Across
- 2. fast-moving-consumer-good
- 5. The amount of money a firm receives from selling goods.
- 8. the type of goods typically expensive, high-end items that may signal a certain social status to others, or give pride to the owner.
- 11. If a firm invests in better more advanced technology, in the production process, they will be able to produce more in the same time. So the curve shifts right.
- 12. Shows the maximum possible output of two goods or services an economy can achieve when all resources are efficiently employed.
- 15. Price elasticity of supply
- 17. point on the curve.
- 19. a measurement of the relative change in one variable when another is changed
- 20. point inside a curve.
Down
- 1. Never ending.
- 3. price elasticity demand
- 4. cost Consider the cost of any choice in terms of the next alternative given up.
- 6. Where a change in price causes a smaller proportionate change in demand
- 7. The amount of goods producers are willing to offer for sale at different price in a given period of time.
- 9. The price at which supply and demand are equal.
- 10. The difference between total revenue and total cost.
- 13. The amount of goods or serves that consumers are willing to buy at a given price.
- 14. When the government increases tax on a good such as petrol/gas, the supply shifts left.
- 16. Resources limited in supply.
- 18. Money that is paid by a government or organisation to make prices lower. Usually to encourage production of a certain good.
