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Ability-to-Pay Principle  The individuals who are most able to bear the burden of the tax should pay the tax.
Absolute Advantage  A country that can produce a good at a lower cost than another country is said to have an absolute advantage in the production of that good. When two countries have absolute advantages in different goods, there are gains of trade to be had.
Acquisition  A transaction in which a company buys another company and the purchaser has the right of direct control over the resulting operation (but does not always exercise that right).
Adverse Selection Problem  A problem that occurs when buyers and sellers have different amounts of information about the good for sale.
Antitrust Policy  The government's policy toward the competitive process.
Art of Economics  The application of the knowledge learned in positive economics to the achievement of the goals one has determined in normative economics.
Average Fixed Cost  Fixed cost divided by quantity produced.
Average Product  Output per worker.
Average Total Cost  Total cost divided by the quantity produced.
Average Variable Cost  Variable cost divided by quantity produced.
Balance of Trade  The difference between the value of the goods and services a country imports and the value of the goods and services it exports.
Bar Graph  A graph where the area under each point is filled in to look like a bar.
Barriers to Entry  Social, political, or economic impediments that prevent firms from entering a market.
Benefit Principle  The individuals who receive the benefit of a good or service should pay the tax necessary to supply that good.
Bilateral Monopoly  A market with only a single seller and a single buyer.
Budget Constraint  A curve that shows us the various combinations of goods an individual can buy with a given amount of money.
Business  A private producing unit in our society.
Capitalism  An economic system based on the market in which the ownership of the means of production resides with a small group of individuals called capitalists.
Cartel  A combination of firms that acts as if it were a single firm.
Cartel Model of Oligopoly  A model that assumes that oligopolies act as if they were monopolists that have assigned output quotas to individual member firms of the oligopoly so that total output is consistent with joint profit maximization.
Clayton Antitrust Act  A U.S. law that made four specific monopolistic practices illegal: price discrimination, tie-in contracts, interlocking directorships, and buying stock in a competitor's company in order to reduce competition.
Closed Shop  A firm where unions control the hiring.
Comparable Worth Laws  Laws mandating comparable pay for comparable work.
Comparative Advantage  The ability to be better suited to the production of one good than to the production of another good.
Complements  Goods that are used in conjunction with other goods.
Concentration Ratio  The value of sales by the top firms of an industry stated as a percentage of total industry sales.
Conglomerate Merger  The merging of relatively unrelated businesses.
Conspicuous Consumption  The consumption of goods not for one's direct pleasure, but simply to show off to others.  
Constant Returns to Scale  A situation in which long-run average total costs do not change with an increase in output. Also: Output will rise by the same proportionate increase as all inputs.
Consumer Sovereignty  The principle that the consumer's wishes determine what's produced.
Consumer Surplus  The difference between what consumers would have been willing to pay and what they actually pay.
Contestable Market Model  A model of oligopoly in which barriers to entry and barriers to exit, not the structure of the market, determine a firm's price and output decisions.
Coordinate System  A two-dimensional space in which one point represents two numbers.
Corporate Takeover  An action in which another firm or a group of individuals issues a tender offer (that is, offers to buy up the stock of a company) to gain control and to install its own managers.
Corporation  A business that is treated as a person, legally owned by its stockholders. Its stockholders are not liable for the actions of the corporate "person."
Cost Minimization Condition  A situation where the ratio of marginal product to the price of an input is equal for all inputs.
Cost/Benefit Approach  Assigning costs and benefits, and making decisions on the basis of the relevant costs and benefits.
Cross-Price Elasticity of Demand  The percentage change in demand divided by the percentage change in the price of a related good.
Deacquisition  One company's sale of either parts of another company it has bought or parts of itself.
Deadweight Loss  The loss of consumer and producer surplus from a tax.
Decision Tree  A visual description of sequential choices.
Decreasing Returns to Scale  A situation when output rises by a smaller proportionate increase than all inputs.
Demand  A schedule of quantities of a good that will be bought per unit of time at various prices, other things constant.
Demand Curve  The graphic representation of the relationship between price and quantity demanded.
Demerit Goods or Activities  Goods or activities that government believes are bad for people even though they choose to use the goods or engage in the activities.
Depreciation  A measure of the decline in value of an asset that occurs over time through use. Also: A decrease in the value of a currency.
Derived Demand  The demand for factors of production by firms, which depends on consumers' demands.
Derived Demand Curve for Labor  A curve that shows the maximum amount of labor, measured in labor hours, that a firm will hire.
Diminishing Marginal Productivity  A situation when increasing one input, keeping all others constant, leads to smaller and smaller gains in output.
Direct Regulation  A program in which the amount of a good people are allowed to use is directly limited by the government.
Direct Relationship  A relationship in which when one variable goes up, the other goes up too.
Diseconomies of Scale  Situation when the long-run average total costs increase as output increases.
Division of Labor  The splitting up of a task to allow for specialization of production.
Downsizing  A reduction in the workforce.
Duopoly  An oligopoly with only two firms.
Dynamic Efficiency  A market's ability to promote cost-reducing or product-enhancing technological change.
E-commerce  Buying and selling over the Internet.
Economic Decision Rule  If the marginal benefits of doing something exceed the marginal costs, do it. If the marginal costs of doing something exceed the marginal benefits, don't do it.
Economic Efficiency  Achieving a goal at the lowest possible cost.
Economic Forces  The necessary reactions to scarcity.
Economic Model  A framework that places the generalized insights of a theory in a more specific contextual setting.
Economic Policy  An action (or inaction) taken by government to influence economic actions.
Economic Principle  A commonly held economic insight stated as a law or general assumption.
Economic Profit  Explicit and implicit revenue minus explicit and implicit cost.
Economically Efficient  A method of production that produces a given level of output at the lowest possible cost.
Economics  The study of how human beings coordinate their wants and desires, given the decision-making mechanisms, social customs, and political realities of the society.
Economies of Scale  Situation when long-run average total costs decrease as output increases.
Economies of Scope  Situation when the costs of producing products are interdependent so that it's less costly for a firm to produce a good when it's already producing another.
Efficiency  Achieving a goal as cheaply as possible. Also: using as few inputs as possible.
Efficiency Wages  Wages paid above the going-market wage to keep workers happy and productive.
Efficient  Achieving a goal at the lowest cost in total resources without consideration as to who pays those costs.
Effluent Fees  Charges imposed by government on the level of pollution created.
Elastic  The percentage change in quantity is greater than the percentage change in price (E > 1).
Embargo  A total restriction on the import or export of a good.
Entrepreneur  An individual who sees an opportunity to sell an item at a price higher than the average cost of producing it.
Entrepreneurship  The ability to organize and get something done. Also: Labor services that involve high degrees of organizational skills, concern, oversight responsibility, and creativity.
Equilibrium  A concept in which opposing dynamic forces cancel each other out.
Equilibrium Price  The price toward which the invisible hand drives the market.
Equilibrium Quantity  The amount bought and sold at the equilibrium price.
Euro  The currency used by 12 members of the European Union.
European Commission (EC)  The executive group of the European Union that indicates action and safeguards the European Union nations; also called Commission of the European Communities. The EU's antitrust agency.
Excess Demand  Situation when quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied.
Excess Supply  Situation when quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded.
Exchange Rate  The price of one country's currency in terms of another currency.
Excise Tax  A tax that is levied on a specific good.
Externality  An effect of a decision on a third party not taken into account by the decision maker.
Failure of Market Outcomes  A situation in which, even though the market is functioning properly (there are no market failures), it is not achieving society's goals.
Fallacy of Composition  The false assumption that what is true for a part will also be true for the whole.
Federal Trade Commission Act  A U.S. law that made it illegal for firms to use "unfair methods of competition" and to engage in "unfair or deceptive acts or practices."
Feudalism  An economic system in which traditions rule.
Firm  An economic institution that transforms factors of production into goods and services.
Fixed Costs  Costs that are spent and cannot be changed in the period of time under consideration.
Free Rider  A person who participates in something for free because others have paid for it.
Free Rider Problem  Individuals' unwillingness to share in the cost of a public good.
Free Trade Association  A group of countries that have reduced or eliminated trade barriers among themselves.
Game Theory  An application of economic principles in which players make interdependent choices.
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)  A regular international conference to reduce trade barriers held from 1947 to 1995. It has been replaced by the World Trade Organization (WTO).
General Rule of Political Economy  When small groups are helped by a government action and large groups are hurt by that same action, the small group tends to lobby far more effectively than the large group.
Global Corporations  Corporations with substantial operations on both the production and sales sides in more than one country.
Good/Bad Paradox  The phenomenon of doing poorly because you're doing well.
Government Failure  A situation in which the government intervention in the market to improve market failure actually makes the situation worse.
Grandfather  To pass a law affecting a specific group but providing that those in the group before the law was passed are exempt from some provisions of the law.
Graph  A picture of points in a coordinate system in which points denote relationships between numbers.
Herfindahl Index  An index of market concentration calculated by adding the squared value of the individual market shares of all firms in the industry.
Horizontal Merger  The combining of two companies in the same industry.
Hostile Takeover  A merger in which the firm being taken over doesn't want to be taken over.
Households  Groups of individuals living together and making joint decisions.
Implicit Collusion  A type of collusion in which multiple firms make the same pricing decisions even though they have not explicitly consulted with one another.
Incentive-Compatible Contract  A contract in which the incentives of each of the two parties to the contract are made to correspond as closely as possible.
Incentive Effect  How much a person will change his or her hours worked in response to a change in the wage rate.
Income  Payments received plus or minus changes in the value of a person's assets in a specified time period.
Income Elasticity of Demand  The percentage change in demand divided by the percentage change in income.
Increasing Returns to Scale  A situation when output rises by a greater proportionate increase than all inputs.
Indifference Curve  A curve that shows combinations of goods among which an individual is indifferent.
Indivisible Setup Cost  The cost of an indivisible input for which a certain minimum amount of production must be undertaken before the input becomes economically feasible to use.
Industrial Policy  A formal policy that government takes toward business.
Industrial Revolution  A time when technology and machines rapidly modernized industrial production and mass produced goods replaced handmade goods.
Inefficiency  Getting less output from inputs that, if devoted to some other activity, would produce more output.
Inefficient  Achieving a goal in a more costly manner than necessary.
Inelastic  The percentage change in quantity is less than the percentage change in price (E < 1).
Infant Industry Argument  The argument that with initial protection, an industry will be able to become competitive.
Inferior Goods  Goods whose consumption decreases when income increases.
Inherent Comparative Advantage  Comparative advantage that is based on factors that are relatively unchangeable.
Input  What is put into a production process to achieve an output.
Interpolation Assumption  The assumption that the relationship between variables is the same between points as it is at the points.
Inverse Relationship  A relationship between two variables in which when one goes up, the other goes down.
Invisible Hand  The price mechanism; the rise and fall of prices that guides our actions in a market.
Invisible Hand Theory  A market economy, through the price mechanism, will tend to allocate resources efficiently.
Isocost Line  A line that represents alternative combinations of factors of production that have the same costs.
Isoquant Curve  A curve that represents combinations of factors of production that result in equal amounts of output.
Isoquant Map  A set of isoquant curves that show technically efficient combinations of inputs that can produce different levels of output.
Judgment by Performance  To judge the competitiveness of markets by the performance (behavior) of firms in that market.
Judgment by Structure  To judge the competitiveness of markets by the structure of the industry.
L  The broadest measure of money.
Labor Market  The factor market in which individuals supply labor services for wages to other individuals and to firms that need (demand) labor services.
Labor Productivity  The average output per worker.
Laissez-Faire  An economic policy of leaving coordination of individuals' actions to the market.
Land Bank Program  A program in which government supports prices by giving farmers economic incentives to reduce supply.
Law of Demand  Quantity demanded rises as price falls, other things constant. Also can be stated as: Quantity demanded falls as price rises, other things constant.
Law of Diminishing Marginal Productivity  As more and more of a variable input is added to an existing fixed input, eventually the additional output one gets from that additional input is going to fall.
Law of Diminishing Marginal Rate of Substitution  As you get more and more of a good, if some of that good is taken away, then the marginal addition of another good you need to remain on the same indifference curve gets less and less.
Law of One Price  The wages of workers in one country will not differ significantly from the wages of (equal) workers in another institutionally similar country.
Law of Supply  Quantity supplied rises as price rises, other things constant. Also can be stated as: Quantity supplied falls as price falls, other things constant.
Lazy Monopolist  A monopolist that does not push for efficiency, but merely enjoys the position it is already in.
Learning by Doing  As we do something, we learn what works and what doesn't, and over time we become more proficient at it. Also: To improve the methods of production through experience.
Limited Liability  The liability of a stockholder (owner) in a corporation; it is limited to the amount the stockholder has invested in the company.
Line Graph  A graph where the data are connected by a continuous line.
Linear Curve  A curve that is drawn as a straight line.
Long-Run Decision  A decision in which a firm chooses among all possible production techniques.
Lorenz Curve  A geometric representation of the share distribution of income among families in a given country at a given time.
Luxuries  Goods that have an income elasticity greater than 1.
Macroeconomic Externality  An externality that affects the levels of unemployment, inflation, or growth in the economy as a whole.
Macroeconomics  The study of the economy as a whole, which includes inflation, unemployment, business cycles, and growth.
Marginal Benefit  Additional benefit above the benefits already derived.
Marginal Cost (MC)  Additional cost over and above the costs already incurred. Also: Increase (decrease) in total cost from increasing (or decreasing) the level of output by one unit. Also: The change in total cost associated with a change in quantity.
Marginal Factor Cost  The additional cost to a firm of hiring another worker.
Marginal Physical Product (MPP)  The additional units of output that hiring an additional worker will bring about.
Marginal Product  The additional output that will be forthcoming from an additional worker, other inputs constant.
Marginal Rate of Substitution  The rate at which one good must be added when the other is taken away to keep the individual indifferent between the two combinations. Also: The rate at which one factor must be added to compensate for the loss of another factor to keep output constant.
Marginal Revenue (MR)  The change in total revenue associated with a change in quantity.
Marginal Revenue Product (MRP)  The marginal revenue a firm expects to earn from selling an additional worker's output.
Marginal Social Benefit  The marginal private benefit of consuming a good plus the benefits of the positive externalities resulting from consuming that good.
Marginal Social Cost  The marginal private costs of production plus the cost of the negative externalities associated with that production.
Marginal Utility  The satisfaction one gets from consuming one additional unit of a product above and beyond what one has consumed up to that point.
Market Demand Curve  The horizontal sum of all individual demand curves.
Market Economy  An economic system based on private property and the market in which, in principle, individuals decide how, what, and for whom to produce.
Market Failure  A situation in which the invisible hand pushes in such a way that individual decisions do not lead to socially desirable outcomes.
Market Force  An economic force that is given relatively free rein by society to work through the market.
Market Incentive Plan  A plan requiring market participants to certify that they have reduced total consumption— not necessarily their own individual consumption—by a specified amount.
Market Structure  The physical characteristics of the market within which firms interact.
Market Supply Curve  The horizontal sum of all individual supply curves. Also: Horizontal sum of all the firms' marginal cost curves, taking account of any changes in input prices that might occur.
Marxian (Radical) Model  A model that focuses on equitable distribution of power, rights, and income among social classes.
Medicare  A multibillion-dollar medical insurance system.
Mercantilism  An economic system in which government determines the what, how, and for whom decisions by doling out the rights to undertake certain economic activities.
Merger  The act of combining two firms.
Merit Good or Activity  A good or activity that government believes is good for you, even though you may not choose to consume the good or engage in the activity.
Microeconomics  The study of individual choice, and how that choice is influenced by economic forces.
Minimum Efficient Level of Production  The amount of production that spreads setup costs out sufficiently for a firm to undertake production profitably.
Minimum Wage Law  A law specifying the lowest wage a firm can legally pay an employee.
Monitoring Costs  Costs incurred by the organizer of production in seeing to it that the employees do what they're supposed to do.
Monitoring Problem  The need to oversee employees to ensure that their actions are in the best interest of the firm.
Monopolistic Competition  A market structure in which many firms sell differentiated products; there are few barriers to entry.
Monopoly  A market structure in which one firm makes up the entire market.
Monopoly Power  The ability of individuals or firms currently in business to prevent other individuals or firms from entering the same kind of business.
Monopsony  A market in which a single firm is the only buyer.
Most-Favored Nation  A country that will be charged as low a tariff on its exports as any other country.
Movement along a Demand Curve  The graphical representation of the effect of a change in price on the quantity demanded.
Movement along a Supply Curve  The graphical representation of the effect of a change in price on the quantity supplied.
Natural Monopoly  An industry in which a single firm can produce at a lower cost than can two or more firms. Also: An industry in which significant economies of scale make the existence of more than one firm inefficient.
Necessity  A good that has an income elasticity less than 1.
Negative Externality  The adverse effect of a decision on others not taken into account by the decision maker.
Network Externality  The phenomenon that the greater use of a product increases the benefit of that product to everyone.
Nonlinear Curve  A curve that is drawn as a curved line.
Nonrecourse Loan Program  A program in which government "buys" goods in the form of collateral on defaulting loans.
Normal Goods  Goods whose consumption increases with an increase in income.
Normal Profit  The amount the owners of business would have received in the next-best alternative.
Normative Economics  The study of what the goals of the economy should be.
North American Industry Classification System (NAICS)  An industry classification that categorizes firms by type of economic activity and groups firms with like production processes.
Oligopoly  A market structure in which there are only a few firms; there are often significant barriers to entry.
Opportunity Cost  The benefit you might have gained from choosing the next-best alternative.
Optimal Policy  A policy in which the marginal cost of undertaking the policy equals the marginal benefit of that policy.
Output  A result of a productive activity.
Outsourcing  The relocation of production once done in the United States to foreign countries.
Pareto Optimal Policy  A policy that benefits some people and hurts no one.
Partnership  A business with two or more owners.
Patent  The legal protection of a technical innovation that gives the person holding it sole right to use that innovation. (Note: A patent is good for only a limited time.)
Perfectly Competitive Market  A market in which economic forces operate unimpeded.
Perfectly Elastic  Quantity responds enormously to changes in price (E = ∞).
Perfectly Inelastic  Quantity does not respond at all to changes in price (E = 0).
Pie Chart  A circle divided into "pie pieces," where the undivided pie represents the total amount and the pie pieces reflect the percentage of the whole pie that the various components make up.
Positive Economics  The study of what is, and how the economy works.
Positive Externality  The positive effect of a decision on others not taken into account by the decision maker.
Poverty Threshold  The income below which a family is considered to live in poverty.
Present Value  A method of translating a flow of future income or savings into its current worth.
Price Ceiling  A government-imposed limit on how high a price can be charged. In other words, a government-set price below the market equilibrium price.
Price-Discriminate  To charge different prices to different individuals or groups of individuals.
Price Elasticity of Demand  The percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.
Price Elasticity of Supply  The percentage change in quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price.
Price Floor  A government-imposed limit on how low a price can be charged. In other words, a government-set price above equilibrium price.
Price Stabilization Program  A program designed to eliminate short-run fluctuations in prices, while allowing prices to follow their long-run trend line.
Price Support Program  A program designed to maintain prices at higher levels than the market prices.
Price Taker  A firm or individual who takes the price determined by supply and demand as given.
Principle of Diminishing Marginal Utility  As you consume more of a good, after some point the marginal utility received from each additional unit of a good decreases with each additional unit consumed, other things equal.
Principle of Increasing Marginal Opportunity Cost  In order to get more of something, one must give up ever increasing quantities of something else.
Principle of Rational Choice  Spend your money on those goods that give you the most marginal utility (MU) per dollar.
Prisoner's Dilemma  Well-known game that demonstrates the difficulty of cooperative behavior in certain circumstances.
Private Good  A good that, when consumed by one individual, cannot be consumed by another individual.
Private Property Rights  Control a private individual or firm has over an asset.
Producer Surplus  Price the producer sells a product for less the cost of producing it.
Production  The transformation of factors into goods and services.
Production Function  The relationship between the inputs (factors of production) and outputs.
Production Possibility Curve  A curve measuring the maximum combination of outputs that can be obtained from a given number of inputs.
Production Possibility Table  A table that lists a choice's opportunity costs by summarizing what alternative outputs can be achieved with given inputs.
Production Table  A table showing the output resulting from various combinations of factors of production or inputs.
Productive Efficiency  Achieving as much output as possible from a given amount of inputs or resources.
Productivity  Output per unit of input.
Profit  What's left over from total revenues after all the appropriate costs have been subtracted.
Profit-Maximizing Condition  MR = MC = P.
Progressive Tax  A tax whose rates increase as a person's income increases.
Proportional Tax  A tax whose rates are constant at all income levels, no matter what a taxpayer's total annual income is.
Public Assistance  Means-tested social programs targeted to the poor and providing financial, nutritional, medical, and housing assistance.
Public Choice (Conservative) Model  A model that focuses on economic incentives as applied to politicians.
Public Choice Economists  Economists who integrate an economic analysis of politics with their analysis of the economy.
Public Good  A good that if supplied to one person must be supplied to all and whose consumption by one individual does not prevent its consumption by another individual. That is, a good that is nonexclusive and nonrival.
Quantity Demanded  A specific amount that will be demanded per unit of time at a specific price, other things constant.
Quantity Supplied  A specific amount that will be supplied at a specific price.
Quota  Quantity limit placed on imports.
Rational  An adjective used to describe behavior individuals undertake in their own best interest.
Regressive Tax  A tax whose rates decrease as income rises.
Regulatory Trade Restrictions  Government-imposed procedural rules that limit imports.
Rent Control  A price ceiling on rents, set by government.
Rent-Seeking Activities  Activities designed to transfer surplus from one group to another.
Reverse Engineering  The process of a firm buying other firms' products, disassembling them, figuring out what's special about them, and then copying them within the limits of the law.
Scarcity  The goods available are too few to satisfy individuals' desires.
Share Distribution of Income  The relative division of total income among income groups.
Sherman Antitrust Act  A U.S. law designed to regulate the competitive process.
Shift Factor of Demand  The effect of anything other than price on demand.
Shift in Supply  The graphical representation of the effect of a change in a factor other than price on supply.
Short-Run Decision  A decision in which the firm is constrained in regard to what production decisions it can make.
Shutdown Point  The point at which the firm will be better off if it temporarily shuts down than it will if it stays in business.
Signaling  An action taken by an informed party that reveals information to an uninformed party and thereby partially offsets adverse selection.
Sin Tax  A tax that discourages activities society believes are harmful (sinful).
Slope  The change in the value on the vertical axis divided by the change in the value on the horizontal axis.
Social Security System  A social insurance program that provides financial benefits to the elderly and disabled and to their eligible dependents and/or survivors.
Socialism  An economic system based on individuals' goodwill toward others, not on their own self-interest, and in which, in principle, society decides what, how, and for whom to produce.
Socioeconomic Distribution of Income  The allocation of income among relevant socioeconomic groupings.
Sole Proprietorship  A business that has only one owner.
Soviet-Style Socialist Economy  An economic system that uses administrative control or central planning to solve the coordination problems: what, how, and for whom.
Status Quo Bias  An individual's actions are very much influenced by what the current situation is, even when that reasonably does not seem to be very important to the decision.
Stock  A financial asset that conveys ownership rights in a corporation. Also, certificates of ownership in a company.
Strategic Bargaining  Demanding a larger share of the gains from trade than you can reasonably expect.
Strategic Decision Making  Taking explicit account of a rival's expected response to a decision you are making.
Strategic Pricing  A characteristic of oligopoly in which firms set their price based on the expected reactions of other firms.
Strategic Trade Policies  Threatening to implement tariffs to bring about a reduction in tariffs or some other concession from the other country.
Substitutes  Goods that can be used in place of one another.
Sunk Costs  Costs that have already been incurred and cannot be recovered.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)  A federal program that pays benefits, based on need, to the elderly, blind, and disabled.
Supply  A schedule of quantities a seller is willing to sell per unit of time at various prices, other things constant.
Supply Curve  A graphical representation of the relationship between price and quantity supplied.
Takeover  The purchase of one firm by a shell firm that then takes direct control of all the purchased firm's operations.
Tariff  An excise tax on an imported (internationally traded) good.
Tax Incentive Program  A program using a tax to create incentives for individuals to structure their activities in a way that is consistent with the desired ends.
Team Spirit  The feelings of friendship and being part of a team that bring out people's best efforts.
Technical Efficiency  A situation in which as few inputs as possible are used to produce a given output.
Technological Change  An increase in the range of production techniques that leads to more efficient ways of producing goods as well as the production of new and better goods.
Technological Development  The discovery of new or improved products or methods of production.
Technological Lock-In  The prior use of a technology makes the adoption of subsequent technologies difficult.
Technology  The way we make goods and supply services.
Total Cost  The explicit payments to the factors of production plus the opportunity cost of the factors provided by the owners of the firm.
Total Revenue  The amount a firm receives for selling its product or service plus any increase in the value of the assets owned by the firm.
Total Utility  The total satisfaction one gets from consuming a product.
Trade Adjustment Assistance Programs  Programs designed to compensate losers for reductions in trade restrictions.
Transferable Comparative Advantage  Comparative advantage based on factors that can change relatively easily.
Ultimatum Game  A game in which the person only gets the money if the other person accepts the offer. If the second person does not accept, they both get nothing.
Unemployment Compensation  Short-term financial assistance, regardless of need, to eligible individuals who are temporarily out of work.
Union Shop  A firm in which all workers must join the union.
Unit Elastic  The percentage change in quantity is equal to the percentage change in price (E = 1).
Utility  The pleasure or satisfaction that one expects to get from consuming a good or service.
Utility-Maximizing Rule  Utility is maximized when the ratios of the marginal utility to price of two goods are equal.
Value of Marginal Product (VMP)  An additional worker's marginal physical product multiplied by the price at which the firm could sell that additional product.
Variable Costs  Costs that change as output changes.
Vertical Merger  A combination of two companies that are involved in different phases of producing a product.
Wealth  The value of the things individuals own less the value of what they owe.
Welfare Loss Triangle  A geometric representation of the welfare cost in terms of misallocated resources caused by a deviation from a supply/demand equilibrium.
World Trade Organization (WTO)  Organization committed to getting countries to agree not to impose new tariffs or other trade restrictions except under certain limited conditions. See also General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.
X-inefficiency  The underperformance of a firm that has a monopoly position. The firm operates far less efficiently than it could technically.







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