Across
- 2. number of births that 1,000 women are expected to undergo in their lifetime
- 4. diagram showing the breakdown of population by age and gender
- 6. total amount of income going to the consumer sector before individual income taxes are paid
- 9. year serving as point of comparison for other years in a price index or other statistical measure
- 10. the place where a person lives
- 13. net national product less indirect business taxes; measure of a nation’s income
- 14. the market value of goods and services produced by labor and property supplied by U.S. residents
- 15. person living alone or with nonrelatives even though that person may have relatives living elsewhere
- 16. net population change after accounting for those who leave as well as enter a country
- 19. average remaining life span in years of a person who has reached a specified age
- 20. dollar value of all final goods, services, and structures produced within a country’s national borders during a one-year period
- 21. basic unit of consumer sector consisting of all of the people who occupy a house, apartment, or separate living quarters
- 22. people who study growth, density, and other characteristics of the population
Down
- 1. unreported legal and illegal activities that do not show up in GDP statistics
- 3. not counted or included
- 5. the highways, levees, mass transit, communications, power, water, sewerage, and other public goods needed to support a population
- 7. economic activity not taking place in the market, and therefore, not included in GDP; examples include services of homemakers and work done around the home
- 8. sales of used goods; category of activity not included in GDP computation
- 11. complete count of population, including place of residence
- 12. products that are components of other final products already included in the GDP; for example, new tires and radios for use on new cars
- 13. gross national product minus depreciation charges for wear and tear on capital equipment; measure of net annual production generated with labor and property supplied by a country’s citizens
- 17. historically high birthrate years in the United States from 1946 to 1964
- 18. two or more people living together that are related by blood, marriage, or adoption
