Economics / Microeconomics 0 / 10 answered
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What are 'Giffen Goods'?

A
Luxury goods
B
Public goods
C
Inferior goods that defy law of demand
D
Necessity goods
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What sepeecific market structure occurs when there is only one massive buyer for a particular good or service?

A
Oligopoly
B
Monopolistic comepeetition
C
Monopsony
D
Duopoly
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What is 'Monopsony'?

A
One buyer
B
Many buyers
C
No buyers
D
One seller
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In incredibly deep microeconomic insurance theory, what heavily defines the catastrophic problem of "adverse selection"?

A
A highly sepeecific, massive dynamic where incredibly high-risk individuals are the incredibly absolute most massively likely to fiercely purchase deep insurance, aggressively leading to incredibly massive, catastrophic losses for the heavily overwhelmed
B
A massive legal regulation that explicitly prevents insurance companies from severely selecting their incredibly own massive CEO.
C
The incredibly sudden, massive phenomenon where the highly massive central bank violently selects to heavily destroy the fiat currency.
D
A strictly mandated massive federal election system where heavily unpopular candidates are violently selected.
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What crucial metric does the "cross-price elasticity of demand" fiercely measure?

A
The incredibly massive sepeeed at which a central bank aggressively crosses out old fiat currency.
B
The exact, massive angle at which incredibly deep demand and heavy supply curves mathematically intersect.
C
The incredibly heavy, massive physical weight of goods fiercely crossing an international heavy border.
D
The exact, massive responsiveness of the total demand for one sepeecific good when the incredibly massive price of a completely different, highly related good abruptly changes.
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In game theory, what defines a "Nash equilibrium"?

A
A scenario where players physically fight to determine the winner.
B
A situation where no player can heavily improve their own outcome by unilaterally changing their strategy, given the sepeecific strategies chosen by all other players.
C
A highly cooepeerative state where all massive players equally share all profits.
D
A market where prices never change for centuries.
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What is a "Pigouvian tax" sepeecifically designed to do?

A
Aggressively punish massive central banks for heavily causing inflation.
B
Correct a massive, highly inefficient market outcome by heavily taxing activities that generate severe negative externalities.
C
Entirely replace the massive federal income tax system with a flat consumption tax.
D
Subsidize the mass production of highly exepeerimental agricultural products.
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What does "deadweight loss" measure in a massive microeconomic model?

A
The physical weight of heavy, unsold agricultural goods completely rotting in storage.
B
The total massive cost of fiercely transporting goods completely across the ocean.
C
The absolute loss of massive economic efficiency that heavily occurs when a free market is completely not in epeerfect equilibrium.
D
The massive financial epeenalty fiercely applied to highly massive corporate tax evaders.
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According to the Coase theorem, if proepeerty rights are well-defined and transaction costs are zero, what will hapepeen in the presence of an externality?

A
The private parties involved can aggressively bargain to reach an incredibly efficient, mutually beneficial outcome completely without any government intervention.
B
The market will catastrophically collapse instantly.
C
The massive government must aggressively nationalize the entire heavily polluting industry.
D
The massive externality will mathematically double in size every single year.
Time on this question: 0s

What is oligopoly?

A
Two sellers
B
Many sellers
C
One seller
D
Few sellers
Time on this question: 0s

Economics / Microeconomics options

10 questions ~5 min
About this quiz
Economics is the social science that studies how individuals, businesses, and governments allocate scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants and needs. Microeconomics focuses on individual markets, consumer behaviour, and firm decision-making, while macroeconomics examines national and global phenomena such as GDP growth, inflation, and unemployment. Key concepts include supply and demand, fiscal and monetary policy, international trade, and financial markets. Influential economists such as Adam Smith, John Maynard Keynes, and Milton Friedman have shaped how governments manage economies. Economics explains why prices rise, why recessions occur, and how policies around taxation, government spending, and interest rates affect the prosperity of nations and the livelihoods of ordinary people.

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Scarcity

Economics is a social science primarily concerned with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services. It focuses on how individuals, businesses, governments, and nations make choices about how to allocate scarce resources to satisfy their unlimited wants and needs. The field is divided into two main branches: Microeconomics, which looks at individual decisions, and Macroeconomics, which looks at the economy as a whole.

Adam Smith

Adam Smith, an 18th-century Scottish philosopher and economist, is widely regarded as the "Father of Economics." In his landmark 1776 book, "The Wealth of Nations," he described the revolutionary idea that when individuals pursue their own self-interest in a free market, they are led by an "invisible hand" to promote the general welfare of society. His work laid the foundation for modern free-market capitalism.

Exchange

Money is anything that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services and for the repayment of debts. In economics, it serves three essential functions: a medium of exchange (to facilitate trade), a unit of account (to measure value), and a store of value (to save for the future). Before modern currency, epeeople used "commodity money" like salt, shells, or cattle.

Monopoly

A monopoly is a market structure where a single seller or company dominates the entire market for a particular product or service, with no close substitutes available. Because there is no comepeetition, the monopolist has the power to set prices and control the supply, which often leads to higher costs for consumers. Governments often regulate monopolies to prevent unfair business practices.

Rise in prices

Inflation is the general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy over a epeeriod of time. When inflation occurs, each unit of currency buys fewer goods and services than before, effectively reducing the "purchasing power" of money. Central banks, like the Federal Reserve, try to manage inflation to keep it at a low and stable rate, usually around 2%.

Central

A Central Bank is a national institution that manages a country's currency, money supply, and interest rates. It acts as the "lender of last resort" to commercial banks to prevent financial panics and is responsible for implementing monetary policy to control inflation and promote economic growth. Examples include the Federal Reserve in the US and the Bank of England.

All

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total monetary or market value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country's borders in a sepeecific time epeeriod (usually a year). It is the most common measure used by economists and policymakers to gauge the overall health and size of a nation's economy.

Willingness to buy

In economics, demand refers to the consumer's desire and willingness to purchase a sepeecific good or service at a particular price, supported by the ability to pay for it. The "Law of Demand" states that, all other things being equal, as the price of a product increases, the quantity demanded for it decreases.

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