Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.

Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.

My Basket

You have nothing in your shopping cart yet.

Title: 100+ vocabulary definitions
Description: More than 100 clear, short and concise definitions of economics terms. I made this list for IB Economics higher level exam of May 2015. I achieved a 7 (highest grade)! Good luck!

Document Preview

Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above


1
...

This occurs when the production and consumption of a good or service has an
effect upon a third party
...

A good that will be undersupplied by the market and therefore, underconsumed; these g&s are over-priced and under-provided to the market
...

The production and consumption of a good has an external cost to society
...
These goods are over provided and under priced in the market
place
...

This represents the misallocation of society’s resources; the extra units that get
produced beyond the socially optimal level in a negative externality or the too
few units that get produced compared to the socially optimal level in a positive
externality
...
Public goods have two
essential characteristics: non-rivalries and non-excludable
...

One condition for a public good; a good is non-excludable if it is impossible to
stop other people consuming it once it is provided
...


The lack of a pricing mechanism for a common access resource means that the
resource will be overused/degraded/depleted as a result of activities of
producers and consumers who do not pay for the resource used
...


The ability of the environment and the economy to continue to produce and
satisfy needs and wants into the future; sustainability depends crucially on
preservation of the environment over time
...


When a party in the economic transaction possesses more information than the
other party
...
Monopolies can
distort competition and charge a higher price and provide at a lower quantity
than a competitive market
...
1

The level of overall economic activity
English
Definition
National income
It is the value of all the goods and services produced in an economy in a

given time period, normally one year
...



National expenditure
It is what a country spends, as contrasted with national product, which is

what it produces
...


It measures the wealth of an economy
...

Income (GNI)

Nominal GDP
Measured at current prices

Real GDP
Measured at constant prices
...


Per capital GDP
GDP/population

indicator of a country standard of living
...

Green GDP = GDP- environmental costs of production
...


- measured by changes in real GDP
...


Recovery
Occurs when GDP and Unemployment are moving back from their slump

towards normal levels
...


Depression
It is a prolonged recession
...
2 Aggregate demand and aggregate supply

English
Aggregate demand


Investment

Price level

Aggregate supply

Short-run aggregate
supply

Long-run aggregate
supply


Full employment


Natural rate of
unemployment
Macroeconomic
equilibrium
Inflationary gap



Recessionary gap




















2
...

AD=C(consumption)+I(investment)+G(government spending)+NX (X-M:
export-import)
...

The general level of prices in an economy
...

An upward sloping curve illustrating that if the average price level increases,
firms will be offering more output (because money wages are assumed fixed)
A vertical line at the economy's potential level of output,
illustrating that in the long run, the level of real output is Independent of
prices
...

when every worker available for employment has a job
...


Macroeconomic equilibrium in the short run exists at the level of real output
at which AD is equal to SRAS
...

(When actual equilibrium output is greater than potential (full employment)
output
...

(When equilibrium output is below the potential (FE) level of output
...

- adult (16-65 in UK)
- actively seeking a job

% of the labour force that is unemployed
n of people unemployed/ labour force
Situation where there the labour market is in equilibrium
...

Workers who are nominally employed but whose contribution to output is so
small as to be negligible
...

U that results due to a long term decline for a particular product,
thus there is a decline in the demand for labour
...

U that results as some people work only part of the year
...
k
...

increase in the overall price lever in a national economy
...

Causes:
1
...
Cost-push ↓SRAS
3
...

A slowing in the rate of inflation
...


Indicator of how the price level changes in a national economy
...

↑Same
...

AD rising faster than SRAS
...

Due to a decrease of SRAS
...

SR - Inverse: decrease in U will result to an increase In inflation and vice versa
...
It is an increase in a country’s capacity to
produce
...

•Increase in the efficiency of existing resources
...

Refers to Increase in real GDP through time
...

Shift outwards of the PPC
...

Refers to the n of people living below the minimum income necessary to
satisfy basic physical needs
...

The proportion of the population that is poor in comparison with the
consumption of the general population
...


It is a tax imposed upon expenditure
...


When a higher-income household pays proportionately more than a lowerincome household
It is used to redistribute income from higher income earners to low income
earners
...

Indirect taxes are regressive taxes
...


The ratio of the tax over the tax base (which can be income or spending)
(Total tax paid/income) x100

Average rate of tax


Marginal rate of tax (Change in total tax paid/change in income) x100

Lorenz Curve
Illustrates the distribution of income in an national economy
...


ex
...


CPI
Indicator of how the price level changes in a national economy
...



2
...

They include fiscal policy and monetary policy
Refers to the manipulation of the level of government spending (G) and
taxation (T) in order to affect AD
...

To correct a recession
...

To decrease inflation
...

National debt
...

The reduction in private investment that results from an increase in interestrate due to an increase in government borrowing
...
Higher the MPS, lower the multiplier, and
lower the MPS, higher the multiplier
...

Formula: MPC/(1-MPC)

Tax Multiplier



Marginal propensity MPC= ∆C/∆Y
to consume
MPC + MPS = 1

Marginal propensity MPS=∆S/∆Y
to save
MPC + MPS = 1

Disposable income Income left after tax
...
Based on the

sticky wage theory
...
4
Monetary policy

English
Monetary policy


Central Bank


Expansionary monetary
policy

Contractionary monetary
policy

Interest rate

Monetarism




2
...


Supply-side policies


Interventionist supplyside policies

Infrastructure


Human capital


Market-based supply
side policies

Privatisation

Deregulation




Policies aimed to increase AS in order to affect growth, employment and
inflation
...

To increase AD of an economy that is in or about to enter recession (to
close a deflationary gap)
...

Price of money, reward for savings, cost of borrowing
...

Based on the flexible wage theory
...

Physical capital, typically financed by governments, which facilitates
economic activity
...

These policies focus on allowing markets to operate more freely, with
minimal government intervention
...

If governments have placed many regulations on the operations of
business then this may increase their costs of production, thereby
reducing potential output in the economy
Title: 100+ vocabulary definitions
Description: More than 100 clear, short and concise definitions of economics terms. I made this list for IB Economics higher level exam of May 2015. I achieved a 7 (highest grade)! Good luck!