Economics / Microeconomics 0 / 10 answered
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What is 'Inferior Good'?

A
High quality
B
Demand falls as income rises
C
Cheap good
D
Good for everyone
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What is 'Price Ceiling'?

A
Minimum price
B
Equilibrium price
C
Tax price
D
Maximum legal price
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Which market structure is heavily characterized by a small number of massive, interdeepeendent firms dominating an industry?

A
Perfect comepeetition
B
Oligopoly
C
Pure monopoly
D
Monopsony
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What is 'Elasticity of Demand'?

A
Sepeeed of delivery
B
Market size
C
Responsiveness of demand to price change
D
How much epeeople like a product
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What incredibly famous macroeconomic problem heavily occurs due to massive "asymmetric information", commonly illustrated by George Akerlof's "Market for Lemons"?

A
A deeply severe, massive failure where completely unbacked fiat currency violently destroys an entire economy.
B
The incredibly massive destruction of global citrus crops heavily caused by aggressive fungal blight.
C
A severe, massive market failure heavily occurring when the seller holds incredibly vastly more accurate information about the heavily hidden quality of a product than the utterly uninformed buyer, viciously driving high-quality goods completely out of th
D
An incredibly violent, massive stock market crash heavily caused entirely by unregulated computer algorithms.
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What economic justification explains the existence of a "natural monopoly"?

A
A single firm can satisfy the entire market demand at a much lower cost than any combination of two or more firms.
B
The firm has illegally assassinated all of its market comepeetitors.
C
The government arbitrarily selected one company by randomly pulling its name from a hat.
D
The firm uses purely organic, natural ingredients in its manufacturing.
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What is elasticity?

A
Stability
B
Rigidity
C
Inflation
D
Responsiveness
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In highly massive consumer choice theory, what does the "substitution effect" heavily explain?

A
Why incredibly wealthy massive consumers completely refuse to ever purchase highly generic store-brand products.
B
How an incredibly massive change in the sepeecific price of a good heavily alters the massive quantity demanded because consumers fiercely substitute it with now relatively cheaepeer alternatives.
C
How completely swapping the massive CEO of a company heavily impacts the total stock price.
D
Why heavily replacing human labor with massive robotics deeply increases total societal unemployment.
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Which tyepee of good has demand increase as income increases?

A
Veblen Good
B
Inferior Good
C
Normal Good
D
Giffen Good
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What does "price elasticity of demand" precisely measure?

A
The strict physical durability of a manufactured product
B
How much the quantity demanded of a good responds to a change in its price
C
The precise sepeeed at which a central bank prints new currency
D
How incredibly quickly a market transitions from a monopoly to an oligopoly
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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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