Deck 3: The Fundamental Economic Problem Scarcity and Choice

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Millionaires do not face the problem of scarcity.
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Inputs in production processes are called resources.
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All actions and purchases,even those of wealthy people,involve a sacrifice.
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An optimal decision is one that chooses the most desirable from among all possibilities that are available.
Question
The scarcity of physical resources is far more fundamental to the study of economics than the scarcity of funds.
Question
Resources are used to create goods and services.
Question
If the budget deficit was eliminated,the federal government would have more money than it could spend.
Question
Economics examines the options open to households,business firms,governments,and entire societies by the limited resources at their command.
Question
Scarcity is the fundamental problem of the economy.
Question
Rational decision making must always be based on the concept of opportunity cost.
Question
Economics studies the logic of choices made from among available possibilities.
Question
Goods that are actually produced by firms are not really limited in supply,because the firms can always produce more of them.
Question
Scarcity of resources implies that people must make decisions consistent with the means they have available to them.
Question
The opportunity cost of any decision is the forgone value of the next best alternative that is not chosen.
Question
Economics examines the options open to households and business firms,but ignores the options of governments and entire societies.
Question
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative that is given up.
Question
Given its size,the United States does not have to worry about limitations on resources.
Question
Centrally planned economies are not constrained by the problem of scarcity.
Question
Money is scarce,but resources are not.
Question
Market economies are not constrained by scarcity; only planned economies have that problem.
Question
In a properly functioning economy,money costs approximate opportunity costs.
Question
Opportunity cost always arises when a trade-off decision is made.
Question
Individuals face scarcity; whole societies do not.
Question
Opportunity cost cannot be measured in money terms,only in conceptual terms.
Question
Being on the PPF implies that increasing the production of one good or service can only be accomplished by decreasing the quantity produced of another good or service.
Question
The production possibilities frontier slopes downward and to the right because of limited resources.
Question
A well-functioning market will have high monetary costs applied to high opportunity costs.
Question
Waiting in line to get a free ticket does not involve any opportunity cost.
Question
Any point on or outside the PPF is attainable.
Question
Although finished goods are scarce,the inputs to produce them are not scarce.
Question
The opportunity cost of a college education includes wages lost while enrolled in school.
Question
Opportunity cost is the combined value of all other alternatives that go unchosen.
Question
The term "satisficing" indicates an optimal choice.
Question
Since it is a centrally planned economy,China does not face opportunity costs when economic decisions are made.
Question
High opportunity costs go hand in hand with high money costs in a properly functioning economy.
Question
Monetary costs and opportunity costs are always identical.
Question
Opportunity cost can always be measured in money terms.
Question
The production possibilities frontier can be used to show a manufacturer's possible combinations of output of two goods.
Question
The production possibilities frontier has a tendency to bow outward from the origin.
Question
A production possibilities frontier shows the combinations of various goods that should be produced.
Question
Economic growth solves the problem of scarcity.
Question
If the quantity of one good that must be forgone increases as successive units of another good are produced,then there is said to be increasing opportunity cost between the two goods.
Question
The U.S.government spent over $3.6 trillion in budget year 2010.
Question
According to the principle of increasing costs,as the production of one good expands,the opportunity cost of producing another unit of the good tends to increase.
Question
The negative slope of a production possibilities frontier is a graphic representation of opportunity cost.
Question
The political party that is in power determines the position and shape of the production possibilities frontier that constrains the choices of the economy.
Question
If the U.S.government decides to increase military spending,one opportunity cost will be lower spending on education.
Question
A society's decision to produce more tanks may require it to forgo production of some cars.
Question
A market economy allocates resources primarily in accordance with orders from government bureaucrats.
Question
The concept of opportunity cost is more applicable to society as a whole than it is for an individual household.
Question
From a society's viewpoint,when all resources are fully employed,a decision to have more of one thing means we must give up some of another thing.
Question
A large government faces a production possibilities frontier much like a business firm does.
Question
If the PPF for guns and butter is bowed outward from the origin,this indicates constant opportunity cost between the two goods.
Question
Since it spent over $3.6 trillion in 2010,opportunity cost was not an issue for the U.S.government.
Question
If a farmer's opportunity cost of producing 50,000 bushels of wheat is 20,000 fewer bushels of soybeans,then her opportunity cost of producing 50,000 bushels of soybeans must also be 20,000 fewer bushels of wheat.
Question
If a farmer's opportunity cost of producing 10,000 bushels of wheat is 5,000 fewer bushels of soybeans,then her opportunity cost of producing 5,000 bushels of soybeans must be 10,000 fewer bushels of wheat.
Question
As more of a good is produced,its opportunity cost tends to increase because resources are not equally efficient at producing all goods.
Question
Society can produce at a point outside the production possibilities frontier,but only if it is using all of its resources efficiently.
Question
If society produces at a point inside the production possibilities frontier,it is characterized by full employment of resources.
Question
Economists use the term capital to describe that factor of production that includes human-made resources such as factories,buildings,machinery and tools.
Question
If two persons trade,one must gain at the expense of the other.
Question
A society must make three sorts of decision: what goods to produce,how to produce them,and how to distribute them.
Question
In terms of efficiency,any point on a production possibilities frontier is as good another.
Question
Efficient production can be carried out anywhere on or below the production possibilities frontier.
Question
A decrease in the unemployment rate will shift the PPF outward from the origin.
Question
Only a market economy must answer the questions of what goods to produce,how to produce them,and for whom to produce them.
Question
Voluntary exchange results in mutual gains.
Question
Specialization and division of labor are made easier by the existence of money.
Question
Economists define "efficiency" as the absence of waste.
Question
In the Wealth of Nations,Adam Smith wrote about how countries could increase their consumption of goods and services through specialization and trade with other countries.
Question
A society which is inside its production possibilities frontier is efficient.
Question
Efficiency is defined as minimizing waste.
Question
The definition of efficiency implies that production is carried out on the production possibilities frontier.
Question
Although all points on the PPF are efficient,that alone does not tell us which point is "best" for the society.
Question
The principle of comparative advantage helps explain trade between nations.
Question
In a market economy,government decides the answers to the three economic decisions.
Question
Division of labor has caused output to rise dramatically since the industrial revolution.
Question
Specialization of labor makes sense only if there is some means of exchange.
Question
The principle of comparative advantage explains specialization and trade among countries but not among individuals.
Question
While specialization and exchange were very important to Adam Smith in 1776,they have largely lost their importance in the 21st century.
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Deck 3: The Fundamental Economic Problem Scarcity and Choice
1
Millionaires do not face the problem of scarcity.
False
2
Inputs in production processes are called resources.
True
3
All actions and purchases,even those of wealthy people,involve a sacrifice.
True
4
An optimal decision is one that chooses the most desirable from among all possibilities that are available.
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5
The scarcity of physical resources is far more fundamental to the study of economics than the scarcity of funds.
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6
Resources are used to create goods and services.
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7
If the budget deficit was eliminated,the federal government would have more money than it could spend.
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8
Economics examines the options open to households,business firms,governments,and entire societies by the limited resources at their command.
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9
Scarcity is the fundamental problem of the economy.
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10
Rational decision making must always be based on the concept of opportunity cost.
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11
Economics studies the logic of choices made from among available possibilities.
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12
Goods that are actually produced by firms are not really limited in supply,because the firms can always produce more of them.
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13
Scarcity of resources implies that people must make decisions consistent with the means they have available to them.
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14
The opportunity cost of any decision is the forgone value of the next best alternative that is not chosen.
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15
Economics examines the options open to households and business firms,but ignores the options of governments and entire societies.
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16
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative that is given up.
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17
Given its size,the United States does not have to worry about limitations on resources.
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18
Centrally planned economies are not constrained by the problem of scarcity.
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19
Money is scarce,but resources are not.
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20
Market economies are not constrained by scarcity; only planned economies have that problem.
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21
In a properly functioning economy,money costs approximate opportunity costs.
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22
Opportunity cost always arises when a trade-off decision is made.
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23
Individuals face scarcity; whole societies do not.
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24
Opportunity cost cannot be measured in money terms,only in conceptual terms.
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25
Being on the PPF implies that increasing the production of one good or service can only be accomplished by decreasing the quantity produced of another good or service.
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26
The production possibilities frontier slopes downward and to the right because of limited resources.
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27
A well-functioning market will have high monetary costs applied to high opportunity costs.
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28
Waiting in line to get a free ticket does not involve any opportunity cost.
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29
Any point on or outside the PPF is attainable.
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30
Although finished goods are scarce,the inputs to produce them are not scarce.
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31
The opportunity cost of a college education includes wages lost while enrolled in school.
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32
Opportunity cost is the combined value of all other alternatives that go unchosen.
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33
The term "satisficing" indicates an optimal choice.
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34
Since it is a centrally planned economy,China does not face opportunity costs when economic decisions are made.
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35
High opportunity costs go hand in hand with high money costs in a properly functioning economy.
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36
Monetary costs and opportunity costs are always identical.
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37
Opportunity cost can always be measured in money terms.
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38
The production possibilities frontier can be used to show a manufacturer's possible combinations of output of two goods.
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39
The production possibilities frontier has a tendency to bow outward from the origin.
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40
A production possibilities frontier shows the combinations of various goods that should be produced.
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41
Economic growth solves the problem of scarcity.
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42
If the quantity of one good that must be forgone increases as successive units of another good are produced,then there is said to be increasing opportunity cost between the two goods.
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43
The U.S.government spent over $3.6 trillion in budget year 2010.
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44
According to the principle of increasing costs,as the production of one good expands,the opportunity cost of producing another unit of the good tends to increase.
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45
The negative slope of a production possibilities frontier is a graphic representation of opportunity cost.
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46
The political party that is in power determines the position and shape of the production possibilities frontier that constrains the choices of the economy.
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47
If the U.S.government decides to increase military spending,one opportunity cost will be lower spending on education.
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48
A society's decision to produce more tanks may require it to forgo production of some cars.
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49
A market economy allocates resources primarily in accordance with orders from government bureaucrats.
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50
The concept of opportunity cost is more applicable to society as a whole than it is for an individual household.
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51
From a society's viewpoint,when all resources are fully employed,a decision to have more of one thing means we must give up some of another thing.
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52
A large government faces a production possibilities frontier much like a business firm does.
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53
If the PPF for guns and butter is bowed outward from the origin,this indicates constant opportunity cost between the two goods.
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54
Since it spent over $3.6 trillion in 2010,opportunity cost was not an issue for the U.S.government.
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55
If a farmer's opportunity cost of producing 50,000 bushels of wheat is 20,000 fewer bushels of soybeans,then her opportunity cost of producing 50,000 bushels of soybeans must also be 20,000 fewer bushels of wheat.
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56
If a farmer's opportunity cost of producing 10,000 bushels of wheat is 5,000 fewer bushels of soybeans,then her opportunity cost of producing 5,000 bushels of soybeans must be 10,000 fewer bushels of wheat.
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57
As more of a good is produced,its opportunity cost tends to increase because resources are not equally efficient at producing all goods.
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58
Society can produce at a point outside the production possibilities frontier,but only if it is using all of its resources efficiently.
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59
If society produces at a point inside the production possibilities frontier,it is characterized by full employment of resources.
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60
Economists use the term capital to describe that factor of production that includes human-made resources such as factories,buildings,machinery and tools.
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61
If two persons trade,one must gain at the expense of the other.
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62
A society must make three sorts of decision: what goods to produce,how to produce them,and how to distribute them.
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63
In terms of efficiency,any point on a production possibilities frontier is as good another.
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64
Efficient production can be carried out anywhere on or below the production possibilities frontier.
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65
A decrease in the unemployment rate will shift the PPF outward from the origin.
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66
Only a market economy must answer the questions of what goods to produce,how to produce them,and for whom to produce them.
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67
Voluntary exchange results in mutual gains.
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68
Specialization and division of labor are made easier by the existence of money.
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69
Economists define "efficiency" as the absence of waste.
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70
In the Wealth of Nations,Adam Smith wrote about how countries could increase their consumption of goods and services through specialization and trade with other countries.
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71
A society which is inside its production possibilities frontier is efficient.
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72
Efficiency is defined as minimizing waste.
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73
The definition of efficiency implies that production is carried out on the production possibilities frontier.
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74
Although all points on the PPF are efficient,that alone does not tell us which point is "best" for the society.
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75
The principle of comparative advantage helps explain trade between nations.
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76
In a market economy,government decides the answers to the three economic decisions.
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77
Division of labor has caused output to rise dramatically since the industrial revolution.
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78
Specialization of labor makes sense only if there is some means of exchange.
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79
The principle of comparative advantage explains specialization and trade among countries but not among individuals.
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80
While specialization and exchange were very important to Adam Smith in 1776,they have largely lost their importance in the 21st century.
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