Across
- 2. When you focus on one job and get really good at it. (14)
- 4. Breaking a big job into mini‑jobs to get it done faster. (8,2,6)
- 6. How much people want something and can actually pay for it. (6)
- 8. Producers increase output when prices rise. (3,2,6)
- 11. How many products firms are willing to bring to the table at each price. (6)
- 12. When prices go up people usually buy less. (3,2,6)
- 14. How quickly producers can ramp up output when price rises. (5,10,2,6)
- 15. The four building blocks you need before you can make anything at all. (7,2,11)
- 16. The number of units traded at the perfect balance point. (11,8)
- 18. When the whole line moves because something other than price changed. (6,2,6,3,6)
- 19. The sloping line that shows how much buyers want at different prices. (6,5)
- 20. Everyone’s individual demand added together. (6,6)
Down
- 1. The “just right” price where buyers and sellers agree. (11,5)
- 3. When being bigger makes each unit cheaper like bulk‑buying for businesses. (9,2,5)
- 5. What you give up when you pick one choice over another. (11,4)
- 7. How dramatically shoppers change their minds when price changes. (5,10,2,6)
- 9. A rising line showing producers get more generous as prices increase. (6,5)
- 10. Too many wants, not enough stuff. (8)
- 13. The total amount supplied when all firms combine their output. (6,6)
- 17. The place real or virtual where buyers and sellers meet. (6)
