ___________
- interaction the relationship between people and their environment
- how people, products, and ideas travel from one place to another
Down
- an area (of land) that has unifying or similar characteristics
- The five themes of Social Studies are History, Geography, Economics, Culture & ______________
- What happened in the past
- a system of laws and leaders that help people live together successfully
- people's way of life (religion, food, music, traditions, etc.)
10 Clues: What happened in the past • The study of Earth's surface and the way people use it • the way people use resources to meet their needs, often money • an area (of land) that has unifying or similar characteristics • people's way of life (religion, food, music, traditions, etc.) • how people, products, and ideas travel from one place to another • ...
BYOBusiness vocabulary 2022-04-25
Across
- the parts of economics concerned with single factors.
- the parts of economics concerned with large-scale or general economic factors.
- an act or use for which a consumer (for example) is willing to pay.
- an article or substance that is manufactured or refined for sale.
- the number of goods or services that suppliers will produce and sell at a given marketplace.
- a good whose appeal increases with the popularity of its complement.
Down
- a person or thing acting or serving in place of another.
- the surplus earned above the normal return on capital.
- the social performance of a product or a service.
- the amount of money required when buying something.
- the exchange of goods and services takes place when buyers and sellers are in contact with each other.
- condition where the quantity demanded is greater than supplied.
- the amount of an asset or resource that exceeds the portion that's actively utilized.
- a for-profit business organization—such as a corporation, limited liability company (LLC), or partnership—that provides professional services.
14 Clues: the social performance of a product or a service. • the amount of money required when buying something. • the parts of economics concerned with single factors. • the surplus earned above the normal return on capital. • a person or thing acting or serving in place of another. • condition where the quantity demanded is greater than supplied. • ...
Engineering Processes 2024-10-14
Across
- Which design principle refers to the use of differences in elements to create visual interest.
- What design principle involves creating a focal point, which draws viewer's attention.
- The feel of a surface is known as ______.
- This is the last step of the design process.
- This is the engineering design principles that focuses on assembling a product.
- This design element represents a path of a moving point in space.
- a series of steps used to solve a problem is called?
Down
- This design element refers to three-dimensional representation of an object.
- This designing principle focuses on the visual appeal of a product.
- A ______ is helps a person to understand how a solution works.
- This is the first step of the engineering design process.
- The factors that drive economics for a product is supply and _____.
- This focuses on the overall cost of the materials and product.
- Which design element refers to the use of light and dark areas to create the illusion of depth and volume?
14 Clues: The feel of a surface is known as ______. • This is the last step of the design process. • a series of steps used to solve a problem is called? • This is the first step of the engineering design process. • A ______ is helps a person to understand how a solution works. • This focuses on the overall cost of the materials and product. • ...
Tokyo, Japan 2026-05-21
15 Clues: Culture • Language • Famous Food • Famous Place • Famous Anime • Famous Tower • Modern Virus • Health Issue • Famous Movie • Name of Place • Famous Mountain • Historical Virus • Aging Global Issue • Famous Game Company • Environmental Issue
APES - Chapter 22 Test 2023-03-27
Across
- Nonliquid waste that is not especially hazardous and that comes from production of consumer goods, mining, petroleum extraction and refining, and agriculture.
- A quantitative analysis of inputs and outputs across the entire life cycle of a product—from its origins, through its production, transport, sale, and use, and finally its disposal—in an attempt to judge the sustainability of the process and make it more ecologically efficient.
- Any unwanted material or substance that results from a human activity or process.
- An incinerator that uses heat from its furnace to boil water to create steam that drives electricity generation or that fuels heating systems.
- Waste management strategy composed of recycling and composting.
- An area of land whose redevelopment or reuse is complicated by the presence or potential presence of hazardous material.
- A mix of gases that consists of roughly half methane produced by anaerobic decomposition deep inside landfills.
- A site at which solid waste is buried in the ground or piled up in large mounds for disposal, designed to prevent the waste from contaminating the environment.
- The process by which materials are collected and then broken down and reprocessed to manufacture new items.
- A law establishing a program whereby consumers pay a deposit on bottles or cans upon purchase—often 5 or 10 cents per container—and then receive a refund when they return them to stores after use.
- Strategic decision making to minimize the amount of waste generated and to dispose of waste safely and effectively.
- Liquid that results when substances from waste dissolve in water as rainwater percolates downward.
- The conversion of organic waste into mulch or humus by encouraging, in a controlled manner, the natural biological processes of decomposition.
- Liquid or solid waste that is toxic, chemically reactive, flammable, or corrosive.
- Nonliquid waste that is not especially hazardous and that comes from homes, institutions, and small businesses.
Down
- U.S. law (enacted in 1976 and amended in 1984) that specifies, among other things, how to manage sanitary landfills to protect against environmental contamination.
- A hazardous waste disposal method in which a well is drilled deep beneath an area’s water table into porous rock below an impervious soil layer.
- A recycling facility where items are sorted, cleaned, shredded, and prepared for reprocessing into new items.
- (1) A disposal method for hazardous waste or mining waste in which waste in liquid or slurry form is placed into a shallow depression lined with impervious material such as clay and allowed to evaporate, leaving a solid residue on the bottom. (2) The site of such disposal.
- Discarded electronic products such as computers, monitors, printers, televisions, DVD players, cell phones, and other devices. Heavy metals in these products mean that this waste may be judged hazardous.
- A holistic approach to industry that integrates principles from engineering, chemistry, ecology, economics, and other disciplines and seeks to redesign industrial systems in order to reduce resource inputs and minimize inefficiency.
- An approach to waste management and industrial design in which the materials from products are recovered and reused to create new products.
- The reduction of the amount of material that enters the waste stream to avoid the costs of disposal and recycling, help conserve resources, minimize pollution, and save consumers and businesses money.
- The flow of waste as it moves from its sources toward disposal destinations.
- A program administered by the Environmental Protection Agency in which experts identify sites polluted with hazardous chemicals, protect groundwater near these sites, and clean up the pollution. Established by the Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) in 1980.
- A controlled process of burning solid waste for disposal in which mixed garbage is combusted at very high temperatures.
26 Clues: Waste management strategy composed of recycling and composting. • The flow of waste as it moves from its sources toward disposal destinations. • Any unwanted material or substance that results from a human activity or process. • Liquid or solid waste that is toxic, chemically reactive, flammable, or corrosive. • ...
cooking at school 2020-10-28
Grade 5 year 2023-12-05
Yuri 2021-10-17
Ch 1 Lesson 1 Vocab Quiz 2026-01-08
Across
- the exchange of one benefit or advantage for another that is thought to be better
- the branch of economics that applies value judgments to data in order to recommend actions or policies. The goal is to advise how things ought to be done.]
- something that motivates a person to take a particular course of action
- the branch of economics that uses objective analysis to find out how the economy actually works
Down
- a way to compare the costs of an action with the benefits of that action; if benefits exceed costs, then the action is worth taking
- The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants
- the condition that results because people have limited resources but unlimited wants
- A system used to manage limited resources for the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
8 Clues: something that motivates a person to take a particular course of action • the exchange of one benefit or advantage for another that is thought to be better • the condition that results because people have limited resources but unlimited wants • The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants • ...
Unit-III-Environmental Pollution & Current Environmental issues 2022-10-05
Across
- Disease which is caused by drinking contaminated water.
- Use should be banned to avoid soil pollution.
- Produced on incomplete combustion of fuels.
- This type of soil can hold very little water.
- Type of soil used for making pottery.
Down
- Pollutant which was used in refrigerators and air conditioners.
- This layer protects us from harmful ultraviolet rays.
- Living organism in the soil.
- River which is famous in India and sustains most of the northern, central and eastern Indian population.
- Collective name for layers of soil.
- Plantation prevents it.
- It is essential for combustion.
- Clay and loam are suitable for cereals like.
- In desert soil erosion occurs through.
- This chemical protects our crops and is washed into water bodies from the field.
15 Clues: Plantation prevents it. • Living organism in the soil. • It is essential for combustion. • Collective name for layers of soil. • Type of soil used for making pottery. • In desert soil erosion occurs through. • Produced on incomplete combustion of fuels. • Clay and loam are suitable for cereals like. • Use should be banned to avoid soil pollution. • ...
Clean Up Australia Day Crossword 2013-03-14
Across
- On the first Clean up Australia Day there were 300 000 ___________________
- Clean Up Australia Day is the nation's largest community-based environmental __________.
- a vessel used for private cruising or racing
- present tense of participating
- many people just carelessly throw __________ where ever they like
- opposite of dirty
- The air is contaminated by _____________
- What is the only planet that allows humans, flora and fauna to live in it?
- Where is the Opera House located?
Down
- I seem to have no ___________ after all that running
- Clean Up Australia Day is a non-profit Australian environmental maintenance ___________________.
- north is pointing ____
- many _____________ participate in clean up a=Australia day at school
- clock/watch
- The ________________ helped clean up the local area.
- Canberra is the Capital city of what country?
- opposite of night
- clean up australia day has improved the health of the environment
- many ___________ participate in clean up austrlia day
- inspiration made Ian Kiernan _________ of Clean Up Australi Day
- Ian Kiernan fulfilled his __________ of sailing solo on his yacht.
21 Clues: clock/watch • opposite of night • opposite of dirty • north is pointing ____ • present tense of participating • Where is the Opera House located? • The air is contaminated by _____________ • a vessel used for private cruising or racing • Canberra is the Capital city of what country? • I seem to have no ___________ after all that running • ...
Crossword B 2025-12-07
Across
- perception – How the public views an issue, topic, or event.
- – The ability to recover from environmental or social shocks.
- – The process of providing or obtaining the food necessary for health.
- – Fair treatment and access to opportunities for everyone.
- misinformation – False information that spreads quickly online.
- activism – Using online platforms to promote social or political change.
- – Ability to adjust to new conditions or environments.
- safety – Practices ensuring that food is safe to eat.
- labor – Ensuring safe and just working conditions.
- design – Creating products that minimize environmental impact.
- – Involving multiple age groups working together.
- – Ensuring everyone feels respected and valued.
Down
- mobility – Opportunities to move or grow in a career.
- – Chemicals used to protect crops from pests.
- stress – Anxiety caused by constant alerts from apps or devices.
- awareness – Understanding social problems and inequalities.
- – Extreme division of opinions in society.
- – Rules that determine what content users see online.
- responsibility – Awareness of how buying choices affect the world.
- culture – Shared values, norms, and practices at work.
20 Clues: – Extreme division of opinions in society. • – Chemicals used to protect crops from pests. • – Ensuring everyone feels respected and valued. • – Involving multiple age groups working together. • labor – Ensuring safe and just working conditions. • mobility – Opportunities to move or grow in a career. • – Rules that determine what content users see online. • ...
Crossword B 2025-12-07
Across
- perception - How the public views an issue, topic, or event.
- - The ability to recover from environmental or social shocks.
- - The process of providing or obtaining the food necessary for health.
- - Fair treatment and access to opportunities for everyone.
- misinformation - False information that spreads quickly online.
- activism - Using online platforms to promote social or political change.
- - Ability to adjust to new conditions or environments.
- safety - Practices ensuring that food is safe to eat.
- labor - Ensuring safe and just working conditions.
- design - Creating products that minimize environmental impact.
- - Involving multiple age groups working together.
- - Ensuring everyone feels respected and valued.
Down
- mobility - Opportunities to move or grow in a career.
- - Chemicals used to protect crops from pests.
- stress - Anxiety caused by constant alerts from apps or devices.
- awareness - Understanding social problems and inequalities.
- - Extreme division of opinions in society.
- - Rules that determine what content users see online.
- responsibility - Awareness of how buying choices affect the world.
- culture - Shared values, norms, and practices at work.
20 Clues: - Extreme division of opinions in society. • - Chemicals used to protect crops from pests. • - Ensuring everyone feels respected and valued. • - Involving multiple age groups working together. • labor - Ensuring safe and just working conditions. • mobility - Opportunities to move or grow in a career. • - Rules that determine what content users see online. • ...
Sustainability Puzzle Challenge 2026-06-19
Across
- global sector that uses up 70% of our freshwater sources
- a renewable resource
- the most commonly used type of energy source in urban areas of Uganda
- involves using organic materials to produce energy
- Does not count as a greenhouse gas
- the brand which was the first to turn plastic waste into clothing
- root cause of the ozone layer hole
- is responsible for ESG implementation oversight
- It's part of FINCA Uganda's social agenda
- Is key for use of personal data.
Down
- a key principle of good governance
- refers to exaggerating environmental claims
- energy source that is harmful to the environment
- connected to the overuse of chemicals that harm the environment and living things
- ESG risk is MOST dangerous when it is
- Conflict of interest at board level is a......risk
- Cabon........ refers to total greenhouse gas emissions
- Customer data protection fits within........pillar
- I am not profitable, yet I protect it.
- ......stands for Environmental, Social & Governance aspects.
20 Clues: a renewable resource • Is key for use of personal data. • a key principle of good governance • Does not count as a greenhouse gas • root cause of the ozone layer hole • ESG risk is MOST dangerous when it is • I am not profitable, yet I protect it. • It's part of FINCA Uganda's social agenda • refers to exaggerating environmental claims • ...
finance 2024-02-12
Across
- direct exchange of goods w/out using currency
- the study of how money is created and used
- privately owned business engaged in making profit
- the transportation of goods services resources ext. across international borders
- those in which the prices of goods/service is determined by gov. or state
- a structure within a society that organizes production distribution and consumption of other goods and services
Down
- where goods/services is exchanges w/out expecting immediate pay
- no gov. presence in economic transactions
- companies that have all control over a certain product/industry
- the goods and tools used to make products
- human ability to produce goods or services that require physical labor or skill
- the range of economic activity in a community
- things like land minerals forests and oil that exist naturally and are used to make goods
- the prices of services and goods are determined by a free system
14 Clues: no gov. presence in economic transactions • the goods and tools used to make products • the study of how money is created and used • direct exchange of goods w/out using currency • the range of economic activity in a community • privately owned business engaged in making profit • where goods/services is exchanges w/out expecting immediate pay • ...
GENVI FINALS ACT#1 2026-04-27
Across
- One of the stages of PDCA cycle
- GPS was originally operated by _____ before they became available to civilians.
- One of the triple planetary crises
- ECC is granted by the Environmental Management ______.
- A stage of impact assessment where the EIS is already prepared and presented to the authority & the public
Down
- Projects located at Environmentally ______ Areas(ECAs) demand an Environmental Impact Statement in accordance to PD 1586.
- ISO means International Organization for ________
- The Environmental ______ Certificate (ECC), is issued to the government-owned/private company that serves as a permit for them to proceed with their project.
- An example of internet mapping technologies that provides a 3D representation of the planet.
- _______ confidence & trust is one of the benefits of having an ISO certification
10 Clues: One of the stages of PDCA cycle • One of the triple planetary crises • ISO means International Organization for ________ • ECC is granted by the Environmental Management ______. • GPS was originally operated by _____ before they became available to civilians. • _______ confidence & trust is one of the benefits of having an ISO certification • ...
Fun Quiz 2020-11-08
6 Clues: Medium of Exchange • Father of Modern Economics • Agriculture belongs to which sector • Beach Shack owner falls under which sector • Economics that deals with daily consumer habits • total goods,services produced in a country in 1 year
Understanding the Times- Chapter 5 2023-02-10
10 Clues: USA • ECONOMICS • Utopian Society • Ideas of Karl Marx • Owners/Oppressor's • Oppressed/Lower class • realizing who you are • justifies lower class abuses • Abolition of Private Property • struggle=social and economic progress
Leilani Huff 2026-03-13
10 Clues: Equal rights • 42nd president • Ease hostility • Immune disease • Iraq invades Kuwait • supreme court woman • Conservative movement • President Reagan's economics • Pact between U.S,Mexico, and Canada • Prevents discrimination of the disabled
Engineering fields 2025-11-02
Across
- – Aviation and spacecraft
- – Environmental protection and resource management
- – Electricity, power, and circuits
- – Construction of buildings and infrastructure
Down
- – Design and manufacturing of machines
- – Programming and computer systems
- – Medical technology and devices
- – Transformation of materials and chemical processes
8 Clues: – Aviation and spacecraft • – Medical technology and devices • – Programming and computer systems • – Electricity, power, and circuits • – Design and manufacturing of machines • – Construction of buildings and infrastructure • – Environmental protection and resource management • – Transformation of materials and chemical processes
History Economics 1 2022-11-08
Across
- The study of how people use limited resources.
- ___resources are things in the environment we use
- The name of a worker for a company or business.
- When there is not enough of a thing that we want
Down
- ___resources are the people who work in a business.
- The person who studies economics
- ___resources are what is produced or made.
7 Clues: The person who studies economics • ___resources are what is produced or made. • The study of how people use limited resources. • The name of a worker for a company or business. • When there is not enough of a thing that we want • ___resources are things in the environment we use • ___resources are the people who work in a business.
UNIT 5:THE ENVIRONMENT 2025-07-19
Across
- energy Energy from sources that are naturally replenishing, such as wind, solar, and hydro power.
- waste Harmful materials that can cause damage to health and the environment.
- The ability to maintain ecological balance without depleting resources.
- change Long-term changes in temperature, precipitation, and other atmospheric conditions.
- The variety of plant and animal life in a particular habitat.
- The illegal hunting or capturing of animals, often for profit or trade.
- pollution The contamination of water bodies (rivers, lakes, oceans) by pollutants like chemicals or waste.
- gases Gases that trap heat in the Earth’s atmosphere, contributing to global warming (e.g., carbon dioxide, methane).
- The process of replanting trees in areas where forests have been cut down or destroyed.
- spill The release of oil into the ocean or other water bodies, causing significant environmental damage.
- footprint The amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases emitted due to human activities.
- species Species that are at risk of becoming endangered in the near future.
- list A list of species that are considered endangered or threatened with extinction by conservation organizations.
- The process of restoring injured or orphaned animals back to health before releasing them into the wild.
- efforts Actions taken to protect endangered species and their habitats.
Down
- resources Materials or substances occurring in nature that are used by humans, such as water, air, and minerals.
- The introduction of harmful substances into the environment.
- sanctuary Protected areas where animals can live and breed safely without the threat of poaching or habitat destruction.
- The protection and preservation of natural resources and the environment.
- A community of living organisms interacting with their environment.
- toxins Harmful chemicals or particles suspended in the air that can cause health problems and environmental harm.
- pollution The contamination of the air by harmful substances such as smoke or chemicals.
- waste Discarded plastic products that can harm the environment, especially marine life.
- The complete disappearance of a species from the Earth.
- loss The destruction or alteration of natural habitats, often due to human activities, putting animals at risk.
- species Non-native species that cause harm to the environment, economy, or native species.
- species Species that are at risk of extinction due to various factors like habitat loss or hunting.
- pollution Harmful or disruptive sounds, often from industrial or urban sources.
- Areas where waste is buried to reduce its environmental impact.
- The clearing of forests, often for agriculture or urban development, leading to environmental damage.
30 Clues: The complete disappearance of a species from the Earth. • The introduction of harmful substances into the environment. • The variety of plant and animal life in a particular habitat. • Areas where waste is buried to reduce its environmental impact. • A community of living organisms interacting with their environment. • ...
Advanced Environmental Science Crossword Puzzle 2026-01-26
Across
- The ability to do work; renewable and nonrenewable energy sources affect environmental sustainability
- Organic matter from living organisms, used as a renewable energy source
- The layer of gases surrounding Earth that protects life and controls weather and climate
- All living organisms in a specific area or ecosystem
- The solid part of Earth (rocks, soil, landforms) that supports ecosystems and human activity
- The release of substances (such as greenhouse gases) into the atmosphere
- Large, slow-moving ice masses that store freshwater and indicate climate change when they melt
- A vital gas for respiration and combustion, produced mainly by plants through photosynthesis
- The long-term pattern of weather conditions in a region
- The introduction of harmful substances into the environment that damage ecosystems and human health
- Meeting present needs without harming future generations or the environment
- An online data source that tracks real-time global statistics such as population, emissions, and resource use
- The number of individuals living in an area; population growth increases demand for resources
- Materials that can break down naturally by microorganisms, reducing pollution
- All water on Earth (oceans, rivers, lakes, groundwater) that supports life and regulates climate
Down
- Frozen parts of Earth (ice caps, glaciers, snow) that influence sea levels and global temperature
- All living and nonliving surroundings that affect life on Earth, including air, water, land, and organisms
- The variety of life on Earth; high biodiversity increases ecosystem stability
- The protection and sustainable management of natural resources and ecosystems
- Natural materials (water, minerals, forests) used by humans for survival and development
- The study of population size, structure, and trends affecting environmental impact
- Actions taken to reduce environmental damage, especially climate change effects
- Land degradation in dry areas caused by climate change and human activities
- All regions of Earth where life exists, including land, water, and air
- The growth of cities, often increasing pollution and resource consumption
- The study of interactions between organisms and their environment
- Energy emitted as waves or particles, including solar radiation that affects climate
- A chemical element essential for life; its movement through the carbon cycle affects climate change
- A decrease in population that can reduce environmental pressure but affect economies
- Tiny particles or droplets in the air that influence climate and air quality
30 Clues: All living organisms in a specific area or ecosystem • The long-term pattern of weather conditions in a region • The study of interactions between organisms and their environment • All regions of Earth where life exists, including land, water, and air • Organic matter from living organisms, used as a renewable energy source • ...
Puzzle 20: Living Together 2026-05-27
Across
- The collective physical factors and living surroundings that directly affect the survival and growth of an organism.
- A green plant that captures sunlight to make its own food, forming the base of every feeding relationship.
- The total number of individuals of a single species in an area, which drops if their food source decreases.
- A condition that occurs when too many organisms live in a small space, increasing struggle for resources.
- Different populations of living things living together and interacting with one another in the same area.
- An environmental condition measuring hotness that drops at night, affecting how fast an organism loses water.
- A non-living environmental variable like salinity or acidity that determines what types of organisms can live there.
- The amount of water vapor or dampness present in soil or air, which is a critical need for woodlice to survive.
- What happens when different organisms struggle against each other for limited resources like food, water, or space.
- The specific place that provides an organism with its shelter, water, and food to survive and reproduce safely.
Down
- A relationship where different living things rely on each other for food, transport of seeds, or shelter.
- Organisms have special body features or behaviors that help them __________ in their specific environmental conditions.
- A single linear pathway that shows the transfer of energy from one feeding organism to the next.
- A single, distinct living individual, such as a specific plant, mammal, fungus, or microscopic bacterium.
- An organism that breaks down dead organic matter, returning vital mineral nutrients back into the soil.
- A group of organisms of the same kind living and reproducing together in a specific area at the same time.
- An animal that is hunted, killed, and eaten by another animal in a feeding relationship.
- An organism that cannot make its own food and must feed on other living things to get energy.
- An environmental variable that directly affects how quickly green plants can carry out food production under a lamp.
- A complex network of interconnected feeding pathways showing how different living populations depend on each other.
- An animal that catches, kills, and feeds on another animal to obtain its source of energy.
21 Clues: An animal that is hunted, killed, and eaten by another animal in a feeding relationship. • An animal that catches, kills, and feeds on another animal to obtain its source of energy. • An organism that cannot make its own food and must feed on other living things to get energy. • ...
Human Impact on Earth Systems 2025-05-14
Across
- – Type of pollution increased by fan travel to matches
- – Used in making soccer balls and cleats
- – Grass alternative used in many soccer fields
- – Reigning men's World Cup champion
- – One factor that affects population growth
- – Group of individuals of the same species living in a specific area
- – Short for tools that can monitor stadium energy
- – Measure of individual or event environmental impact
- – Gas released during transportation to games
- – Water shortage due to overuse
- – Energy-efficient lighting
- – Renewable energy powering some stadiums
Down
- – Environmental practice to reduce waste
- – Strategy to reduce waste in stadiums
- – Common waste product from stadium drinks
- – Who is playing in the 2025 Champions League final? PSG vs ____
- – Population change increasing resource use
- – Leo Messi’s current U.S. soccer club
- – Planet affected by human activity
- – Natural resource heavily used in soccer stadiums
- – Eco-friendly way for fans to reach games
- – Materials like water, air, and minerals that humans use from the environment
22 Clues: – Energy-efficient lighting • – Water shortage due to overuse • – Reigning men's World Cup champion • – Planet affected by human activity • – Strategy to reduce waste in stadiums • – Leo Messi’s current U.S. soccer club • – Environmental practice to reduce waste • – Used in making soccer balls and cleats • – Renewable energy powering some stadiums • ...
evolution and natural selection 2024-04-10
Across
- How well a species can survive in a habitat
- Believed that organisms altered their behavior in response to environmental change
- Traits that are passed down through generations
- Looks different with similar function
- Species competing for resources
- Evolution happens______
- The change of characteristics in species over a long period of time
- An organism evolves from an _____
- Organisms adapt to have better fitness in an environment
- the biological variation that occurs within species
- Looks similar with a different function
Down
- process by which habitats are transformed into smaller patches isolated from each other
- A modification of an organism to better survive
- A species dying off
- Change in population due to urban development
- Believed in natural selection
- an evolutionary force that causes a particular phenotype to be more favorable in certain environmental conditions.
- The amount of organisms in a habitat
- Does not have a function
- Process of a species developing different characteristics
20 Clues: A species dying off • Evolution happens______ • Does not have a function • Believed in natural selection • Species competing for resources • An organism evolves from an _____ • The amount of organisms in a habitat • Looks different with similar function • Looks similar with a different function • How well a species can survive in a habitat • ...
alternative living 2025-08-14
Across
- wanted or worth having
- use less of the Earth's materials
- spend nights outdoors without a home
- influenced or sparked by something
- place giving protection from weather
- with lower environmental impact
- small pieces of trash
- refilled by nature over time
- place where waste is tipped
- by run or driven using a fuel/source
- using less power for same output
- make less rubbish
- when is no more of something
- the environmental “three Rs”
- someone without a permanent home
Down
- power from sources that refill naturally
- proposal; to present a proposal
- split something into parts
- designed to be piled safely
- lift or collect an item
- device that turns sunlight into electricity
- very tall city building
- moving stream, river, or runoff
- main entrance to a building
- process waste into reusable material
- planned area of residential homes
- facts that prove something happened
- shown publicly for viewing
- large vehicle for heavy goods
29 Clues: make less rubbish • small pieces of trash • wanted or worth having • lift or collect an item • very tall city building • split something into parts • shown publicly for viewing • designed to be piled safely • place where waste is tipped • main entrance to a building • refilled by nature over time • when is no more of something • the environmental “three Rs” • ...
NSTP CROSSWORD 2026-04-16
Across
- The city where the college campus is found.
- The campus or community-based activities conducted.
- The local community partner for the immersion.
- The core value representing high quality.
- One of the three core school values.
- The reason for the immersion or campus-based engagement.
- An activity focused on environmental tidiness.
- Personal "What I Learned" statements.
- The positive result of the service.
- The section dedicated to recognizing the NSTP Faculty.
Down
- Noticing the needs and issues of the people we helped.
- A project involving planting or environmental work.
- How the project will be continued or maintained in the future.
- Brief background information about the area or community.
- The province where the campus is located.
- Part of the name of the college.
- The core value that focuses on helping others.
- The act of engaging directly with the community.
- The final results and learning experience of the project.
- The target group receiving the project's help.
20 Clues: Part of the name of the college. • The positive result of the service. • One of the three core school values. • Personal "What I Learned" statements. • The province where the campus is located. • The core value representing high quality. • The city where the college campus is found. • The local community partner for the immersion. • ...
Life Cycle Assessment 2026-02-25
Across
- methodology for assessing the environmental, social, and economic impacts associated with all the stages of the life cycle of a commercial product, process, or service
- First stage of a traditional LCA.
- Inventory data flow contributing to global warming (two words in one)
- Second stage of a traditional life cycle assessment.
- An LCA approach that attributes a portion of the total observed environmental impacts to a specific good or service
- Umbrella term for groups such as workers, consumers, and communities evaluated in social life cycle assessment
Down
- Third stage of a traditional life cycle assessment.
- Proposed in an article how to address energy justice using a social LCA framework.
- Inventory data flow contributing to ozone layer depletion
- Stakeholders positively impacted by a shut down of a coal plan
- Type of cotton that has a lower environmental impact, but account for less than 1% of total cotton production.
- An LCA approach that captures how flows change in response to a decision, presenting the consequences of a change in the provision of goods or services
- Stakeholders negatively impacted by a shut down of a coal plant.
13 Clues: First stage of a traditional LCA. • Third stage of a traditional life cycle assessment. • Second stage of a traditional life cycle assessment. • Inventory data flow contributing to ozone layer depletion • Stakeholders positively impacted by a shut down of a coal plan • Stakeholders negatively impacted by a shut down of a coal plant. • ...
Evolution 2022-03-16
Across
- similar features due to function; similar environmental pressures
- features with no known use
- the evolution of a new species(caused by divergent evolution)
- embryos of different organisms look similar
- organisms bring/remove alleles when they enter/leave a population
Down
- similar features inherited from a common ancestor
- two or more species evolving together
- two or more species become less similar
- can create new alleles
- random changes in a population’s gene pool
- two or more species become more similar due to similar environmental pressures
11 Clues: can create new alleles • features with no known use • two or more species evolving together • two or more species become less similar • random changes in a population’s gene pool • embryos of different organisms look similar • similar features inherited from a common ancestor • the evolution of a new species(caused by divergent evolution) • ...
US Social and environmental movements 2023-02-10
Across
- American Indian Movement
- Celebrated on April 22nd
- A loosely organized but sustained campaign in support of a social goal
- Name of a workers Movement activist
- THE BELIEF THAt MEN AND WOMEN SHOULD HAVE EQUAL RIGHTS AND OPPORTUNITIES
- Lastname of a young environmental activist
Down
- State where the oil pipeline was being built
- Rachel Carson's 1962 book
- Is one of the goals of the environmental movement
- Movement that aims to protect the common interest of workers
- Land designed for the Indigenous to live on
11 Clues: American Indian Movement • Celebrated on April 22nd • Rachel Carson's 1962 book • Name of a workers Movement activist • Lastname of a young environmental activist • Land designed for the Indigenous to live on • State where the oil pipeline was being built • Is one of the goals of the environmental movement • Movement that aims to protect the common interest of workers • ...
Crossword 1 2025-11-11
Across
- Firm leader
- Household helper from abroad
- Works at construction sites
- Having a quick mind
- Showing concern for others
- Striving for success
- In good physical condition
Down
- Specialist in economics
- Creator of building designs
- Achieving goals despite obstacles
- Having a rich imagination
- Believing in one's abilities
- Staying peaceful
13 Clues: Firm leader • Staying peaceful • Having a quick mind • Striving for success • Specialist in economics • Having a rich imagination • Showing concern for others • In good physical condition • Creator of building designs • Works at construction sites • Household helper from abroad • Believing in one's abilities • Achieving goals despite obstacles
Econ In Class Friday 4/11/25 2025-04-11
Across
- The worker and their skills, knowledge, and abilities
- Natural resources
- Desire, ability and willingness to buy a product
- There is an inverse (opposite) relationship between a product’s price and the quantity demanded…P increases, Qd decreases and vice versa
- Fundamental problem of economics: limited resources, unlimited wants
- General increase in the price level
- Usefulness or satisfaction
- Social science that studies the choices individuals/societies/governments make when faced with scarcity
- Additional or difference between two items
- Factories, tools, equipment and machinery used to make goods & services
Down
- Additional benefit of another unit of an activity
- Value of the next best alternative given up when a choice is made
- The risk taker who combines the other factors of production to make a ‘new’ good or service
- Additional cost of another unit of an activity
- Something done for you, for example Netflix streaming services
- As price increases the quantity supplied increases and as the price decreases the quantity supplied decreases
- Mnemonic device to help students remember what shifts the supply curve
- Mnemonic device to help students remember what shifts the demand curve
- The only thing that changes the Qd or the Qs of a product is a change in the __________ of the product itself.
19 Clues: Natural resources • Usefulness or satisfaction • General increase in the price level • Additional or difference between two items • Additional cost of another unit of an activity • Desire, ability and willingness to buy a product • Additional benefit of another unit of an activity • The worker and their skills, knowledge, and abilities • ...
Year 10 Economics 2021-07-01
Across
- the measure of responsiveness to a change in price
- a factor of production
- the acronym we use to determine the factors that affect the supply curve
- the cost of borrowing
- the number of factors of production
- a place where buyers and sellers meet to exchange goods and services for money
- an EoS concerned with bulk buying
- the social science of allocating scarce resources for the production of goods and services that satisfy the needs and wants of the population.
- a point inside the PPF
- when the PED is less than 1.
- costs which do not vary with output
- the quantity of a product that producers are willing and able to produce at various prices over a given time period
Down
- a point beyond the PPF
- the acronym we use to determine the factors that affect the demand curve
- cost the cost of the next best alternative foregone
- what a consumer aims to maximise
- costs which vary with output
- a spillover effect on society of a transaction between two parties
- what a firm aims to maximise
- the quantity of a product that customers are willing and able to buy at various prices over a given time period
- money given to a firm by the government to lower the cost of production
- the output point at which costs and revenues are the same
- the study of the global and national economy
23 Clues: the cost of borrowing • a point beyond the PPF • a factor of production • a point inside the PPF • costs which vary with output • what a firm aims to maximise • when the PED is less than 1. • what a consumer aims to maximise • an EoS concerned with bulk buying • the number of factors of production • costs which do not vary with output • the study of the global and national economy • ...
Economics Final Project 2021-06-09
Across
- What is the amount of a product offered for sale at all available prices?
- What is it called when a store sets prices to less than a whole number to show cheaper value?
- What is the study of how people try to satisfy their wants and needs with limited resources?
- What is the power to increase or decrease the money supply?
- What does it mean when a person leaves their job to find a new one?
- What does it mean when prices of goods increase little every year?
- What are natural resources not created by people?
- What is the measure of a country's total trade of goods and services?
- What is the term for the amount of goods and services made in a country overtime?
- What is a tendency in behavioral finance?
- What is used to promote and pay for the well-being of the society?
- What is a private business that operates in competition and is largely free of state control?
Down
- What is the value of the next best alternative?
- What are actions done by congress to increase or decrease aggregate demand?
- What does it mean when prices of goods increase a lot every year?
- What is when a change in price causes a change in quantity?
- What is the idea that there are limited resources?
- What is the point where a supply curve and demand curve cross?
- What is a form of debt incurred by a person?
- What is when a change in price causes a little change in quantity?
- What is the desire, ability, and willingness to buy a product?
- What is the term used for being in college?
- What do you get after graduating college?
- What is increasing the money supply called?
- What are the ups and downs of GDP?
25 Clues: What are the ups and downs of GDP? • What do you get after graduating college? • What is a tendency in behavioral finance? • What is the term used for being in college? • What is increasing the money supply called? • What is a form of debt incurred by a person? • What is the value of the next best alternative? • What are natural resources not created by people? • ...
Some Economics Terminologies 2022-11-02
Across
- A term referring to the degree of responsiveness.
- Economic growth that is represented by an increase in an economy's productive capacity.
- Individuals in an economy are collectively referred to as this.
- When demand and supply are equal.
- Any entity not directly involved in an economic activity is referred to as this.
- Any entity that enjoys a good or service without paying for it.
- The price of one currency in terms of another currency.
- This is also known as the vicious circle of poverty.
- The total pay received by a worker.
- The national income or output of an economy can be represented by this.
- The largest contributor to a government revenue.
- Inflation rate of an economy can be represented by this.
- A type of product that is both rival and excludable.
- This is likely to fall when inflation rate goes up.
- When inflation rate grows at a rapid pace.
- The degree of flexibility of resources to be moved occupationally or geographically.
- An arrangement which brings buyers into contact with sellers.
- Merging or taking over another firm in a totally different industry.
- Merging or taking over another firm in the same industry at the same production stage.
- Businesses in an economy are collectively referred to as this.
- This is equal to average revenue
- Excess profit above that is required to keep a firm in the market in the long run.
- When supply and demand in the market are not operating in an efficient manner.
- A type of good that does not require any resources to be produced and does not have an opportunity cost.
- A problem caused by overpopulation, leading to scarcer resources and job opportunities.
- The return to savings and the cost of borrowing.
Down
- The reduction or elimination of rules and regulations that ate enforced by laws.
- A type of unemployment caused by a fall in demand in one or a few industries.
- A cost of inflation where buyers have to move around looking for the next best alternatives.
- lack of double coincidence of wants is a drawback of this system.
- The living standard and the degree of poverty in an economy can be shown by this.
- A group of workers joining together to protect their common interests.
- Sector of an economy that is involved in collection, processing, and transmission of information.
- A type of good that is beneficial to society when consumed, but tends to be underproduced and underconsumed.
- Rising average cost as a firm expands its scale of production.
- The number of output per resource used.
- An item generally accepted as a means of payment.
- The skills and risk-taking ability of the owner to combine resources to produce goods/services.
- When two or more firms agree to sell a product at the same price.
- A regional group of countries that remove trade restrictions between themselves.
- The amount of money a firm has to pay that remains constant regardless the number of output.
- An economic system where production decisions are directed by the government.
- A type of good that requires resources to be produced, thus has an opportunity cost.
- A market that is dominated by only one firm.
- A group of people that is considered as economically active.
- The combination of two types of goods that can be produced in an economy is represented by this.
- A type of product that is both non-rival and non-excludable.
- Financial aid from the government to poor people and businesses in need.
- A type of good that is harmful to society when consumed, but tends to be overproduced and overconsumed.
- An abbreviation referring to the lowest amount of money an employer has to pay its employees.
50 Clues: This is equal to average revenue • When demand and supply are equal. • The total pay received by a worker. • The number of output per resource used. • When inflation rate grows at a rapid pace. • A market that is dominated by only one firm. • The largest contributor to a government revenue. • The return to savings and the cost of borrowing. • ...
Economics and Consumerism 2022-06-17
Across
- Money made from a product or service above and beyond the cost of providing the product or service.
- A collection of weapons and military equipment stored by a country, person, or group.
- Healthcare payed for by individuals.
- Economic activity based on buying and selling products and services illegally.
- Health care paid for by taxes.
- Tax based on a percentage of a person's income.
- The wants and needs of consumers for products and services.
Down
- A federal sales tax in Canada.
- Services provided by government to reduce economic inequalities and promote the well-being of citizens.
- A commander of an army, or an army officer of very high rank.
- A condition where the costs of living increases as a result of raising prices and wages.
- A financial plan showing expected income and expenditures over a period of time.
- Tax paid at the time of buying a product or service, and based on a percentage of the price of the product or service.
- A state formally cooperating with another for a military or other purpose.
- A decision made by consumers to stop buying a product or service as a way to bring about change.
- A toll or tax charged by a government on goods which are imported and exported.
- A series of military operations intended to achieve a particular objective, confined to a particular area, or involving a specified type of fighting.
- Misrepresenting what you earn to avoid paying taxes.
- A concept in statistics that means the middle number in a set of data organized in order of least to most.
- A person or nation engaged in fighting during a war.
20 Clues: A federal sales tax in Canada. • Health care paid for by taxes. • Healthcare payed for by individuals. • Tax based on a percentage of a person's income. • Misrepresenting what you earn to avoid paying taxes. • A person or nation engaged in fighting during a war. • The wants and needs of consumers for products and services. • ...
Economics and Consumerism 2022-06-17
Across
- A series of military operations intended to achieve a particular objective, confined to a particular area, or involving a specified type of fighting.
- A condition where the costs of living increases as a result of raising prices and wages.
- A commander of an army, or an army officer of very high rank.
- Services provided by government to reduce economic inequalities and promote the well-being of citizens.
- Tax based on a percentage of a person's income.
- Healthcare payed for by individuals.
- A collection of weapons and military equipment stored by a country, person, or group.
- A decision made by consumers to stop buying a product or service as a way to bring about change.
- A financial plan showing expected income and expenditures over a period of time.
- A state formally cooperating with another for a military or other purpose.
Down
- A person or nation engaged in fighting during a war.
- Health care paid for by taxes.
- Economic activity based on buying and selling products and services illegally.
- Misrepresenting what you earn to avoid paying taxes.
- A concept in statistics that means the middle number in a set of data organized in order of least to most.
- A federal sales tax in Canada.
- Tax paid at the time of buying a product or service, and based on a percentage of the price of the product or service.
- Money made from a product or service above and beyond the cost of providing the product or service.
- The wants and needs of consumers for products and services.
- A toll or tax charged by a government on goods which are imported and exported.
20 Clues: Health care paid for by taxes. • A federal sales tax in Canada. • Healthcare payed for by individuals. • Tax based on a percentage of a person's income. • A person or nation engaged in fighting during a war. • Misrepresenting what you earn to avoid paying taxes. • The wants and needs of consumers for products and services. • ...
Economics Final Review 2022-12-06
Across
- The Law of _______________ Marginal Utility states that the more you get of something, the less satisfaction you experience with every additional unit received (the fifth piece of cake doesn't taste as good as the first piece did)
- Money that a business makes after they cover all costs of production
- Law of economics that states that if the price of something goes up, the quantity demanded goes down
- Money that is awarded, usually for education, that does not have to be paid back
- A type of international trade barrier that essentially restricts trade with a country or group of countries
- The original amount of a loan, before interest is added
- The money it costs to take out a loan, usually paid over time
- The main problem in economics, never enough resources to meet everyone's needs and wants
- The ______________ rate is a percentage of the population currently not working, but actively looking for a job
- Money that is awarded by an educational institution on the basis of merit
- When one producer has total or almost total control of the production of a specific product and is able to set the price and supply at will
- An economic state characterized by shrinking job options, low investment returns and overall economic hesitancy
- The demand ___________ can be shifted left or right based on a variety of factors
- A method of accruing interest, which is characterized by regularly adding interest to the principle amount, then building interest on top of interest--great for investors, bad for borrowers
- Temporary condition where there is not enough supply to meet demand
- The participant of economics that ultimately controls price and supply
- A personalized list of projected income and expenses meant to help someone keep track of spending and saving
- The four stages of this are expansion, peak, retraction, and trough
- Money taken from a paycheck and sent to the state or federal government
- This number, between 300-850 is what lenders check before loaning money--Dave Ramsey calls is an "I love debt score"
Down
- A general increase in prices and the fall of the general value of money, the US is experiencing record-high levels of this currently
- This is a person who takes a financial risk to produce and sell a product, usually motivated by profit
- This term, when discussing the stock market, means to invest in many different stocks to avoid unnecessary risk
- This is a motivation for entrepreneurs, to sell a new piece of technology that would improve the lives of the public
- A budget that intentionally gives every dollar a name, making goal-setting and saving easier and leaving no questions about how much money is meant for spending in which category
- The amount of money someone owes subtracted from the amount of someone's total assets
- This type of economy is based on government control of factors of production, supply is heavily regulated and prices are based on creating equal access for consumers
- The three basic economic questions ask: what to _____, for whom to _________, and how much to __________.
- Land, labor, and capital are all factors of _______________.
- The money someone owes after borrowing
- The ______________ price is the point at which the supply and demand curve intersect, showing the best price point and production amount for a product
- The next best alternative to an economic choice is called the _______________
- Law of economics that states that if the price of something goes up, the supply will go up
- The three economic _______________ are consumers, firms, and the government
- When there are several different producers of a specific product, allowing consumers the freedom of choice
- A piece of ownership in a company that is available for purchase
- This type of economy is purely based on competition, the "invisible hand" and is not regulated by the government
- This type of economy is a mixture of market and command economies, and is the type of economy in the US
38 Clues: The money someone owes after borrowing • The original amount of a loan, before interest is added • Land, labor, and capital are all factors of _______________. • The money it costs to take out a loan, usually paid over time • A piece of ownership in a company that is available for purchase • Temporary condition where there is not enough supply to meet demand • ...
Ms. Flanders Economics 2022-11-15
Across
- contracts between businesses to do a job
- nonmilitary people who are employed or not
- a business owned by 2 or more people
- when 3 or more business are involved
- trained for a specific job
- having education lead to higher wages
- money or other things in value
- demands advanced skills for the job
- someone with a office like job
- a certificate of ownership in a business
- business shared for their shared benefit
- a contract to repay borrowed money
Down
- no special skills required for the job
- organized group stopping work for higher pay
- a 3rd party listens, makes decision
- someone who performs manual labor
- Expenses for using a brand name
- legally having to pay debts
- trying to find an agreement both sides accept
- profits to stockholders in payments
- certain areas able to open a business
- paying other country workers lower wages
- part time or temporary jobs
23 Clues: trained for a specific job • legally having to pay debts • part time or temporary jobs • money or other things in value • someone with a office like job • Expenses for using a brand name • someone who performs manual labor • a contract to repay borrowed money • a 3rd party listens, makes decision • profits to stockholders in payments • demands advanced skills for the job • ...
Ms. Flanders Economics 2022-11-15
Across
- contracts between businesses to do a job
- nonmilitary people who are employed or not
- a business owned by 2 or more people
- when 3 or more business are involved
- trained for a specific job
- having education lead to higher wages
- money or other things in value
- demands advanced skills for the job
- someone with a office like job
- a certificate of ownership in a business
- business shared for their shared benefit
- a contract to repay borrowed money
Down
- no special skills required for the job
- organized group stopping work for higher pay
- a 3rd party listens, makes decision
- someone who performs manual labor
- Expenses for using a brand name
- legally having to pay debts
- trying to find an agreement both sides accept
- profits to stockholders in payments
- certain areas able to open a business
- paying other country workers lower wages
- part time or temporary jobs
23 Clues: trained for a specific job • legally having to pay debts • part time or temporary jobs • money or other things in value • someone with a office like job • Expenses for using a brand name • someone who performs manual labor • a contract to repay borrowed money • a 3rd party listens, makes decision • profits to stockholders in payments • demands advanced skills for the job • ...
Ms. Flanders Economics 2022-11-15
Across
- someone with a office like job
- no special skills required for the job
- trying to find an agreement both sides accept
- Expenses for using a brand name
- a business owned by 2 or more people
- part time or temporary jobs
- having education lead to higher wages
- trained for a specific job
- organized group stopping work for higher pay
- business shared for their shared benefit
Down
- paying other country workers lower wages
- money or other things in value
- contracts between businesses to do a job
- someone who performs manual labor
- demands advanced skills for the job
- a contract to repay borrowed money
- profits to stockholders in payments
- certain areas able to open a business
- a 3rd party listens, makes decision
- when 3 or more business are involved
- a certificate of ownership in a business
- legally having to pay debts
- nonmilitary people who are employed or not
23 Clues: trained for a specific job • part time or temporary jobs • legally having to pay debts • someone with a office like job • money or other things in value • Expenses for using a brand name • someone who performs manual labor • a contract to repay borrowed money • demands advanced skills for the job • profits to stockholders in payments • a 3rd party listens, makes decision • ...
Business and Economics 2022-11-16
Across
- People who consume
- A desire that is unnecessary
- Receives goods elsewhere
- Money you receive
- It’s a promise that companies make to the community
- An action that is provided for money
- An organisation
- A state of a countries money
- plan A plan to save money
- Owned by shareholders
- Assets
- Necessary items
Down
- Sends goods elsewhere
- A gatherings of goods to sell
- Someone who creates goods
- A person who starts a business
- Regular payment saved for the future
- A planning tool
- Getting something for something
- A need or want for something
20 Clues: Assets • An organisation • A planning tool • Necessary items • Money you receive • People who consume • Sends goods elsewhere • Owned by shareholders • Receives goods elsewhere • Someone who creates goods • plan A plan to save money • A desire that is unnecessary • A state of a countries money • A need or want for something • A gatherings of goods to sell • A person who starts a business • ...
Economics Topic 5 2022-11-14
Across
- A temporary job
- The quantity of output produced by a unit of labor
- Practice of negociating labor contracts that keep unnecessary workers on the payroll
- All non-military people employed or unemployed
- An authorization from the local goverment to operate a business
- A Partnership in which all partners share equal responibility and liability
- A formal cotract issued by a corperation
- The legal obligation to pay depts
- Contracting with another company to do a specific job
- Wage rate or price of labor services that is set when the supply of workers meets the demand
- Type of demand that is set by the demand for another good or service
Down
- Semi independent business that pays fees to the parent company to sell their product or service
- A measure that bans mandatory union membership
- The combination of two or more firms competing in the same market with the same good or service
- Theory that attending college lets employers know applicant is more intellegent and hard working
- Workers allowed to live and work in the U.S. temporarily
- When a company moves operations and productions to another country
- A buissness owned and managed by a single individual
- Two firms merge when in different stages of producing
- Theory that education increases efficiency and results in higher wages
20 Clues: A temporary job • The legal obligation to pay depts • A formal cotract issued by a corperation • A measure that bans mandatory union membership • All non-military people employed or unemployed • The quantity of output produced by a unit of labor • A buissness owned and managed by a single individual • Two firms merge when in different stages of producing • ...
Penny Candy Economics 2022-10-04
Across
- To make something that is fake or phony
- A non-precious metal like copper or nickel
- The way governments get money, by force or threat of punishment
- The beginning of a depression
- The Mint-mark on a coin
- A sandwich coin with layers of different metals
- Overtaking a government, usually by force
- Having a shortage of something makes the price go up
- A government program giving tax money away to companies
- A valuable metal like silver or gold
- The most easily traded thing in society
- A government program giving money or goods to poor people
- Shaving the edges of coins in order to get
Down
- A disc of base metal which can be used as a substitute for a coin
- Legal tender money not backed by precious metal
- Trade
- Increase in the amount of money
- Bad money drives out good money
- There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch
- A wafer or disc of precious metal
- The notches on the edge of the coin
- Increase in the amount of money
- Having lots of something makes the price go down
23 Clues: Trade • The Mint-mark on a coin • The beginning of a depression • Increase in the amount of money • Bad money drives out good money • Increase in the amount of money • A wafer or disc of precious metal • The notches on the edge of the coin • A valuable metal like silver or gold • To make something that is fake or phony • The most easily traded thing in society • ...
Economics of Sports 2022-10-05
Across
- negotiation of wages and other conditions of employment by an organized body of employees
- a written or spoken agreement, especially one concerning employment, sales, or tenancy, that is intended to be enforceable by law
- a state or situation in which something needed cannot be obtained in sufficient amounts
- the exclusion of employees by their employer from their place of work until certain terms are agreed to
- the union representing all current Major League Baseball players
- Free Agent free to sign with any team
- a new team in a sports league, usually from a city that has not hosted a team in that league before, formed with the intention of satisfying the demand for a local team from a population in a new area
- bars a tagged player from negotiating a deal with a new team
- allows a tagged player to negotiate a deal with a new team
- a labor union representing National Football League players
- Resources resources that are drawn from nature and used with few modifications
- the upper limit of tokens that can be sold. The developer team is seeking to raise funds, and the hard cap is the maximum amount of funds they are willing to collect in exchange for selling their tokens
- an amount of something left over when requirements have been met; an excess of production or supply over demand
- a labor union that represents National Basketball Association players
Down
- the conducting or supervising of something (such as a business) Business improved under the management of new owners
- special restrictions on the terms under which they can retain or change employment status with their athletic club teams
- a contract offered to a restricted free agent by a team other than the one for which he played during the prior season
- an agreement or rule that places a limit on the amount of money that a team can spend on
- a franchise player is an athlete who is both the best player on their team and one that the team can build their "franchise" around for the foreseeable future
- an organized and intentional stoppage or slowdown of work by employees, intending to make the employer comply with the demands of the employees
- Point the state in which market supply and demand balance each other, and as a result prices become stable
- a player who is eligible to sign with other clubs or franchises; i.e., not under contract to any specific team
- the minimum amount that an initial coin offering (ICO) needs to raise. If the ICO is unable to raise that amount, it may be canceled and the collected funds returned to participants players' salaries
- there exists only a finite amount of human and nonhuman resources which the best technical knowledge is capable of using to produce only limited maximum amounts of each economic good
- the total amount of a specific good or service that is available to consumers
- the labor union for the group of professional hockey players who are under Standard Player Contracts to the 32 member clubs in the National Hockey League located in the United States and Canada
- the quantity of a good that consumers are willing and able to purchase at various prices during a given time
- Tax a tax on luxury goods: products not considered essential
28 Clues: Free Agent free to sign with any team • allows a tagged player to negotiate a deal with a new team • a labor union representing National Football League players • bars a tagged player from negotiating a deal with a new team • Tax a tax on luxury goods: products not considered essential • the union representing all current Major League Baseball players • ...
y11 terms economics 2022-10-20
Across
- one of the for factors of production paid with wages
- S+T+M
- an asset which holds some monetary value
- policy of planning or designing a product with an artificially limited useful life or a purposely frail design
- the assets used by businesses in the course of producing their products and services
- gov spending >gov taxation
- a product or service that provides value to another product or service
- complete control over a part of the market
- the total amount of a given product or service a supplier offers to consumers
- increase in prices
- 1+G+x
Down
- when someone is actively seeking a job
- gov spending <gov taxation
- one of the four factors of production rewards is rent
- influence on the monetary policy by the RBA
- wanting to purchases a good or service
- the loss of other alternatives when one alternative is chosen.
- demand and supply are equal
- reward for capital
- when we are all dead
20 Clues: S+T+M • 1+G+x • reward for capital • increase in prices • when we are all dead • gov spending <gov taxation • gov spending >gov taxation • demand and supply are equal • when someone is actively seeking a job • wanting to purchases a good or service • an asset which holds some monetary value • complete control over a part of the market • influence on the monetary policy by the RBA • ...
Economics Crossword Puzzle 2019-05-27
Across
- costs that are not affected by changes in output
- curve that shows increasing opportunity costs
- when actions of a person have an impact on others
- the percentage of the workforce that is unemployed
- recurring fluctuations in economic activity consisting of recession and recovery and growth and decline
- competition that has only one firm that sets prices
- an increase in money supply increases the quantity of investment demanded because of a decrease in ____.
- minimum price below which the product cannot be sold
- when the interest rates in a country rise, the value of their ______ increases.
Down
- the period of time in which state of the economy declines
- a grant or contribution used to increase the supply of goods with positive externalities
- factor market in which there is a sole firm that has market power
- a decrease in government spending results in a decrease in _____.
- loss of funds for private investment caused by government borrowing
- C + I + G + (X – M)
- tax where the proportion of income paid in taxes rises as income rises
- excess burden caused from not being at the competitive market equilibrium
- indirect costs included in economic profit
- models strategic interactions of firms in oligopoly markets
- general increase in prices over time
20 Clues: C + I + G + (X – M) • general increase in prices over time • indirect costs included in economic profit • curve that shows increasing opportunity costs • costs that are not affected by changes in output • when actions of a person have an impact on others • the percentage of the workforce that is unemployed • competition that has only one firm that sets prices • ...
economics chapter 11 2019-03-25
Across
- - an investment program funded by shareholders that trades in diversified holdings and is professionally managed.
- - is a system that allows the exchange of funds between lenders, investors, and borrowers
- - a certificate issued by a bank to a person depositing money for a specified length of time.
- - a fund from which pensions are paid, accumulated from contributions from employers, employees, or both.
- - is the chance that macroeconomic conditions like exchange rates, government regulation, or political stability will affect an investment, usually one in a foreign country.
- - regular payment made during a person's retirement from an investment fund to which that person or their employer has contributed during their working life.
- - is a monetary exemption which reduces taxable income.
- - a company concerned primarily with providing money, as for short-term loans.
- - an amount to be paid for an insurance policy.
- - is the part of the capital market that deals with the issuance and sale of equity-backed securities to investors directly by the issuer.
- - is a financial institution that does not have a full banking license or is not supervised by a national or international banking regulatory agency
- - the value of the shares issued by a company.
- - refers to the process of how securities are traded for companies that are not listed on a formal exchange
- - date refers to the final payment date of a loan or other financial instrument
- - the nominal value of a bond, share of stock, or a coupon as indicated in writing on the document or specified by charter.
- - the part of a financial system concerned with raising capital by dealing in shares, bonds, and other long-term investments.
- - bond issued by the government and sold to the general public.
- - is a bond's annual return based on its annual coupon payments and current price
- - is a facility where stock brokers and traders can buy and sell securities, such as shares of stock and bonds and other financial instruments
- - a market in which share prices are rising, encouraging buying.
- - a government bond issued by the US Treasury.
- - is a stock market index that tracks the stocks of 500 large-cap U.S. companies
Down
- - is a non-physical asset whose value is derived from a contractual claim, such as bank deposits, bonds, and stocks.
- - an institution or individual that serves as a middleman among diverse parties in order to facilitate financial transactions
- - is where investors buy and sell securities they already own
- - is a government sponsored, tax-deferred personal retirement plan.
- - an index that tracks 30 large, publicly-owned companies trading on the New York Stock Exchange (
- - is a qualified retirement plan that allows eligible employees of a company to save and invest for their own retirement on a tax deferred basis. Only an employer is allowed to sponsor a 401k for their employees.
- - a market in which prices are falling, encouraging selling.
- - is the risk management strategy of combining a variety of assets to reduce the overall risk of an investment portfolio.
- - is a theory in financial economics that states that asset prices fully reflect all available information.
- - a short-term government obligation with a maturity of one year or less in denomintaion of one hundred or less
- - is a marketable U.S. government debt security with a fixed interest rate and a maturity between one and 10 years
- - a person who derives advantage from something, especially a trust, will, or life insurance policy
- - is a bond issued by a local government or territory, or one of their agencies.
- - a market in which securities are bought and sold.
- - a high-yield, high-risk security, typically issued by a company seeking to raise capital quickly in order to finance a takeover.
- -the money one has saved
- - fixed-income security
39 Clues: - fixed-income security • -the money one has saved • - the value of the shares issued by a company. • - a government bond issued by the US Treasury. • - an amount to be paid for an insurance policy. • - a market in which securities are bought and sold. • - is a monetary exemption which reduces taxable income. • ...
Economics in Latvia 2020-03-31
Across
- the action of making or manufacturing from components or raw materials.
- the action or process of paying someone or something or of being paid.
- a commercial business.
- the action or process of working together to the same end.
- the cost incurred in or required for something.
- the state of being unemployed.
- a small plastic card made by a bank
- the activity or condition of striving to gain or win something by defeating or establishing superiority over others.
- required payment of an object or good.
- an insistent and peremptory request, made as of right.
- things to be transported, as distinct from passengers.
- a record or statement of financial expenditure and receipts.
- a financial gain, especially the difference between the amount earned and the amount spent in buying, operating, or producing something.
- the state of being bankrupt.
- the action of delivering letters, parcels, or goods.
- a compulsory contribution to state revenue, levied by the government on workers' income and business profits, or added to the cost of some goods, services, and transactions.
Down
- less amount of money.
- a social science that deals with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.
- the amount of money expected, required, or given in payment for something.
- an economy of or reduction in money, time, or another resource.
- a rule defining correct procedure or behaviour in a sport.
- a fixed regular payment
- a sum of money saved or made available for a particular purpose.
- a system or means of conveying people or goods from place to place.
- the assets, property, and resources owned by someone or something.
- an area or arena in which commercial dealings are conducted.
- money in coins or notes.
- deliver by parachute.
- chance that macroeconomic conditions will affect an investment.
- money received, especially on a regular basis, for work or through investments.
- a person or organization using the services other professional person or company.
31 Clues: less amount of money. • deliver by parachute. • a commercial business. • a fixed regular payment • money in coins or notes. • the state of being bankrupt. • the state of being unemployed. • a small plastic card made by a bank • required payment of an object or good. • the cost incurred in or required for something. • the action of delivering letters, parcels, or goods. • ...
Fundamentals of Economics 2020-08-27
Across
- using resources in a way that maximizes output
- limited goods and services are available to meet unlimited wants
- extra cost of adding one unit
- governments must decide between spending money on military or domestic needs
- study of how people make choices to satisfy their needs/wants
- using fewer resources than an economy is capable of
- giving up one benefit for another, greater benefit
- people who decide how to combine resources to produce a good or service
- all natural resources used to produce a good or service
- human-made objects
- the knowledge and skills a worker has or gains
Down
- land, labor, and capital are referred to as
- extra benefit of adding one unit
- effort people devote to tasks for which they are paid
- actions or activities that one person performs for another
- the most desirable alternative given up as the result of a decision
- essential for survival
- something we desire
- physical objects someone produces
- when consumers want more of a good than producers have available
20 Clues: human-made objects • something we desire • essential for survival • extra cost of adding one unit • extra benefit of adding one unit • physical objects someone produces • land, labor, and capital are referred to as • using resources in a way that maximizes output • the knowledge and skills a worker has or gains • giving up one benefit for another, greater benefit • ...
Colonial Economics Vocabulary 2020-09-23
Across
- workers
- people resources; employees
- measure the strengths of alternatives
- the quantity on hand
- a person who buys or uses a commodity
- the wealth and resources of region
- income exceeds expenses
- the quantity people want
- costs incurred
- expenses exceed income
- resources occurring naturally
- money paid to or received by workers
- money spent to gain profitable returns
Down
- shortness of supply
- choice made has cost of potential gain
- good sold in another country
- a person who buys and sells to earn
- property resources(included slaves)
- a cruel and oppressive person
- tangible commodities
- good made in another country
- money received for goods or service
22 Clues: workers • costs incurred • shortness of supply • the quantity on hand • tangible commodities • expenses exceed income • income exceeds expenses • the quantity people want • people resources; employees • good sold in another country • good made in another country • a cruel and oppressive person • resources occurring naturally • the wealth and resources of region • ...
Year 9 Economics 2020-04-28
Across
- An organization that sells goods
- Where actions by one party have impacts on another, particularly economically.
- The study of how people use scarce resources to satisfy needs and wants
- Final users of goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants
- Basic units used to make goods and services
- Reward for the use of resources
- A system which allows private ownership of the factors of production
- Physical items used by consumer and services for a profit
- Situation where demand is greater than supply
- Equipment used to make goods and services
- Institution which handles money for households and firms
- Ability to combine all resources to make something (plan, recipe, system etc)
- chain Complex group of firms in many countries each producing a component of a final product.
- Organisations that make goods and services
- Payment earned by entrepreneurs
- Money paid at a particular rate for the money lent
- Compulsory government levy
- Goods and services which we desire but don’t need
- Income flows which are added to the Circular Flow of Income model (investment, govt. spending, exports)
- Goods and services sold overseas
- Income flows that are removed from the Circular Flow model. (savings, tax, imports)
- National Company A company which operates in several countries with its headquarters in the parent country. (Apple)
Down
- Goods and services bought from overseas
- Basic necessities for life
- of production Raw materials used to make goods and services (land, labour, capital & enterprise)
- All human effort, both physical and intellectual
- That part of earnings not spent
- Organization with authority to make decisions for the population
- National Company A company that operates in many countries with independent headquarters in each.(McDonalds)
- An economy where people produce only enough goods and services for their own family
- Cost The cost of the next-best alternative opportunity
- Financial assistance given to people by the Government
- Action of only doing one part of the process
- market Place where factors of production are bought and sold.
- Payment per hour for labour
- All resources provided by nature
- Place where goods and services are bought and sold.
- A system where factors of production are owned by the government
- market Place where goods and services are bought and sold (Coles, Seek.com, Fremantle markets) Same as Market
- Payment per year for labour
- Payment for use of land
- A system where all factors of production, distribution and consumption of goods and services are controlled by the government
- Purchase of new capital
- Actions done for consumers by producers
- Used to pay for goods and services
45 Clues: Payment for use of land • Purchase of new capital • Basic necessities for life • Compulsory government levy • Payment per hour for labour • Payment per year for labour • That part of earnings not spent • Reward for the use of resources • Payment earned by entrepreneurs • An organization that sells goods • All resources provided by nature • Goods and services sold overseas • ...
Economics year 9 2020-04-29
Across
- An organization that sells goods
- Where actions by one party have impacts on another, particularly economically.
- The study of how people use scarce resources to satisfy needs and wants
- Final users of goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants
- Basic units used to make goods and services
- Reward for the use of resources
- A system which allows private ownership of the factors of production
- Physical items used by consumer and services for a profit
- Situation where demand is greater than supply
- Equipment used to make goods and services
- Institution which handles money for households and firms
- Ability to combine all resources to make something (plan, recipe, system etc)
- chain Complex group of firms in many countries each producing a component of a final product.
- Organisations that make goods and services
- Payment earned by entrepreneurs
- Money paid at a particular rate for the money lent
- Compulsory government levy
- Goods and services which we desire but don’t need
- Income flows which are added to the Circular Flow of Income model (investment, govt. spending, exports)
- Goods and services sold overseas
- Income flows that are removed from the Circular Flow model. (savings, tax, imports)
- National Company A company which operates in several countries with its headquarters in the parent country. (Apple)
Down
- Goods and services bought from overseas
- Basic necessities for life
- of production Raw materials used to make goods and services (land, labour, capital & enterprise)
- All human effort, both physical and intellectual
- That part of earnings not spent
- Organization with authority to make decisions for the population
- National Company A company that operates in many countries with independent headquarters in each.(McDonalds)
- An economy where people produce only enough goods and services for their own family
- Cost The cost of the next-best alternative opportunity
- Financial assistance given to people by the Government
- Action of only doing one part of the process
- market Place where factors of production are bought and sold.
- Payment per hour for labour
- All resources provided by nature
- Place where goods and services are bought and sold.
- A system where factors of production are owned by the government
- market Place where goods and services are bought and sold (Coles, Seek.com, Fremantle markets) Same as Market
- Payment per year for labour
- Payment for use of land
- A system where all factors of production, distribution and consumption of goods and services are controlled by the government
- Purchase of new capital
- Actions done for consumers by producers
- Used to pay for goods and services
45 Clues: Payment for use of land • Purchase of new capital • Basic necessities for life • Compulsory government levy • Payment per hour for labour • Payment per year for labour • That part of earnings not spent • Reward for the use of resources • Payment earned by entrepreneurs • An organization that sells goods • All resources provided by nature • Goods and services sold overseas • ...
ECONOMICS-Latin America 2021-03-17
Across
- restrictions on a countries ability to trade
- an increase in the production of goods over a specific time
- voluntary exchange of goods or services between countries
- Factories, machines, etc. for business to operate
- tax on imports
- economic choices made by peoples want to buy/sell
- limit put on the number of imports for a country
- getting better at a specific skill
- government order to stop trade with a country
- Economic system with characteristics of both command and market economies
- percent of population who can read/write
- products or “gifts of nature”.
Down
- Completely repressed economic system with total government control
- workers and their individual abilities
- wealth/material available for community
- total value of all the goods and services produced in that country in one year
- a country's economic output per person and is calculated by dividing the GDP of a country by its population
- economic choices made by traditions
- All economic decision are made by the government
- no government involvement in the economy
- trade treaty between USA, Mex., & Can.
- person who risks his/her own money, time, ideas, and energy to start & run a business
22 Clues: tax on imports • products or “gifts of nature”. • getting better at a specific skill • economic choices made by traditions • workers and their individual abilities • trade treaty between USA, Mex., & Can. • wealth/material available for community • no government involvement in the economy • percent of population who can read/write • ...
sydnee's economics vocab 2023-01-23
Across
- trading something
- workers focus on one type of work
- protect our resources so we don't lose them
- putting something in a country
- giving goods and services
- workers or employees
- when you borrow money this is added to the money you owe
- rising prices
- things from nature that people use
- when a resource is hard to find
- if you are giving money back
Down
- a state of money
- made again and used again
- money earned by workers
- exchange a process of exchanging plants
- taking something out of a country
- lowering prices
- organizations or groups who help people
- a system of making and trading goods
- interest depositing money in a savings account
20 Clues: rising prices • lowering prices • a state of money • trading something • workers or employees • money earned by workers • made again and used again • giving goods and services • if you are giving money back • putting something in a country • when a resource is hard to find • workers focus on one type of work • taking something out of a country • things from nature that people use • ...
Economics Vocabulary Review 2023-01-23
Across
- the unit of money that is circulated in the United States
- the price you pay to borrow money
- Someone who buys goods and services
- the former currency in Italy
- the amount of money a person receives for exchanging one country's currency for another country's currency
- a way to buy something now but pay for it in the future
- The amount of a good or service available to the consumers
- the former currency in France
- Things that are grown or made
- production and prices are determined by competition between businesses
Down
- How people, businesses, and governments make choices to earn and spend money
- the former currency in Germany
- the unit of money that is circulated in Mexico
- How much consumers want a good or service
- An economic system for dealing with money where the citizens own and run companies
- the unit of money that is circulated in Japan
- Work that someone does for someone else
- the currency used by most European countries
- Someone who makes or grows goods or offers services
- The paper money and coins that are "current" in a country
20 Clues: the former currency in Italy • the former currency in France • Things that are grown or made • the former currency in Germany • the price you pay to borrow money • Someone who buys goods and services • Work that someone does for someone else • How much consumers want a good or service • the currency used by most European countries • ...
Economics Review 1 2023-01-18
Across
- land personally owned by (an) individual(s) which cannot be taken away without legal proceedings (2 words)
- property owned by the king/kingdom and worked by the peasantry/serfs (2 words)
- groups that controlled production, employment, pricing and more of specific industries (2 words)
- allows the use of goods/services now while paying at a later date
- medieval social system that was arranged by hierarchical class based on birth or heredity
- the production, distribution, management, and utilization of wealth and resources in a society
- where currency, i.e. metal coins, are stamped and stored
- signed & dated note requiring the bank to pay a specific amount to the bearer
- era in which agriculture & bartering/trading with grain products revolutionized societies
- paper that can be exchanged at a bank for legal tender; example: a dollar bill
- subjective worth that one places on a good/service
- the usefulness of a good or service
Down
- economic system centered on the idea of "fixed wealth" & which encouraged domestic trade rather than foreign
- two or more objects are exchanged
- the use of these allowed states to evenly pay soldiers from looted treasures and became widespread during the Classical Antiquity (2 words)
- type of economy that is controlled by a single person or small group
- exchange of goods that includes an exchange of currency
- people of the lowest social class, bound to the land of a king or noble
- taxes placed on imports meant to discourage foreign goods
- time period following the fall of Rome, lasting until the mid 15th century, in which economies were controlled by royalty (2 words)
- medieval social class that lived in and managed manors/estates for the king
21 Clues: two or more objects are exchanged • the usefulness of a good or service • subjective worth that one places on a good/service • exchange of goods that includes an exchange of currency • where currency, i.e. metal coins, are stamped and stored • taxes placed on imports meant to discourage foreign goods • ...
Economics: basic terms 2023-03-04
Across
- товары (мн.ч.)
- потребление
- ресурсы; средства (мн.ч.)
- доступный
- выбор
- предприятие
- рассматривать, обдумывать
- услуги (мн.ч.)
- (...?) management
- нехватка, дефицит
- удовлетворение
- благосостояние
Down
- производство
- распределение
- распределять
- (...?) needs (удовлетворять потребности)
- недостаточный, дефицитный
- усилиe
- оборудование
- решение
- машинное оборудование
- потреблять
- улучшать
- aggregate (...?) совокупный результат
24 Clues: выбор • усилиe • решение • улучшать • доступный • потреблять • потребление • предприятие • производство • распределять • оборудование • распределение • товары (мн.ч.) • услуги (мн.ч.) • удовлетворение • благосостояние • (...?) management • нехватка, дефицит • машинное оборудование • недостаточный, дефицитный • ресурсы; средства (мн.ч.) • рассматривать, обдумывать • aggregate (...?) совокупный результат • ...
chapter 5 economics 2023-03-02
Across
- occur when hiring new workers causes marginal product to increase
- is a set of rules or laws designed to control business behavior
- are the price of the resources used to make products
- is the amount of goods and services that a person can produce in a given time
- occurs when a change in the marketplace prompts producers to sell different amounts at every price
- lists how much of a good or service all producers in a market are willing and able to offer for sale at each price
- is the money made from the sale of each additional unit of output
- lists how much of a good or service an individual producer is willing and able to offer for sale at each price
- are those that business owners incur no matter how much they produce
- is the sum of fixed and variable costs
- is the level of production at which a business realizes the greatest amount of profit
- is a rise or fall in the amount producers offer for sale because of change in price
Down
- is the change in total output brought about by adding one more worker
- is a measure of how responsive producers are to price changes in the market place
- entails applying scientific methods and innovations to production
- is a companys income from selling its products
- depend on the level of production output
- the desire and ability to produce and sell a product
- states that when prices decrease, quantity supplies decreases, and when prices increase, quantity supplied increases
- shows the data from a market supply schedule in graph form
- shows the data from a supply schedule in graph form
- is having a worker focus on a particular aspect of production
- is a tax on the making or selling of certain goods or services
- is the extra cost of producing one more unit
24 Clues: is the sum of fixed and variable costs • depend on the level of production output • is the extra cost of producing one more unit • is a companys income from selling its products • shows the data from a supply schedule in graph form • are the price of the resources used to make products • the desire and ability to produce and sell a product • ...
Economics Vocabulary Review 2023-03-21
Across
- keep and store up for future use
- what you give up as a result of the decision
- decisions about how to use limited resources
- pay out money to buy goods and services
- things used to make or provide goods or services
- restricted; not available as an endless supply
- a person or business that uses resources to make goods and services
- someone who uses a market to purchase something
- actions or activities that can satisfy people's needs and wants
Down
- not restricted; without an end
- the good thing you get as a result of the decision
- something that encourages you to make a certain choice or behave in a certain way
- the lack of resources to produce all of the goods and services people want
- a person or business who uses a market to sell something
- objects that can satisfy people's needs and wants
- the place where people purchase the goods or services they need from the businesses that sell them
- a person who acquires goods and services to satisfy their personal needs and wants
- give a portion of something to someone else
- to give up one thing to get something else
- a plan of how to use income
20 Clues: a plan of how to use income • not restricted; without an end • keep and store up for future use • pay out money to buy goods and services • to give up one thing to get something else • give a portion of something to someone else • what you give up as a result of the decision • decisions about how to use limited resources • restricted; not available as an endless supply • ...
Introduction to Economics 2023-04-21
Across
- A public good that individuals cannot be excluded from consuming.
- The branch of economics that deals with human behavior and choices as they relate to the entire economy.
- A person who receives the benefits of a good without paying for it.
- A graphic representation of all possible combinations of two goods that an economy can produce.
- Tasks that people pay others to perform for them.
- An economy that is neither purely capitalist nor purely socialist; an economy that has some elements of both capitalism and socialism.
- An agreement between two or more people to do something
- The amount of money left over after all the costs of production have been paid. It exists when total revenue is greater than total cost.
- A government plan specifying economic activities, such as what goods will be produced and what prices will be charged.
- An adverse side effect of an act that is felt by others.
- The amount of money by which total cost exceeds total revenue.
- The science that studies the choices of people trying to satisfy their wants in a world of scarcity
- Anything that satisfies a person's wants or brings satisfaction; also tangible products.
- A good for which one person's consumption does not take away from another person's consumption.
- Able to be felt by touch. Ex. a book.
- The quality of bringing satisfaction or happiness.
- The quality of bringing dissatisfaction or unhappiness.
- The special talent that some people have for searching out and taking advantage of new business opportunities and for developing new products and new ways of doing things.
- Something that we desire to have
- An explanation of how something works, designed to answer a question for which there is no obvious answer
- A phenomenon by which economic agents in any given part of the world are affected by events elsewhere in the world; the growing integration of the national economies of the world to the degree that they could merge and operate as a single worldwide economy.
- An economic system in which individuals (not the government) own most, if not all, the resources and control their use. The government plays only a small part in the economy.
- The economic relationships that exist between different economic groups in an economy.
- The condition in which our wants are greater than the resources available to satisfy them.
- A sense of how the world works.
- The belief that all value in produced goods is derived from labor.
- The term used to describe work done for a company by persons other than its employees in a country other than the one in which the company is located.
Down
- A public good that individuals can be physically excluded from consuming.
- An economic unit of one person or more that sells resources and buys goods and services.
- The branch of economics that deals with human behavior and choices as they relate to relatively small units--individuals, business firms, and single markets.
- Property Any good that is owned by an individual or a business.
- Value The difference between the total value of production and the subsistence wages paid to workers.
- An economic system in which the government controls and may own many of the resources.
- Anything that is used to produce goods or services, for example a person's labor may be used to produce computers, TV sets.
- Produced goods that can be used as resources for further production. Factories, machines, and farm tractors are capital.
- The way all the income earned in a country is divided among different groups of income earners.
- A good for which one person's consumption takes away from another person's consumption.
- All the natural resources found in nature. Acres of wheat fields, mineral deposits, and water in a stream are all considered land.
- Not able to be felt by touch. Ex. A Lecture
- Something that encourages or motivates a person to take action.
- A beneficial side effect of an action that is felt by others.
- A person who has a special talent for searching out and taking advantage of new business opportunities.
- The most highly valued opportunity or alternative given up when a choice is made.
- The principles of conduct, such as right and wrong, morality and immorality, good and bad
- A means for deciding who gets what portion of the available resources and goods.
- In economics, means "additional"
- Property Any good that is owned by the government.
- System The way in which a society decides what goods to produce goods, and for whom goods will be produced.
- A situation in which having more of one thing necessarily means having less of something else.
49 Clues: A sense of how the world works. • In economics, means "additional" • Something that we desire to have • Able to be felt by touch. Ex. a book. • Not able to be felt by touch. Ex. A Lecture • Tasks that people pay others to perform for them. • The quality of bringing satisfaction or happiness. • Property Any good that is owned by the government. • ...
Government / Economics crossword 2023-05-10
Across
- sanguinis - The law of the blood, citizenship at birth may also be determined by parentage, to whom is born.
- rule - Majority will be right more often than it will be wrong, and that the majority will also be right more often than any one person or small group would be.
- - Authority in decision making and maintaining orders.
- force - people who are employed or unemployed.
- associations - promote the collective business interests of a city, state, or other area of a group.
- workers - temporarily worker.
- Adams - A remarkable political philospher.
- - Two or more people own a business.
- - colonies; maryland, pennsylvania, an delaware.
- of Tennessee - Bill Lee
- - A citizen of a foreign state who lives in the united states.
- labor - workforce with good knowledge and experience.
- - supreme authority rests in the hands of the people.
- - Valuables
- are owned by ? - stockholders
Down
- power - The power to interpret laws, to determine their meaning, and to settle disputes that arise within the society.
- Locke - (1632-1704) political figure.
- - One who holds both rights and responsibilities in a state.
- ceiling - barrier that prevents certain individuals from being promoted.
- States Senator - Bill Hagerty
- Government - The idea that government is restricted and what may it do.
- - Is the process of blending and adjusting competing views and interests.
- - Franchise charge high fees or royalties
- - The institution through which a society makes and enforces the public policies.
- soil - The law of the soil- citizenship is determined by place of birth.
25 Clues: - Valuables • of Tennessee - Bill Lee • workers - temporarily worker. • States Senator - Bill Hagerty • are owned by ? - stockholders • - Two or more people own a business. • Locke - (1632-1704) political figure. • - Franchise charge high fees or royalties • Adams - A remarkable political philospher. • force - people who are employed or unemployed. • ...
ECONOMICS CROSSWORD PUZZLE 2023-05-26
Across
- consumer’s urge to buy goods and services
- supply the amount of money that is saved for investments or payments
- John(a poor old man who lives on the streets) and Bob(a large corporation owner who makes 6 figures) are paying the same amount of taxes
- a phone
- policy government spending and taxes that influence the ecomony
- the study of use of resources and production
- Inflation big increase in prices overtime
- decline in economic activity in a certain period of time
- curve a graph that shows demand and price__________
- there is no such thing as a free lunch
- John(a poor old man who lives on the streets) pays a large percentage of taxes while Bob(a large corporation owner who makes 6 figures) pays a small percentage of taxes
- people who buy or use goods and services to satisfy their wants.
- a good that can’t be attained because of scarcity
- of production- land, labor, capital, production, entrepreneurship
- a haircut
Down
- losing a job and not working for a long time
- increased prices overtime
- cycle a cycle with lots of swings
- the demand for a good or service is greater than the availability of the good or service
- decrease in government spending
- amount of goods and services produced in one year
- taxes cut and increased government
- buying a new shirt from the store, this is an example of what?
- combination of high inflation and high economic growth
- curve a graph that shows supply and price__________
25 Clues: a phone • a haircut • increased prices overtime • decrease in government spending • taxes cut and increased government • cycle a cycle with lots of swings • there is no such thing as a free lunch • consumer’s urge to buy goods and services • Inflation big increase in prices overtime • losing a job and not working for a long time • ...
Economics Revision Crossword 2013-05-30
Across
- A concept that explains that all resources are in short supply
- The number of deaths per 1000 people of the population that occur within 1 year
- The next best alternative foregone
- A building, site, practice or object that is important for a particular cultural group
- Measures whether goods/services are becoming more or less expensive over time
- Items that are used to create goods/services
- The proportion of the population aged 15 or over that can read and write
- Explains that people all have limited resources
- Workers who help to produce goods & services
Down
- Per person or head of the population
- The total value of all goods and services produced within an economy in one year
- How resources are used within an economy
- The study of how resources are used within an economy
- Products that consumers desire
- Products that consumers cannot live without
- The person who buys or uses a product
- The Law of Demand states that "As the price of a good ___________________, demand for the good will increase"
- The Law of Supply states that "As the price of a good increases, supply will ________________"
- Resources that are found in the natural world
- The average age that adults are likely to live until
- A general rise in the price of goods/services within an economy
21 Clues: Products that consumers desire • The next best alternative foregone • Per person or head of the population • The person who buys or uses a product • How resources are used within an economy • Products that consumers cannot live without • Items that are used to create goods/services • Workers who help to produce goods & services • ...
Labour Economics Crossword 2012-12-27
Across
- Is a system under which people are treated as property to be bought and sold, and are forced to work.
- Occurs when people are without work and actively seeking work.
- Body of laws, administrative rulings, and precedents, which address the legal rights of, and restrictions on, working people and their organizations.
- Is a contract between two parties, one being the employer and the other being the employee.
- Rotation of workers across a set of jobs.
- Form of unemployment resulting from a mismatch between demand in the labour market and the skills and locations of the workers seeking employment.
- Is a contract for a fixed sum to be paid regularly to a person, typically following retirement from service.
- Employment level, unemployment level, labour force, and unfilled vacancies could be called as.
- Rotation of workers according to physical space.
- Indicator of labour mobility that reflects number of mobile population.
- Is the point where a person stops employment completely.
- Is remuneration paid by an employer to an employee.
- Is generally considered an altruistic activity, and is intended to promote good or improve human quality of life, which in return produces a feeling of self-worth andrespect, but financial gain.
- People who are crippled or otherwise physically handicapped.
- Stock of competencies, knowledge, social and personality attributes embodied in the ability to perform labor to produce economic value.
- Solicitation for money or food.
- Is the consumption and savings opportunity gained by an entity within a specified timeframe, that is generally expressed in monetary terms.
- The amount of profit that a company produces during a specific period, which is usually defined as a quarter (three calendar months) or a year.
Down
- Total hours (adjusted for intensity of effort) that workers wish to work at a given real wage rate.
- Indicator of labour mobility that reflects intensity of mobility.
- Concept that provides certain guarantees for pregnant women.
- Is a financial plan and a list of all planned expenses and revenues.
- Process of negotiations between employers and a group of employees aimed at reaching agreements that regulate working conditions.
- Form of unemployment that occurs when a worker is searching for, or transitioning from one job to another.
- Is a measure of the work done by human beings.
- Is the process of international integration arising from the interchange of world views, products, ideas, and other aspects of culture.
- Insurance against the risk of incurring medical expenses among individuals.
- Organization of workers who have banded together to achieve common goals.
- Population that is not included into labour force. Economically...
29 Clues: Solicitation for money or food. • Rotation of workers across a set of jobs. • Is a measure of the work done by human beings. • Rotation of workers according to physical space. • Is remuneration paid by an employer to an employee. • Is the point where a person stops employment completely. • Concept that provides certain guarantees for pregnant women. • ...
Law and Economics 2013-05-26
Across
- People that decide the case after the prosecution and defence have put forth their arguments.
- Initials for the Director of Public Prosecutions
- Someone that saw an incident first hand or knows about it.
- Organising money or funds.
- A serious offence.
- An indictable offence.
- Words that are put into a line starting with a capital letter and ending with a full stop.
- A group of ministers who are chosen to run the country.
- A place where people who commit serious crimes go.
- People who run the country.
- Running with more than you need.
Down
- Someone who represents you in court.
- The person that is in charge of the court room.
- Running on a loss or in debt.
- The outcome for doing something wrong.
- The person who is at the top of the party who is in power.
- someone who has committed a crime.
- Material that is put forth to prove that someone is guilty.
- A not so serious offence.
- The person who runs a state in Australia.
20 Clues: A serious offence. • An indictable offence. • A not so serious offence. • Organising money or funds. • People who run the country. • Running on a loss or in debt. • Running with more than you need. • someone who has committed a crime. • Someone who represents you in court. • The outcome for doing something wrong. • The person who runs a state in Australia. • ...
Economics - Unit 1 2013-02-28
Across
- the money which a government collects in taxes and other payments is known as...
- long term bonds which are traded and have a low level of risk
- Adam Smith's most famous book
- "the bible of the working class"
- French term coined by David Ricardo which argued for less government intervention in the market
- last name of economist who was concerned with the morality of the slave trade
- to be productive without waste
- when banking and finance are supervised less by the government or authorities
- the desire to own something
- the name given to metals, oils, or agricultural products which are traded
- the collective group of those involved with managing a business
- name for the tax paid on a residential home or commercial business
- a special form of loan or credit to buy a house or other property
- term used to describe assets that can quickly be converted into cash
- a person who buys goods and services
- ....and demand are two basic principles in economics
- a package of financial products or items which are traded together
Down
- money paid on savings and investment
- theory argued for by Adam Smith which argued that the market would correct itself
- term used to describe the point at which a stock reaches its highest possible level
- the U.S. state Mr. Butler was born in
- a list showing share, commodity, or currency prices
- a very severe recession
- concept in economics where a consumer makes choices to gain the most economic satisfaction
- taxes paid to the government for certain goods such as alcohol, petrol, etc
- Karl Marx's term for the lower-class working poor
- not a good value in terms of money spent
- an economic decline for more than 2 quarters in which production and demand decreases
- a company may issue these to raise capital
29 Clues: a very severe recession • the desire to own something • Adam Smith's most famous book • to be productive without waste • "the bible of the working class" • money paid on savings and investment • a person who buys goods and services • the U.S. state Mr. Butler was born in • not a good value in terms of money spent • a company may issue these to raise capital • ...
Economics Review Crossword! 2013-04-04
Across
- One positive of capitalism is that is creates _________ between corporations, resulting in better products at cheaper prices.
- One positive of capitalism is that economic freedom usually means more _________ freedom.
- An economic system that is capitalist and has NO government input is called _________ capitalism.
- An economic system that is capitalist but controlled by the government is called _____ capitalism.
- The percentage of income that is profit, measured year to year
- AN economy that has the government determine pricing is a ______ economy.
- One knock of capitalism is that it can create income _______...for example, America's top 1% controls 35-40% of the wealth.
- One of the factors of production; this is the term for the actual people who do the work.
- How badly (or how much) the public wants an item.
- The amount of money you have from income AFTER taxes/wages/expenditures.
Down
- What GDP stands for (GDP is the measure of the total worth of the total goods of the economy THAT YEAR).
- This negative of capitalism happens when a single firm has too much power, resulting in lower wages for employees.
- An economy that uses supply and demand to determine price is a ______ economy.
- How much of something is put into the market
- An economic theory that private industry should control both land and capital. It is also the primary economic system of America.
- This negative of capitalism results in a single corporation cornering (controlling) the market on a good.
- One of the factors of production; this is what we call factories, tools, raw materials, etc.
- America has the _______ highest GDP in the world.
- An economic system that is capitalist yet provided healthcare/education to the poor is called _____ capitalism.
- One of the factors of production; also called resources.
- An economy that has parts of one economic system and parts of another is a ______ economy.
21 Clues: How much of something is put into the market • America has the _______ highest GDP in the world. • How badly (or how much) the public wants an item. • One of the factors of production; also called resources. • The percentage of income that is profit, measured year to year • The amount of money you have from income AFTER taxes/wages/expenditures. • ...
Economics Crossword Puzzle 2014-08-13
Across
- five If the US economy has 2% annual growth rate how long will it take for real GDP to double ?
- Fiscal policy _________ tax .
- ratio The _____________is the number of children and elderly for every 100 workers ages 18-64.
- The capital goods usually provided by the public sector for the use of its citizens and firms.
- basket The __________ is a representative selection of commonly purchased goods and services .
- __________ affects certain industries .
- Inflation rate in develop countries are __________ .
- index To measure changes in prices over time, economists use a ___________ .
Down
- An increase in per caption GDP, back to __________ in the standard of living .
- National Product The dollar value of all final goods, service, and structures produced in one year is the _________ .
- __________ unemployment is due to people moving between jobs .
- pyramid A _________ is a type of bar graph that breaks down the population by age and gender.
- Is the market value of all officially recognised final goods and services produced within a country in a year or our a given period of time.
- A continuous increase in the general price level of goods and services in the economy at a given period.
- An economic measure of output per unit of input.
- A __________ studies growth, density, and other characteristics of population.
- A condition in economy where not all resources are used in the production of goods and services.
- A policy that regulators attempt to improve unemployment rates, control inflation ,stab alive business cycles and influence interest rates in an effort to control the economy.
- triangle Annual compound rates of growth between selected periods of time are shown on a ___________ .
- Open market operation is __________ policy .
20 Clues: Fiscal policy _________ tax . • __________ affects certain industries . • Open market operation is __________ policy . • An economic measure of output per unit of input. • Inflation rate in develop countries are __________ . • __________ unemployment is due to people moving between jobs . • index To measure changes in prices over time, economists use a ___________ . • ...
Introduction to Economics 2015-02-18
Across
- physical objects (things)
- all human made goods used to make other goods
- the best thing we give up when we make a decision
- a situation in which a good or service is unavailable
- maximum productivity, minimum waste
- actions that people provide for others
- resources used to make all goods (land, labor, and capital)
- all natural resources used to make goods/services
- maximum possible production of all goods
- effort spent on tasks that one is paid for
Down
- a graph that shows what goods can be made
- all human resources used to make goods/services
- the alternative to using one resource over another (opportunity cost)
- when we change what we produce it costs more
- using less than maximum
- skills and knowledge of workers
- deciding whether to do/use one more unit
- limited quantities of resources
- giving something up every time you make a choice
- someone who creates new goods or services (includes business owners)
- how people choose to spend money
21 Clues: using less than maximum • physical objects (things) • skills and knowledge of workers • limited quantities of resources • how people choose to spend money • maximum productivity, minimum waste • actions that people provide for others • deciding whether to do/use one more unit • maximum possible production of all goods • a graph that shows what goods can be made • ...
Economics Unit 1 2014-12-10
Across
- оставаться, сохраняться
- экономить
- процесс
- неограниченный
- обслуживать
- ограничение
- обмен
- общество
- оба
- потребление
- современный
- лежать
- решение
- рынок
- высокий
- регулирование
- свободный
- координировать
- экономный
- анализировать
- определенный
- товары
- основной
- цена
- обширный
Down
- производить
- степень
- ресурсы
- низкий
- первый из двух названных
- промышленный
- наука
- вмешательство
- полностью
- экономист
- через, посредством
- потребитель
- в основном
- экономический
- экономика
- правительство
- уровень
- услуга
- производство
- полагаться
- смешанный
- экономическая наука
- планирование
- планировать
- примирять
- важность
- оптимальный
- центральный
- спрос
- слуга
- последний из двух названных
- размещать, распределять
- централизованный, нерыночный
- различаться
59 Clues: оба • цена • наука • обмен • рынок • спрос • слуга • низкий • услуга • лежать • товары • степень • ресурсы • процесс • уровень • решение • высокий • общество • важность • основной • обширный • экономить • полностью • экономист • экономика • смешанный • свободный • примирять • экономный • в основном • полагаться • производить • потребитель • обслуживать • ограничение • потребление • современный • планировать • оптимальный • центральный • различаться • промышленный • ...
Economics Crossword Puzzle 2015-12-15
Across
- the most successful part of an economy
- when a country is doing bad but not a deppression
- founder of US economy
- dont trade
- we have too much
- cant go above this price
- the state of being useful, profitable, or beneficial.
- high taxes
- money goes up in value
- karl marx
- country produce the most
- consumer price index or GDP
- born in vienna
- value from government
- An examination of the additional benefits of an activity compared to the additional costs of that activity.
- 500 minimum if you make a little amount
- spending too much
- for old people to retire
- opposed Keynes
- when a country is growing its economy
- no taxes
- better measurement of countries economy
Down
- sustained increase in the general price level of goods
- have too much
- trade with everyone
- use of monetary or fiscal policy changes to kick start a lagging or struggling economy
- american economy
- something backs it up
- how a country is doing
- 12 district banks
- country doing the best
- A measure of changes in the purchasing-power of a currency
- whether or not to start or stop printing money
- dont have enough
- use the entire world to trade
- assets minus liabilities
- hands off government
- opposed friedman
- how the government handles money
- working well
- multiple owners
- US, MEXICO, CANADA
- the state of being scarce or in short supply; shortage.
- high employment rate
- cant go below this price
- one owner
- wage smallest amount to pay
- A benefit given by the government to groups or individuals usually in the form of a cash payment or tax reduction.
- the least successful part of an economy
49 Clues: no taxes • karl marx • one owner • dont trade • high taxes • working well • have too much • born in vienna • opposed Keynes • multiple owners • american economy • we have too much • dont have enough • opposed friedman • 12 district banks • spending too much • US, MEXICO, CANADA • trade with everyone • hands off government • high employment rate • founder of US economy • something backs it up • ...
Economics Crossword Puzzle 2015-12-07
Across
- A particular market is controlled by a small group of firms
- The phase of the business cycle when the economy moves from a peak to a trough
- The phase of the business cycle when the economy moves from a trough to a peak
- A benefit given by the government to remove a burden
- Promoted classical liberation in Austria's economy
- A measure of average income per person in a country
- A government adjusts its spending levels and tax rates to monitor and influence a nation's economy
- The measurement of usefulness
- The ability to produce goods more efficiently
- An intergovernmental organization which regulates international trade
- The broadest quantitative measure of a nation's total economic activity
- Introduces fiscal policy and hates unemployment
- The production and distribution of goods are controlled by the government
- A government program guaranteeing access to some benefit by members of a specific group
- Wants to stop printing money to stop inflation
- The production and distribution are privately or corporately owned
- The highest point in a business cycle
- Fiscal policy to set tariffs on foreign goods
- A government does not protect its interests from foreign powers
- Using monetary or fiscal policy changes to kick start a struggling economy
- Organization the promotes free trade in North American countries
- Everyone is employed
- Lack of supply; Shortage
- The ability to produce a greater number of goods
Down
- Hands-off government
- Lack of supply
- A market is controlled by a single seller, selling a unique product in the market
- An account that is used to set aside funds to be used in an emergency
- Father of Free Market
- Exports<Imports
- Few restrictions are placed on business activities and ownership and governments have minimal ownership of enterprises
- An analysis of the benefits of an activity compared to the costs
- Money that only has value because the government says so
- The maximum a price can be
- The central bank of the United States and the most powerful financial institution in the world
- More direct measure than GDP
- Ex. GDP, GDP growth rate, inflation
- The total assets minus total outside liabilities of an individual or a company
- A measure of output per unit of input
- Exports>Imports
- One unit of currency has a set value of gold
- Management of money supply and interest rate to control inflation, consumption, growth and liquidity.
- Lack of demand
- Currencies slowly gain value
- The minimum a price can be
- The minimum a company can pay its employees
- A sustained increase in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over a period of time
- The lowest point in a business cycle
- An individual retirement plan that bears many similarities to the traditional IRA, but are not tax deductible and qualified distributions are tax free
49 Clues: Lack of supply • Lack of demand • Exports<Imports • Exports>Imports • Hands-off government • Everyone is employed • Father of Free Market • Lack of supply; Shortage • The maximum a price can be • The minimum a price can be • More direct measure than GDP • Currencies slowly gain value • The measurement of usefulness • Ex. GDP, GDP growth rate, inflation • ...
Economics - Cumulative Project 2015-12-08
Across
- An acceptable level of unemployment just above 0%
- Money stored somewhere for unforeseen situations
- Trade without restrictions
- Measure of preferences over some goods and services
- The practice of shielding a country's industries from foreign competition by taxing imports
- Global network that deals with international trade
- A retirement account allowing a person to set aside after-tax income up to a certain amount each year
- Government backed currency
- The lowest a price can be
- The central banking system of the United States
- In short supply
- When income exceeds expenditures
- The decrease of value in money due to too much in circulation
- indicators CPI, GDP, etc. are these
- When a country can produce more of a product with less, comparatively, than its competitors
- Agreement between the U.S., Canada and Mexico
- Too much of something
- Fought against heavy involvement by the government in the economy
- Control at the hands of a few powerful entities
- Believed that governments should play a heavy role in a country's economy
- Government provided benefits to those meeting certain requirements
- Measure of average income per person in a country
- An economic low point
- How the government monitors and influences a country's economy
- For every dollar, there is gold somewhere to back it up
- When an economy is unhealthy and shrinking
- When an economy is healthy and growing
- The economic system of total control by the government
- The economic system of partial control by the government
Down
- The freedom of businesses to operate for profit with little governmental regulation
- Form of financial support given to a specific economic sector
- An Austrian and British economist and philosopher best known for his defense of classical liberalism
- The lowest amount that an employee can be paid
- A lack of something
- An increase in the value of a country's currency
- When a country's imports are greater than its exports
- When a country can produce more of a product than its competitors
- The effectiveness of efforts in industries to get something done
- The system of economic freedom
- The hands-off policy
- The total assets minus total outside liabilities of an individual or a company
- Examination of additional benefits of an activity compared to the additional costs
- Complete domination by a single entity
- Statistical estimate made by using the prices of a sample of items whose prices are recorded periodically
- The value of all finished goods and services produced in a country in a certain time period
- Used to create a reaction in the economy
- The way in which the money-based authority of a country controls the supply of money
- The highest a price can go
- An economic high point
- Wrote 'Wealth of Nations', father of free trade
50 Clues: In short supply • A lack of something • The hands-off policy • Too much of something • An economic low point • An economic high point • The lowest a price can be • Trade without restrictions • Government backed currency • The highest a price can go • The system of economic freedom • When income exceeds expenditures • indicators CPI, GDP, etc. are these • ...
Health Care Economics 2016-03-19
Across
- of service plan a physician coordinated health insurance plan that combines characteristics of both HMO and PPO plans
- a flat fee that many health insurance plans require patients to pay each time they have receive a health care service
- insurance a health insurance system that allows individuals to obtain group health benefits through an organization such as an employer a union or as an association
- provider organization plan a health insurance plan that allows patients to received care from a nonplan provider but requires them to pay a higher out of pocket price if they do so
- nonprofit institution community facility that receives federal state and local tax exemptions in exchange for providing a community benefit such as services to medicaid patients and those who are unable to pay
- spending account a monetary account offered through an employer into which money is put through payroll deductions before it is taxed funds can be withdrawn for qualified medical expenses as needed but the funds must be spend each year
- institution a for profit health care facility usually owned by a corporation
- the federally-funded health care program for older Americans
- payment system a health care insurance system that pays the health care provider a fixed amount based on the medical diagnosis or specific procedure rather than on the actual cost for care is greater than the fixed amount the provider must absorb the additional expense
- payment the act of paying for health care with one's own money
- review a process in which a n insurer reviews decisions by physicians and other providers about how much care to provide
- a government program that offers health insurance to many lowincome and disabled people
- provider a health care provider who has a contract with a managed care insurance plan
Down
- a government health insurance system that provides medical coverage for active and retired service personnel and their dependents
- care a type of health insurance plan that establishes predetermined rates for services with health care providers such as doctors and hospitals and puts providers in the position o managing patient's use of health care
- institution a public health care facility that receives most of its funding from local state or federal sources
- a physician who not only delivers primary care services but also makes referrals for specialty care
- the portion of the medical costs a patient may still have to pay once an insurance plan's deductible has been met
- the money a person must pay before an insurance policy provides benefits
- of network provider a health care provider who is not in a particular managed care health insurance plan
- related groups a classification system used by Medicare and Medicaid to determine payment for health services based on diagnosis surgical procedures age and other information
- savings account a monetary account commonly paired with a highdeductible health insurance plan that allows individuals to pay for qualified medical change using taxfree HSA dollars until they meet their deductibles
- utilization making better use of health care resources to cut costs
- the monthly amount paid to a private insurance company for health insurance coverage
24 Clues: the federally-funded health care program for older Americans • payment the act of paying for health care with one's own money • utilization making better use of health care resources to cut costs • the money a person must pay before an insurance policy provides benefits • institution a for profit health care facility usually owned by a corporation • ...
Economics 8.1 Crosswords 2016-02-16
Across
- When you have the ability to make a product or an activity more efficiently than others
- Increase of international trade can cause ___________ trade
- Type of predatory pricing and unfair competition
- Competition and ________ are increased due to international trade
- The main arguments against the use of __________ is because they reduce gains of trade
- What instrument does the government used to protect domestic industries against international competition?
- Used to describe the ability of a party (an individual, or firm, or country) to produce a greater quantity of a good, product, or service than competitors, using the same amount of resources.
- Old and declining industry
- Where national economy that can engage trade freely with other countries
- People often joke about the world shrinking, but in reality, it is simply _______________.
- What might encourage international specialization between countries?
- license Driving License but for importing
- The Limit the government places on import and export (to limit them)
Down
- What neighboring country of the world agreed on to trade freely with each other but imposes tariff on all goods or services from non-member country?
- Ban on certain imported good or on all imports from a particular country
- What is the movement and exchange of physical goods (materials, component parts, equipment, finished products) as well as services, ideas, currencies and labour across international borders?
- If the quantity of _____________ increases, this will reduce domestic demand pull inflation (AD = C+I+G+X-M).
- A tax or duty to be paid on a particular class of imports or exports
- If a country can boost general competitiveness and productivity, then its ____________ will become more competitive and should increase.
- A newborn industry
20 Clues: A newborn industry • Old and declining industry • license Driving License but for importing • Type of predatory pricing and unfair competition • Increase of international trade can cause ___________ trade • Competition and ________ are increased due to international trade • A tax or duty to be paid on a particular class of imports or exports • ...
C3 - Chemical Economics 2016-02-17
Across
- A subatomic particle with a positive electric charge.
- Percentage of reactants changed to useful products.
- the heat required to raise the temperature of a particular substance by one degree.
- A substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction without itself undergoing any permanent chemical change.
- The amount of space on a substance has to react.
- A manufacturing process that runs all the time.
- The idea that the rate of a chemical reaction depends on the frequency of successful collisions.
- A reaction which takes in energy, usually in the form of heat. This is shown by a drop in temperature.
- A reaction which gives out energy, usually in the form of heat. This is shown by a rise in temperature.
- A subatomic particle with no electric charge.
Down
- The centre of an ATOM that contains the PROTON and NEUTRON.
- A manufacturing process that only occurs at certain times.
- The mass of a NUCLEUS of an ATOM.
- The number of particles in a particular space.
- Any compound manufactured for use as a medicinal drug.
- An experiment used to measure how much energy a fuel supplies.
- The smallest particle of a chemical element that can exist.
- How quick or slow a reaction is progressing.
- The force between two atoms that are chemically joined.
- The different physical forms of an element. For example, carbon can appear as graphite, fullerenes, and diamond.
- a technique for the separation of a mixture by passing it in solution or suspension through a medium in which the components move at different rates.
- A comparison between the actual yield of a reaction and the predicted yield, expressed a percentage.
- A subatomic particle with a negative electric charge.
23 Clues: The mass of a NUCLEUS of an ATOM. • How quick or slow a reaction is progressing. • A subatomic particle with no electric charge. • The number of particles in a particular space. • A manufacturing process that runs all the time. • The amount of space on a substance has to react. • Percentage of reactants changed to useful products. • ...
Economics Mega Crossword 2016-06-28
Across
- A system for managing your money
- A school run by the government.
- A country that once had a P. economy
- People who have at least $1,000,000,000.
- People run a b________ to make money.
- Things that can be bought
- A school run by a private group.
- An example of something necessary for survival.
- A hospital run by a private group.
- A job specialising in teeth.
- Work you get paid for
- What people want
- Used to buy goods and services
- A job that involves looking after the sick.
- You have to follow the l___ as a shopkeeper.
- A job you work at for a long time.
- A s_____ economy is where you just survive.
- A s________ is having more than you need.
- A business that operates in the school.
Down
- If you get a job, you get h______d.
- A unit of money used in Australia.
- A hospital run by the government.
- People who have at least $1,000,000.
- A person who studies economics is an _________ist.
- A special kind of research done on the market.
- A well-known technology company.
- C__________ism is an example of a P. economy.
- These are used to encourage people to buy.
- Paying for work to be done
- Dividing up jobs between people
- A famous burger restaurant that is very efficient.
- Things you could live without.
- If you lose your job, you get _______.
- A job where you play a game on an oval.
- How much money is coming in.
- A p________ economy is where the government decides everything
- A small unit of money used in Australia.
- A private law-enforcement service is called s______y.
- What producers want to sell
- A m_______ economy is where people can freely buy and sell
- Things you could not survive without.
41 Clues: What people want • Work you get paid for • Things that can be bought • Paying for work to be done • What producers want to sell • A job specialising in teeth. • How much money is coming in. • Things you could live without. • Used to buy goods and services • A school run by the government. • Dividing up jobs between people • A system for managing your money • ...
Economics Crossword Puzzle 2017-05-18
Across
- a factor that can change
- income received by a government from taxes and nontax sources
- the income people receive for supplying factors of production, such as land, labor, or capital
- all nonmilitary people who are employed or unemployed
- a good that consumers demand less of when their incomes increase
- a government-issued right to operate a business
- government aid to the poor
- tendency of suppliers to offer more of a good at a higher price
- fiscal policies, like higher spending and tax cuts, that encourage economic growth
- a maximum price that can be legally charged for a good or service
- the point at which quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal
- objects that have value in themselves and that are also used as money
- a minimum price for a good or service
- the amount of goods available
- the study of the behavior and decision making of entire economies
- the study of how people seek to satisfy their needs and wants by making choices
- the desire to own something and the ability to pay for it
- a required payment to a local, state, or national government
Down
- the use of government spending and revenue collection to influence the economy
- the right to sell a good or service within an exclusive market
- a business owned and managed by a single individual
- labor that requires advanced skills and education
- actions or activities that one person performs for another
- physical objects such as clothes or shoes
- labor that requires specialized skills and training
- fiscal policies, like lower spending and higher taxes, that reduce economic growth
- the study of the economic behavior and decision making of small units, such as individuals, families, and businesses.
- the legally bound obligation to pay debts
- Old-age, survivors, and disability insurance (OASDI)
- objects that have value because the holder can exchange them for something else of value
- a business organization owned by two or more persons who agree on a specific division of responsibilities and profits
- an institution for receiving, keeping, and lending money
- the method used by a society to produce and distribute goods and services
- economic system in which decisions on production and consumption of goods and services are based on voluntary exchange in markets
- the change in consumption resulting from a change in real income
- a market dominated by a single seller
36 Clues: a factor that can change • government aid to the poor • the amount of goods available • a minimum price for a good or service • a market dominated by a single seller • physical objects such as clothes or shoes • the legally bound obligation to pay debts • a government-issued right to operate a business • labor that requires advanced skills and education • ...
Economics Crosswords Puzzle 2017-05-22
Across
- _________ are the cost of labor.
- ____ Control is not available in every single state.
- The ___________ System is another name for Capitalism.
- __________ is no unemployment caused by decreased economic activity.
- In this economic system, the economic questions have been answered in the same way they've been for generations.
- When you're working part-time or temporarily, it is an example of _____________________.
- __________ control who can buy or sell its stock.
- The Silk Road was an example of an online _______________ platform for selling illegal drugs.
- The practice of hiring workers in other countries.
- __________ have Boards of Directors that run them.
- Exclusive control or possession of the supply or trade of a certain good or service. Also the name of a board game you may have played.
- Jacking up prices of basic necessities for survival following a natural disaster is an example of _______________.
- Your money accrues this over time as it sits in your bank account.
Down
- An analogy to demonstrate a nation's relationship in investing in defense and or civilian goods.
- Following the First World War, Germany underwent ___________.
- One way unions can negotiate is through ____________________.
- This took place from late 2007 to the middle 2009 (Thanks Obama!)
- Military personnel are not considered to be part of the ________________________________.
- The most expensive cost of business
- Working away from a central office
- Supply and demand determine __________ wages.
- _____________ blend Elements of all three economic systems.
- Mrs. Kriger owns stocks, therefore this makes her a _____________.
- If talks fail, unions can and (pretty much) will go on ______.
- Two requirements of ________ to be met are willingness and ability to make and sell a product.
25 Clues: _________ are the cost of labor. • Working away from a central office • The most expensive cost of business • Supply and demand determine __________ wages. • __________ control who can buy or sell its stock. • The practice of hiring workers in other countries. • __________ have Boards of Directors that run them. • ____ Control is not available in every single state. • ...
Economics Senior Celebration 2022-03-28
Across
- One of the six principles of persuasion, that invokes returning a favor that is owed
- Process of determining the present value of a payment or a stream of payments that is to be received in the future
- The art of persuasion
- Dean of the Tepper School of Business
- A noun formed from another grammatical form that deadens prose; grossly overused in academic writing
- This faculty member won the 2017 The William H. and Frances S. Ryan Award for Meritorious Teaching?
- Risk to the financial system
- A set of assumptions designed to simplify the world and make it more understandable in order to address a specific question
- Measurement of responsiveness of an economic variable to a change in another variable
- _______ multipliers are interpreted as the imputed value or shadow prices of inputs for production
- Econometric term for the correlation between independent variables and the error terms
- Number of CMU affiliated Nobel Laureates in Economics
Down
- A function that can easily be computed but whose inverse is very difficult to compute.
- Difference between prices that asset sellers demand and buyers require
- A multi-dimensional line
- situation in which no one benefits by changing his/her behavior
- Informal understanding that governs behavior in a society
- In the Solow Growth Model, production growth rate declines as __________ accumulates
- Ballot that stockholders use to vote shares
- Conditional perfect foresight
- Akerlof’s paper “The Market for Lemons” describes how asymmetry of information leads to ________ selection
- industry structure in which only one seller provides a good or service that has no close substitutes
- A deviation between the observed data and the restrictions on variables imposed by set of first order conditions of a Pareto optimal competitive equilibrium
- Co-Author of “Adapting to Climate Change: Evidence from Long-Run Changes in the Temperature-Mortality Relationship in the 20th Century United States”
- When a good/service becomes more valuable the more people use it
25 Clues: The art of persuasion • A multi-dimensional line • Risk to the financial system • Conditional perfect foresight • Dean of the Tepper School of Business • Ballot that stockholders use to vote shares • Number of CMU affiliated Nobel Laureates in Economics • Informal understanding that governs behavior in a society • ...
Economics terms - Klara 2022-04-05
Across
- Measure of relative price changes.
- What is happening when the prices rise and the goods are becoming more expensive?
- From which word was the “dollar” created?
- Money in the form of gold or silver coins.
- Selection of goods and services that are consistently purchased and sold.
- How do we call people who borrow money and therefore owe money?
- Metallic forms of money such as pennies.
- What do you call a fly who has no wings?
- How do we call a person or institution to whom money is owed?
- Any object that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services.
- What mode of transportation does an economist prefer?
- Regular up and downs in the economy.
Down
- Money that has an alternative use.
- What happens when you add “de” to inflation?
- What kind of tea is hard to swallow?
- Paper component of the money supply.
- It happened in the USA during the 1930s.
- What do you call an American bee?
- What do you call a strange bear with no socks?
- Period when slow economic growth and joblessness overlap with rising inflation.
20 Clues: What do you call an American bee? • Measure of relative price changes. • Money that has an alternative use. • What kind of tea is hard to swallow? • Paper component of the money supply. • Regular up and downs in the economy. • It happened in the USA during the 1930s. • Metallic forms of money such as pennies. • What do you call a fly who has no wings? • ...
Review...Again - Economics 2021-12-14
Across
- The study of the way a nation (or business or person) uses its limited resources to satisfy unlimited wants and needs.
- When a country spends more on imports than it earns on exports, there is a ________.
- Limits based on the quantities that can be imported.
- Goods bought and used by customers, rather than by manufacturers for producing other goods.
- The study of the economics of a small unit, such as a family or business.
- The quantities of a product consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices given a period of time.
- The study of the economics of an entire country.
- There is an opposite relationship between price and quantity. When the prices goes down, consumers buy more.
- The point where the supply curve and the demand curve intersect.
- This acronym represents a tax in Europe that is distributed to members based on need.
- The key to trade is __________.
- The way a nation uses its productive resources to produce and distribute goods and services.
- The single currency in Europe that replaced individual nation currencies.
- An example of this kind of good is hot dogs and hot dog buns, waffles & syrup. When one price goes up, it may affect the sales of the other.
- Consists of 27 member states in Europe; also known as the European Community (EC).
- When producers do not make enough of a product.
- The quantities of a product that sellers are willing and able to produce at a given price.
- When a country is able to produce more of a given product than another, it has a(n) __________.
- In this type of economy, there is more government involvement than capitalist nations, but government runs key industries such as transportation and banking.
- Goods we buy often and can't live without (toothpaste, water, milk, bread).
- When producers make too much of a product and have to reduce the price to sell it.
- A good meant to last for years.
Down
- In this type of economy, there is market competition and private ownership of land.
- The Father of Economics.
- Inexpensive items that require little effort to buy, usually unplanned purchases.
- This acronym represents a trade organization that consists of 142 countries around the world.
- A listing that shows the quantity demanded (of a product) at all prices that may occur in a market at a given time.
- Goods purchased from another country and brought into a home country (coming into a country).
- When a country earns more on exports than it spends on imports, there is a ________.
- A good meant to last for a short time or have a one-time use.
- Goods sold from a home country to another outside country (going out of a country).
- Any good you can physically touch.
- A factor of production; all people who work.
- This acronym represents an agreement that was signed by 23 countries; it did away with import quotas and reduced the price of tariffs.
- A factor of production; everything contained in the earth or sea.
- A factor of production; people who invest time and money to run a business.
- In this type of economy, government controls the factors of production.
- All resources are limited.
- The amount earned when calculating the equilibrium (price x qty).
- There is a direct relationship between price and quantity. If sellers can get a higher price, they will make more of a product.
- This economic system is commonly found in rural settings or in 2nd/3rd world nations.
- When the price of one country's currency is described in terms of another country's currency.
- An order by government prohibiting movement of ships into or out of ports.
- Opportunity cost states that there is no such thing as a ________ lunch. There is always a cost for the choices you make.
- This acronym represents an agreement that made trade easier among the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.
- A factor of production; money, buildings, equipment and tools used to run a business.
- Taxes placed on imports.
- A good that is unable to be touched or grasped, not having physical presence. Another name for "service."
- This concept means less government involvement; supply and demand will govern the market by themselves, there's no need for government interference.
49 Clues: The Father of Economics. • Taxes placed on imports. • All resources are limited. • The key to trade is __________. • A good meant to last for years. • Any good you can physically touch. • A factor of production; all people who work. • When producers do not make enough of a product. • The study of the economics of an entire country. • ...
Economics Key Terms 2022-02-22
Across
- the reward for labour (5)
- a collection of workers from the same industry (5,5)
- the value of the next best alternative (11,4)
- the opposite of a spender (5)
- when workers focus on just on task (14)
- when an economy has both a private and public sector (5)
- an alternative for another good e.g. coke and pepsi(10)
- when supply is much greater than demand (7)
- when the PED or PES comes out at a figure of 1 (7)
Down
- when resources are finite (8)
- where supply and demand meet (11)
- how governments fund their activities (8)
- the label for the y axis on an S & D graph (5)
- the reward for land (4)
- the responsiveness to changes in price(10)
- one of the factors of production (10)
- the payment to producers to encourage supply (7)
- when a good is unresponsive to changes in price (9)
- one of the characteristics of money that means it lasts (7)
- another name for fringe benefits (5)
20 Clues: the reward for land (4) • the reward for labour (5) • when resources are finite (8) • the opposite of a spender (5) • where supply and demand meet (11) • another name for fringe benefits (5) • one of the factors of production (10) • when workers focus on just on task (14) • how governments fund their activities (8) • the responsiveness to changes in price(10) • ...
ch 1 economics 2022-02-15
Across
- worth of something in dollars and cents
- goods sold for survival and satisfaction of the people
- theory by adam smith
- map of possible production combinations.
- what is lost when an economic choice is made
- economic problem where the demand is larger than the availability
- market comes up with prices instead of the government
Down
- goods sold for the production of consumer goods
- the social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services
- needed for survival
- other economic choices
- encompasses employee knowledge, skills, know-how, good health, and education in terms of capital
- increase or improvement of production of goods and services
- how useful something is, how much worth it has
- the separation of a work process into a number of tasks, with each task performed by a separate person or group of persons
- process where a company or individual decides to focus their labor on a specific type of production
- the degree of wealth and material comfort available to a person or community
- wanted for satisfaction
- land, labor, capital and entrepreneurs risktakers
- abundance of tangible possesions
20 Clues: needed for survival • theory by adam smith • other economic choices • wanted for satisfaction • abundance of tangible possesions • worth of something in dollars and cents • map of possible production combinations. • what is lost when an economic choice is made • how useful something is, how much worth it has • goods sold for the production of consumer goods • ...
Year 9 Economics 2023-08-02
Across
- (2 words) The exchange of money from consumers to producers.
- Goods and services bought and brought in from overseas countries.
- (2 words) Companies that operate across multiple nations.economiesofscale (3 words) This is the name given to the benefit that allows TNSc to save money on costs by increasing the amount of goods/services produced.
- (3 words) This is the name given to the benefit that allows TNSc to save money on costs by increasing the amount of goods/services produced.
- (2 words) This is one of the benefits enjoyed by developing nations when TNCs locate their factories there.
- The other name given to the good we import the most (look at the graphs).
- (2 words) The goods that we export the most of (look at the graphs).
- (2 words) What the government sector provides to producers.
- What source of income do TNCs provide the government of the countries they are choosing to operate in with?
- The name of the country we both import from and export to the most (look at the graphs).
Down
- (2 words) Other name given to transnational corporations.
- The continent with the third highest GDP in the world (look at the charts).
- The acronym given to the metric used by economists to measure a country's economic health.
- (2 words) The industry in which people are employed to create goods by using various resources.
- (2 words) The name given to the system that includes all steps it takes to produce goods and services (raw materials, labour, assembly, etc).
- (2 words) The name given to the industry that harvests produce or raw materials.
- (3 words) What FOP stands for.
- (2 words) The name given to the industry that provides services.
- What consumers provide to the financial sector.
- What the financial sector provides to producers.
- Goods and services sold and sent to overseas countries.
- The acronym given to the law passed by the Australian government to prevent TNCs from avoiding paying their taxes.
22 Clues: (3 words) What FOP stands for. • What consumers provide to the financial sector. • What the financial sector provides to producers. • Goods and services sold and sent to overseas countries. • (2 words) Other name given to transnational corporations. • (2 words) What the government sector provides to producers. • ...
Economics - Market Failure 2023-08-03
Across
- the extra revenue obtained by producing and selling another unit of output.
- once most efficient level of production has been reached, adding an extra factor of production causes a small increase in output.
- indirect cost and benefits associated with the production and consumption of certain goods and services that the market fails to take into account.
- the return per unit of output.
- there are no clearly defined property rights, so no price can be attached to their use (e.g the ocean).
- small number of firms are selling differentiated products.
- when the allocation of resources is optimal (e.g if you go past one person gains another person looses).
- a country's productive resources are used that generate the maximum benefit for all consumers and the country.
- an economy responding to change consumer demands by reallocating resources to new industries or production processes.
- the addition to the total cost that occurs when one more unit of output is produced.
- a private good with positive externalities.
- one sellar in the market (100% control).
- a private good with negative externalities.
- the cost incurred by a firm (eg. wages).
Down
- cost saving advantages that a firm of large size gets.
- a good such as national defence, a beach or road that are non-rival.
- large numbers of buyers and sellers are exchanging differentiated products.
- one party to an economic transaction has more knowledge then the other party
- many buyers and sellers trade a homogenous product.
- the overuse or destruction of a common property good.
- the state in which the allocation of goods and resources in a market is not efficient.
- the cost that a firm must meet (eg. rates).
- the maximum quantity of output from a given quantity of productive resources.
- a market with two firms (50% control).
- the cost per unit of output.
25 Clues: the cost per unit of output. • the return per unit of output. • a market with two firms (50% control). • one sellar in the market (100% control). • the cost incurred by a firm (eg. wages). • the cost that a firm must meet (eg. rates). • a private good with positive externalities. • a private good with negative externalities. • ...
Crossword Puzzle (Economics) 2023-11-21
Across
- THE PRICE AT WHICH DEMAND AND SUPPLY ARE EQUAL
- PRODUCERS HAVE AN AIM OF...
- THE AMOUNT OF GOODS AND SERVICES CONSUMERS ARE WILLING TO BUY AT AGIVEN PRICE.
- SOMETHING THAT AFFECTS A SITUATION
- THE DESIRE FOR GOODS AND SERVICES
- A GOOD THAT CAN BE USED AS REPLACEMENT FOR ANOTHER GOOD.
- THE HUMAN CONTRIBUTION TO PRODUCTION
- THE RESPONSIVENESS OF DEMAND TO A CHANGE IN PRICE
- THE HIGHEST VALUED ALTERNATIVE THAT IS FOREGONE
- INCREASE IN THE LEVEL OF OUTPUT
Down
- GOODS THAT ARE PURCHASED BY FIRMS.
- MONEY THAT IS PAID BY THE GOVERNMENT TO MAKE PRICES LOWER.
- A TAX ON A PARTICULAR GOOD.
- HOW MUCH GOODS ARE SOLD FOR
- A FIRM IS PREPARED TO SUPPLY MORE AS THEIR PRICE IS INCREASED
- BUSINESSES OWNED BY INDIVIDUALS OR GROUPS OF INDIVIDUALS
- WHEN CAPACITY IS FIXED THEREFORE SUPPLY WILL NOT FLUNCTUATE
- IF THE RESULT IS 1 OR ABOVE WE CAN SAY DEMAND IS...
- A GOOD THAT COMPANIES ANOTHER GOOD.
- GOODS THAT ARE BENEFICIAL TO SOCIETY.
20 Clues: PRODUCERS HAVE AN AIM OF... • A TAX ON A PARTICULAR GOOD. • HOW MUCH GOODS ARE SOLD FOR • INCREASE IN THE LEVEL OF OUTPUT • THE DESIRE FOR GOODS AND SERVICES • GOODS THAT ARE PURCHASED BY FIRMS. • SOMETHING THAT AFFECTS A SITUATION • A GOOD THAT COMPANIES ANOTHER GOOD. • THE HUMAN CONTRIBUTION TO PRODUCTION • GOODS THAT ARE BENEFICIAL TO SOCIETY. • ...
Economics Vocabulary Crossword 2023-11-09
Across
- The legal obligation to pay debts
- The amount of a good or service that is available
- Something we desire but is not necessary for survival
- Contracts to buy or sell commodities at a particular date in the future
- The option to sell shares of stock at a specified time in the future
- Something essential for survival
- The amount of money a business receives in excess of its expenses
- Income that does not increase even when prices go up
- A market structure that fails to meet the conditions of pure competition
- Income that is not used for consumption
- net Set of programs to protect people who face unfavorable economic conditions
Down
- A semi-independent business that pays fees to a parent company
- When a good's price is lower, consumers will buy more of it
- Relies on habit, custom, or ritual to answer the three basic economic questions
- A business owned and managed by a single individual
- The price paid from the use of borrowed money
- Expenses that a new business must pay before its can begin to produce and sell goods
- Goods that consumers demand more of when their incomes increase
- The study of how people seek to satisfy their need/wants by making choices
- Is the ability to control prices and total market output
20 Clues: Something essential for survival • The legal obligation to pay debts • Income that is not used for consumption • The price paid from the use of borrowed money • The amount of a good or service that is available • A business owned and managed by a single individual • Income that does not increase even when prices go up • ...
Economics and Finance 2023-11-26
Across
- Distribution of a portion of a company's earnings to its shareholders.
- Process of starting and managing a new business.
- Economic principle governing the availability and desire for goods.
- Loan for purchasing real estate.
- Exchange where stocks are bought and sold.
- Cost of borrowing or return on investment.
- Measure of a country's economic output.
- Statistics reflecting the overall health of an economy.
- Situation where expenditures exceed income.
Down
- Excess of imports over exports.
- Ease with which an asset can be converted into cash.
- Management of money supply by a central bank.
- Conversion of one currency into another.
- Financial instruments with values based on underlying assets.
- Market structure with a single seller dominating the industry.
- Period of rising stock prices.
- System of levying charges on citizens and businesses.
- Ownership interest in a company.
- Period of falling stock prices.
- Rise in the general level of prices.
20 Clues: Period of rising stock prices. • Excess of imports over exports. • Period of falling stock prices. • Ownership interest in a company. • Loan for purchasing real estate. • Rise in the general level of prices. • Measure of a country's economic output. • Conversion of one currency into another. • Exchange where stocks are bought and sold. • ...
