Глоссарий экономики
Этот экономический глоссарий представляет собой список определений терминов и понятий, используемых в экономике , ее субдисциплинах и смежных областях.
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- 401(а) Пенсионный план
- накоплений с отсрочкой налогообложения, План пенсионных определенный подразделом 401(a) Налогового кодекса . [1] План 401(a) устанавливается работодателем и допускает взносы работодателя или как работодателя, так и работника. [2] Эти планы доступны некоторым служащим правительства, образовательных учреждений и некоммерческих организаций, а их средства могут быть переведены на другой квалифицированный пенсионный план, например 401(k) или IRA . [3] при смене места работы.
- 401 (k) Пенсионный план
- Тип пенсионного плана , который спонсируется работодателем и в котором работодатель может компенсировать часть взносов работника. Большинствовзносы откладываются по налогу до тех пор, пока не произойдет изъятие пенсий.
- 403(b) Пенсионный план
- в США налогообложением накоплений с льготным План пенсионных , доступный для государственных образовательных организаций , некоторых некоммерческих работодателей (только организации, соответствующие требованиям Кодекса внутренних доходов 501(c)(3 ), кооперативных больничных обслуживающих организаций и самозанятых священников в США . [4] Его налоговый режим аналогичен плану 401 (k) . [5]
- 457 Retirement Plan
- A type of nonqualified,[6][7] tax advantaged deferred-compensation retirement plan that is available for governmental and certain nongovernmental employers in the United States. Unlike with a 401(k) plan, it has no 10% penalty for withdrawal before the age of 55 (59 years, 6 months for IRA accounts) (although the withdrawal is subject to ordinary income taxation). 457 plans can also allow independent contractors to participate in the plan, where 401(k) and 403(b) plans cannot.[8]
A[edit]
- absolute advantage
- The ability of a party (whether an individual, firm, or country) to produce a greater quantity of a good, product, or service than competitors using the same amount of resources.
- absorption
- The total demand for all final marketed goods and services by all economic agents resident in an economy, regardless of the origin of the goods and services themselves[9]
- abandonment of the gold standard
- The decision by a government to abandon a monetary system in which the standard economic unit of account is based on a fixed quantity of gold.
- accelerator effect
- A positive effect on private fixed investment because of the growth of the market economy. Rising GDP usually implies that profit expectations and business confidence rise, encouraging businesses to build more factories and other buildings and to install more machinery.
- adaptive expectations
- A hypothetical process by which people form expectations about what will happen in the future based on what has happened in the past.
- AD–AS model
- A macroeconomic model that explains price level and output through the relationship of downward-sloping aggregate demand (AD) and upward-sloping aggregate supply (AS).
- AD–IA model
- A macroeconomic model that explains inflation and output through the relationship of downward-sloping aggregate demand (AD) and horizontal inflation adjustment (IA). The monetary policy rule (MPR) is assumed, which is that the central bank increases interest rates in response to increase in inflation and vice versa.
- adverse selection
- A market situation where buyers and sellers have different information, and participants with key information participate selectively in trades at the expense of other parties.
- advertising elasticity of demand (AED)
- Measures the sensitivity of a good's demand to a change in advertising.
- agflation
- An increase in the price of food and industrial agricultural crops when compared to the general rise in prices.
- aggregate demand (AD)
- The total demand for goods and services in an economy.[10] It specifies the amounts of goods and services that will be purchased at all possible price levels.[11] Aggregate demand can also be interpreted as the demand for the gross domestic product of a country. It is often called effective demand, though this term also has a distinct meaning.
- aggregate supply (AS)
- The total supply of goods and services in an economy.
- aggregation problem
- The difficult problem of finding a valid way to treat an empirical or theoretical aggregate as if it reacted like a less-aggregated measure, say, about behavior of an individual agent as described in general microeconomic theory.[12]
- agent
- An actor or, more specifically, a decision maker in a model of some aspect of the economy.
- agricultural economics
- An applied field of economics concerned with the application of economic theory in optimizing the production and distribution of food.
- AK model
- A macroeconomic model that explains output through the relationship of total factor productivity and capital. It assumes that there is no diminishing return of capital.
- Alchian–Allen effect
- When the prices of two substitute goods, such as high and low grades of the same product, are both increased by a fixed per-unit amount, consumption will shift toward the higher-grade product. This is because the added per-unit amount decreases the relative price of the higher-grade product.
- Allais paradox
- A choice problem showing an inconsistency of actual observed choices with the independence axiom of expected utility theory.
- allocative efficiency
- A state of the economy in which production represents consumer preferences; in particular, every good or service is produced up to the point where the last unit provides a marginal benefit to consumers equal to the marginal cost of producing. In the single-price model, at the point of allocative efficiency, price is equal to marginal cost.[13][14]
- alternative minimum tax (AMT)
- A tax imposed by the U.S. federal government in addition to the regular income tax for certain individuals, estates, and trusts. High-income taxpayers must calculate and pay the greater of the AMT or regular tax.[15]
- ambiguity aversion
- Any preference for known risks over unknown risks.
- American school
- A school of thought based around industry protection, government investment in infrastructure, and a national bank.
- Amoroso–Robinson relation
- An equation that describes the relation between price, marginal revenue, and price elasticity of demand.
- Anglo-Saxon model
- A school of thought based around low levels of regulation and taxation, minimal public services, strong private property rights, contract enforcement, overall ease of doing business, and low barriers to free trade.
- annual effective discount rate (AER)
- The amount of interest paid or earned as a percentage of the balance at the end of the annual period.
- anti-rival good
- The opposite of a rival good. The more people share an anti-rival good, the more utility each person receives.
- antitrust law
- Any law that promotes or seeks to maintain market competition by regulating anti-competitive conduct by companies.[16][17] Competition law is implemented through public and private enforcement.[18] It is also known as "antitrust law" in the United States for historical reasons and as "anti-monopoly law" in China[16] and Russia.
- applied economics
- The application of economic theory and econometrics in specific settings. As one of the two sets of fields of economics (the other being the core),[19] it is typically characterized by the application of the core, i.e. economic theory and econometrics, to address practical issues in a range of fields.
- appropriate technology
- A movement (and its manifestations) encompassing technological choice and application that is small-scale, decentralized, labor-intensive, energy-efficient, environmentally sound, and locally autonomous.[20]
- arbitrage
- The practice of taking advantage of a price difference between two or more markets by striking a combination of matching deals that capitalize upon the imbalance, with the profit being the difference between the market prices.
- Arrow–Debreu model
- A model that suggests there must be a set of prices such that aggregate supplies will equal aggregate demands for every commodity in the economy, given certain assumptions. It can be used to prove the existence of general equilibrium (or Walrasian equilibrium) of an economy.[21]
- Arrow-Debreu security
- A contract that agrees to pay one unit of a numeraire (a currency or a commodity) if a particular state occurs at a particular time in the future and pays zero numeraire in all the other states.
- Arrow information paradox (AIP)
- A problem faced by companies when considering the transfer of intellectual property. A company may wish to sell some information, but it cannot fully describe the capabilities of the information without effectively transferring the information for free.
- Arrow's impossibility theorem
- When voters have three or more distinct options, no ranked voting electoral system can convert the ranked preferences of individuals into a community-wide (complete and transitive) ranking while also meeting the specified set of criteria: unrestricted domain, non-dictatorship, Pareto efficiency, and independence of irrelevant alternatives.
- Associate's Degree
- An academic program taken at the undergraduate level and after secondary school, which is considered a two-year degree and can be obtained from a community college, junior college, or some four-year universities.
- Atkinson–Stiglitz theorem
- Where the utility function is separable between labor and all commodities, no indirect taxes need be employed.
- Aumann's agreement theorem
- If the probabilistic beliefs of agents who share a common prior and update their probabilistic beliefs by Bayes' rule, regarding a fixed event, are common knowledge then these probabilities must coincide. Thus, agents cannot have common knowledge of a disagreement over the posterior probability of a given event.
- austerity
- A set of political-economic policies that aim to reduce government budget deficits through spending cuts, tax increases, or a combination of both.[22][23][24]
- Austrian School
- A heterodox[25][26][27] school of economic thought that is based on methodological individualism—the concept that social phenomena result from the motivations and actions of individuals.[28][29][30]
- autarky
- The characteristic of being self-sufficient; the term is usually applied to political states or their economic systems. Autarky is possible when an entity can survive or continue its activities without external assistance or international trade. If a self-sufficient economy also deliberately refuses all trade with the outside world, then it is called a closed economy.[31]
- automatic stabilizer
- A feature of the structure of modern government budgets, particularly income taxes and welfare spending, that acts to damp out fluctuations in real GDP.[32]
- autonomous consumption
- The consumption expenditure that occurs when income levels are zero. Such consumption is considered autonomous of income only when expenditure on these consumables does not vary with changes in income; generally, it may be required to fund necessities and debt obligations. If income levels are actually zero, this consumption counts as dissaving, because it is financed by borrowing or using up savings.
- average cost
- A quantity equal to the total cost divided by the number of goods produced (the output quantity, Q). It is also equal to the sum of variable costs (total variable costs divided by Q) plus average fixed costs (total fixed costs divided by Q).
- average fixed cost
- The fixed costs (FC) of production divided by the quantity (Q) of output produced. Fixed costs are those costs that must be incurred in fixed quantity regardless of the level of output produced.
- average variable cost
- A firm's variable costs (labour, electricity, etc.) divided by the quantity of output produced. Variable costs are those costs which vary with the output.
- average tax rate
- The ratio of the total amount of taxes paid to the total tax base (taxable income or spending), expressed as a percentage.[33]
B[edit]
- Backus–Kehoe–Kydland puzzle
- The observation that consumption is much less correlated across countries than output. According to theory we should observe that consumption is much more correlated across countries than output in an Arrow–Debreu economy.
- Backus–Smith puzzle
- The observation that the correlations between consumption and real exchange rates are zero or negative. This is contrary to economic theory which predicts that with full risk sharing, relative consumption should be perfectly correlated with the real exchange rate.
- backward advantage
- The advantage that a still-developing country has because it can take advantage of the technology/industry gap with a developed country by implementing a new technology or venturing into an industry that is new to its economy but mature in the developed country.
- backward disadvantage
- The fact that it is easier for late-development countries to imitate technologies, but more difficult to imitate the system, because the reform will offend vested interests.[34]
- backward induction
- The process of reasoning backwards in time, from the end of a problem or situation, to determine a sequence of optimal actions. It proceeds by first considering the last time a decision might be made and choosing what to do in any situation at that time. Using this information, one can then determine what to do at the second-to-last time of decision. This process continues backwards until one has determined the best action for every possible situation (i.e. for every possible information set) at every point in time.
- balance of payments
- A record or summary of all economic transactions between the residents of a country and the rest of the world in a particular period of time (e.g. over a quarter of a year or, more commonly, over a year). These transactions are made by individuals, firms and government bodies. Thus the balance of payments includes all external visible and non-visible transactions of a country.
- balance of trade
- The difference between the monetary value of a nation's exports and imports over a certain period.[35] Sometimes a distinction is made between a balance of trade for goods versus one for services. "Balance of trade" can be a misleading term because trade measures a flow of exports and imports over a given period of time, rather than a balance of exports and imports at a given point in time. Also, balance of trade does not necessarily imply that exports and imports are "in balance" with each other or anything else.
- balanced budget
- A budget in which revenues equal expenditures. Thus, neither a budget deficit nor a budget surplus exists (the accounts "balance"). The term may also refer more generally to a budget that has no budget deficit but could possibly have a budget surplus.[36] A cyclically balanced budget is a budget that is not necessarily balanced year-to-year, but is balanced over the economic cycle, running a surplus in boom years and running a deficit in lean years, with these offsetting over time.
- bank
- A financial institution that accepts deposits from the public and creates credit.[37] Lending activities can be performed either directly or indirectly through capital markets. Due to their importance in the financial stability of a country, banks are highly regulated in most countries. Most nations have institutionalized a system known as fractional reserve banking, under which banks hold liquid assets equal to only a portion of their current liabilities. In addition to other regulations intended to ensure liquidity, banks are generally subject to minimum capital requirements based on an international set of capital standards, known as the Basel Accords.
- bank rate
- The rate of interest which a central bank charges on its loans and advances to a commercial bank.
- bankruptcy
- The inability to pay debt due to loss of income, increased spending, or an unforeseen financial crisis.
- bargaining model of war
- A method of representing the potential gains and losses and ultimate outcome of war between two actors as a bargaining interaction.[38]
- barriers to entry
- In theories of competition in economics, a cost that must be incurred by a new entrant into a market that incumbents do not have or have not had to incur.[39][40] Because barriers to entry protect incumbent firms and restrict competition in a market, they can contribute to distortionary prices and are therefore most important when discussing antitrust policy. Barriers to entry often cause or aid the existence of monopolies or give companies market power.
- barter
- In trade, a system of exchange in which participants in a transaction directly exchange goods or services for other goods or services without using a medium of exchange, such as money.[41] Economists distinguish barter from gift economies in many ways; barter, for example, features immediate reciprocal exchange that is not delayed in time. Barter usually takes place on a bilateral basis, but may be multilateral (i.e. mediated through a trade exchange). In most developed countries, barter usually only exists parallel to monetary systems to a very limited extent. Market actors use barter as a replacement for money as the method of exchange in times of monetary crisis, such as when currency becomes unstable (e.g. by hyperinflation or a deflationary spiral) or simply unavailable for conducting commerce.
- base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS)
- Corporate tax planning strategies used by multinationals to "shift" profits from higher-tax jurisdictions to lower-tax jurisdictions or no-tax locations.
- Baxter-Stockman neutrality of exchange rate regime puzzle
- The unexpectedly weak relationship between the exchange rate and any other macroeconomic variable.[42]
- Beckstrom's law
- "The value of a network equals the net value added to each user’s transactions conducted through that network, summed over all users."
- behavioral economics
- The branch of economics that studies the effects of psychological, cognitive, emotional, cultural and social factors on the economic decisions of individuals and institutions and how those decisions vary from those implied by classical theory.[43]
- Bellman equation
- The dynamic programming equation associated with discrete-time optimization problems.[44] It writes the "value" of a decision problem at a certain point in time in terms of the payoff from some initial choices and the "value" of the remaining decision problem that results from those initial choices.
- bequest motive
- Seeks to provide an economic justification for the phenomenon of intergenerational transfers of wealth; in other words, to explain why people leave money behind when they die.
- Bertrand competition
- A model of competition that describes interactions among producers that set prices and their consumers that choose quantities at the prices set.
- Bertrand–Edgeworth model
- A microeconomic model of price-setting oligopoly which studies what happens when there is a homogeneous product (i.e. consumers want to buy from the cheapest seller) where there is a limit to the output of firms which they are willing and able to sell at a particular price. This differs from the Bertrand competition model where it is assumed that firms are willing and able to meet all demand. The limit to output can be considered a physical capacity constraint which is the same at all prices (as in Edgeworth’s work) or to vary with price under other assumptions.
- Bertrand paradox
- A situation in which two players (firms) reach a state of Nash equilibrium where both firms charge a price equal to marginal cost.
- biflation
- A state of the economy in which the processes of inflation and deflation occur simultaneously in different parts of the economy.[45][46]
- big push model
- A concept in development economics or welfare economics that emphasizes that a firm's decision whether to industrialize or not depends on its expectation of what other firms will do. It assumes economies of scale and oligopolistic market structure and explains when industrialization would happen.
- Birmingham school
- A school of thought based around opposing the gold standard, advocating for expansionary monetary policy, and belief in underconsumption.
- Bishop–Cannings theorem
- A theorem in evolutionary game theory that states that (i) all members of a mixed evolutionarily stable strategy have the same payoff, and (ii) that none of these can also be a pure ESS.[47]
- Black–Scholes model
- A mathematical model for the dynamics of a financial market containing derivative investment instruments. From the partial differential equation in the model, known as the Black–Scholes equation, one can deduce the Black–Scholes formula, which gives a theoretical estimate of the price of European-style options and shows that the option has a unique price regardless of the risk of the security and its expected return (instead replacing the security's expected return with the risk-neutral rate). The formula led to a boom in options trading and provided mathematical legitimacy to the activities of the Chicago Board Options Exchange and other options markets around the world.[48] It is widely used, although often with adjustments and corrections, by options market participants.[49]: 751
- board of governors
- The main governing body that directs the operations of the United States Federal Reserve System. Its seven members supervise the 12 Federal Reserve Districts.
- bond
- In finance, an instrument of indebtedness of the bond issuer to the holders. The most common types of bonds include municipal bonds and corporate bonds. The bond is a debt security, under which the issuer owes the holders a debt and (depending on the terms of the bond) is obliged to pay them interest (the coupon) or to repay the principal at a later date, termed the maturity date.[50] Interest is usually payable at fixed intervals (semiannual, annual, or sometimes monthly). Very often the bond is negotiable, that is, the ownership of the instrument can be transferred in the secondary market. This means that once the transfer agents at the bank medallion stamp the bond, it is highly liquid on the secondary market.[51]
- Bondareva–Shapley theorem
- Describes a necessary and sufficient condition for the non-emptiness of the core of a cooperative game in characteristic function form.
- boots theory
- Purchasing cheap, low-quality goods may become more expensive in the long run because they must be replaced more frequently. For example, purchasing expensive, high-quality boots may be cheaper over a long time because cheaper boots would quickly wear out and require replacement.
- borrower
- See debtor.
- bounded rationality
- The idea that rationality is limited when individuals make decisions, and under these limitations, rational individuals will select a decision that is satisfactory rather than optimal.[52]
- Braess's paradox
- The observation that adding one or more roads to a road network can slow down overall traffic flow through it.
- Brander–Spencer model
- An economic model in international trade that illustrates a situation where a government can subsidize domestic firms to help them in their competition against foreign producers and in doing so enhances national welfare.
- break-even
- The point at which total cost and total revenue are equal, i.e. "even". There is no net loss or gain, and one has "broken even", though opportunity costs have been paid and capital has received the risk-adjusted, expected return. In short, all costs that must be paid are paid, and there is neither profit nor loss.[53][54]
- Bretton Woods system
- A monetary system which established the rules for commercial and financial relations among the United States, Canada, Western Europe, Australia, and Japan after the 1944 Bretton Woods Agreement. The Bretton Woods system was the first example of a fully negotiated monetary order intended to govern monetary relations among independent states. The chief features were an obligation for each country to adopt a monetary policy that maintained its external exchange rates within 1 percent by tying its currency to gold and the ability of the IMF to bridge temporary imbalances of payments; there was also a need to address the lack of cooperation among other countries and to prevent competitive devaluation of the currencies.
- budget
- The itemization of an individual's or firm's total income and total expenses for a set period of time, usually a month or a year.
- budget deficit
- The amount by which spending exceeds revenue over a particular period of time; it is the opposite of budget surplus. The term may be applied to the budget of a government, private company, or individual.
- budget set
- The set of all possible consumption bundles that an individual can afford, given the prices of goods and the individual's income level. The budget set is bounded above by the budget line. Graphically speaking, all the consumption bundles that lie inside and on the budget constraint form the budget set. By most definitions, budget sets must be compact and convex.
- budget surplus
- A budget's revenues in excess of its expenditures.
- buffer stock scheme
- An attempt to use commodity storage for the purposes of stabilising prices in an entire economy or an individual (commodity) market. Specifically, commodities are bought when a surplus exists in the economy, stored, and are then sold from these stores when economic shortages in the economy occur.[55]
- bullionism
- An economic theory that defines wealth by the amount of precious metals owned.[56]
- business cycle
- The downward and upward movement of gross domestic product (GDP) around its long-term growth trend.[57] The length of a business cycle is the period of time containing a single boom and contraction in sequence. These fluctuations typically involve shifts over time between periods of relatively rapid economic growth (expansions or booms) and periods of relative stagnation or decline (contractions or recessions).
- business economics
- A branch of applied economics which uses economic theory and quantitative methods to analyze business enterprises and the factors contributing to the diversity of organizational structures and the relationships of firms with labour, capital and product markets.[58]
- business sector
- The part of the economy made up by companies.[59] It is generally considered a subset of the domestic economy,[60] excluding the economic activities of general government, of private households, and of non-profit organizations serving individuals.[61]
C[edit]
- Cambridge capital controversy
- A dispute between proponents of two differing theoretical and mathematical positions in economics concerning the nature and role of capital goods and a critique of the neoclassical vision of aggregate production and distribution.[62]
- Cambridge equation
- Relates money demand, price level, and real national income in the Cambridge quantity theory of money.
- cameralism
- A German science of public administration in the 18th and early 19th centuries that aimed at strong management of a centralized economy for the benefit mainly of the state.[63]
- cap and trade (CAT)
- A market-based approach to limiting negative externalities (for example, pollution) by providing economic incentives for reducing the production of said negative externalities.[64] A central authority or governmental body allocates or sells a limited number (a "cap") of permits that allow the creation of a specific negative externality over a set time period. Permit owners are then allowed to sell these permits to others.
- capacity utilization
- The extent to which an enterprise or a nation uses its installed productive capacity. It is the relationship between output that is produced with the installed equipment and the potential output which could be produced with it if capacity was fully used.
- capital
- Any asset that can enhance one's power to perform economically useful work. Capital goods, real capital, or capital assets are already-produced, durable goods or any non-financial asset that is used in production of goods or services.[65] Capital is distinct from land (or non-renewable resources) in that capital can be increased by human labor. At any given moment in time, total physical capital may be referred to as the capital stock (which is not to be confused with the capital stock of a business entity).
- capital account
- Reflects net change in ownership of national assets. A surplus in the capital account means money is flowing into the country, and the inbound flows effectively represent borrowings or sales of assets. A deficit in the capital account means money is flowing out of the country, and it suggests the nation is increasing its ownership of foreign assets.
- capital accumulation
- Any net addition to existing wealth and/or a redistribution of wealth. Capital accumulation is the dynamic that motivates the pursuit of profit, involving the investment of money or any financial asset with the goal of increasing the initial monetary value of said asset as a financial return.
- capital cost
- A fixed, one-time expense incurred on the purchase of land, buildings, construction, and equipment used in the production of goods or in the rendering of services. In other words, it is the total cost needed to bring a project to a commercially operable status. Whether a particular cost is capital or not depends on many factors, such as accounting, tax laws, and materiality.
- capital flight
- Occurs when money or assets rapidly flow out of a country due to an event of economic consequence. Such events may include an increase in taxes on capital or capital holders or the government of the country defaulting on its debt that disturbs investors and causes them to lower their valuation of the assets in that country or otherwise to lose confidence in its economic strength.
- capital formation
- Any method for increasing the amount of capital owned or under one's control, or any method in utilizing or mobilizing capital resources for investment purposes. Capital formation also sometimes refers to a specific statistical concept, also known as net investment, which measures the net additions to the (physical) capital stock of a country (or an economic sector) in an accounting interval. Capital formation is also sometimes a modern general term for capital accumulation, referring to the total "stock of capital" that has been formed, or to the growth of this total capital stock.[66]
- capital gain
- The profit earned on the sale of an asset which has increased in value over the holding period. An asset may include tangible property, a car, a business, or intangible property such as shares.
- capital good
- A durable good that is used in the production of goods or services. Capital goods are one of the three types of producer goods, the other two being land and labour, which are also known collectively as primary factors of production. This classification originated with classical economics and has remained the dominant method for classification.
- capital intensity
- The amount of fixed or real capital present in relation to other factors of production, especially labor. At the level of either a production process or the aggregate economy, it may be estimated by the capital to labor ratio, such as from the points along a capital/labor isoquant.
- capitalism
- An economic system based on the private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit.[67][68][69][70] Central characteristics of capitalism include capital accumulation, competitive markets, price systems, private property, property rights recognition, voluntary exchange, and wage labor.[71][72]
- cartel
- Any group of firms that colludes and acts as a single coordinated whole to restrict output and drive up prices.
- cash
- Money in the physical form of currency, such as banknotes and coins.
- central bank
- An institution that manages the currency, money supply, and interest rates of an entire state or nation. Central banks also usually oversee the commercial banking system of their respective countries. In contrast to a commercial bank, a central bank possesses a monopoly on increasing the monetary base in the state, and usually also prints the national currency,[73] which usually serves as the state's legal tender. Central banks also act as a "lender of last resort" to the banking sector during times of financial crisis. Most central banks usually also have supervisory and regulatory powers to ensure the solvency of member institutions, prevent bank runs, and prevent reckless or fraudulent behavior by member banks.
- Certificate of Deposit (CD or COD)
- A savings instrument that usually earns more interest than a savings account but is bound by limits set within a contract.
- ceteris paribus
- A phrase or clause often loosely translated as "holding all else constant." It does not imply that no other things will in fact change; rather, it isolates the effect of one particular change.[74]
- charitable giving
- A gift of cash or property made to a nonprofit organization to help it accomplish its goals, for which the donor receives nothing of value in return. In the U.S. however, some charitable giving is tax deductible.
- chartalism
- A heterodox theory of money that argues that money originated historically with states' attempts to direct economic activity rather than as a spontaneous solution to the problems with barter or as a means with which to tokenize debt,[75] and that fiat currency has value in exchange because of sovereign power to levy taxes on economic activity payable in the currency they issue.
- check (money)
- A check is a written, dated, and signed draft that directs a bank to pay a specific sum of money to the bearer. The person or entity writing the check is known as the payor or drawer, while the person to whom the check is written is the payee.
- Chicago school
- A neoclassical school of thought once based around rational expectations, monetarism, and free market supremacy.
- Choice (CD or COD)
- Making a decision when facing multiple possible options.
- choice modelling
- A method of modelling the decision process of an individual or segment via revealed or stated preferences.
- circular flow of income
- A model of the economy in which the major exchanges are represented as flows of money, goods and services, etc. between economic agents. The flows of money and goods exchanged in a closed circuit correspond in value, but run in the opposite direction. The circular flow analysis is the basis of national accounts and hence of macroeconomics.
- circulation
- The continuous movement of goods, services, and money within an economy.
- citizen's dividend
- A proposed set of regular payments to all citizens from revenue raised by leasing or taxing the monopoly of valuable land and other natural resources. It is based on the Georgist principle that the natural world is the common property of all people.
- classical economics
- A school of thought in economics that flourished, primarily in Britain, in the late 18th and early-to-mid 19th century. Its main thinkers are held to be Adam Smith, Jean-Baptiste Say, David Ricardo, Thomas Robert Malthus, and John Stuart Mill. These economists produced a theory of market economies as largely self-regulating systems, governed by natural laws of production and exchange (famously captured by Adam Smith's metaphor of the invisible hand).
- classical general equilibrium model
- A model that aims to describe the economy by aggregating the behavior of individuals and firms.[76] Note that the classical general equilibrium model is unrelated to classical economics, and was instead developed within neoclassical economics beginning in the late 19th century.[77]
- club good
- A good that is excludable but non-rivalrous, at least until reaching a point where congestion occurs.
- Coase conjecture
- A model in which a monopolist must sell its product at a low price because it is effectively in competition with itself over multiple periods. It is assumed that the monopolist sells a durable good to a market where resale is impossible, faces an infinite time horizon, faces consumers who have different valuations, and does not know individuals' valuations.
- Coase theorem
- States that if the provision of a good or service results in an externality and trade in that good or service is possible, then bargaining will lead to a Pareto efficient outcome regardless of the initial allocation of property. This requires sufficiently low transaction costs in the bargaining and exchange process.
- cobweb model
- A model which describes cyclical supply and demand in a market where the amount produced must be chosen before prices are observed. Producers' expectations about prices are assumed to be based on observations of previous prices. It explains why prices may be subjected to periodic fluctuations in certain types of markets.
- collateral loan
- Also known as a secured loan, it is a loan where the borrower pledges an asset to a financial institution to access funds. The asset, called collateral, protects the lender from possible defaulting as they would take ownership in case of default.
- collective action
- Any action taken together by a group of people whose goal is to enhance their condition and achieve a common objective.[78]
- collective action problem
- A situation in which all individuals would be better off cooperating but fail to do so because of conflicting interests between individuals that discourage joint action.[79][80][81]
- collusion
- A deceitful agreement or secret cooperation between two or more parties to limit open competition by deceiving, misleading or defrauding others of their legal right.
- command economy
- An economy in which the government directs all economic activity.
- commerce
- Relates to "the exchange of goods and services, especially on a large scale".[82] It includes legal, economic, political, social, cultural and technological systems that operate in a country or in international trade.
- commodity
- An economic good or service that has full or substantial fungibility: that is, the market treats instances of the good as equivalent or nearly so with no regard to who produced them.[83]
- communism
- An ideology centered around common ownership of the means of production, distribution, and exchange that allocates products to everyone in the society based on need.[84][85][86]
- comparative advantage
- The ability to produce most efficiently given all of the other products that could be produced.
- compensating differential
- The additional amount of income that a given worker must be offered in order to motivate them to accept a given undesirable job, relative to other jobs that worker could perform.[87][88]
- Competition (CD or COD)
- The presence in a market of independent buyers and sellers competing with one another and the freedom of buyers and sellers to enter and leave the market.
- competition law
- Any law that promotes or seeks to maintain market competition by regulating anti-competitive conduct by companies.[16][17]
- competitive market
- A market in which many sellers compete against eachother to attract customers. Each seller has an incentive to sell at the lowestprice possible to attract customers, so prices tend to be driven so low thatthe sellers can just barely make a profit.
- complementary goods
- Goods that are bought and used together.
- complex multiplier
- The multiplier by which a change in autonomous expenditure changes the equilibrium income in an economy.
- compound interest
- The addition of interest to the principal sum of a loan or deposit; it is often interpreted as "interest on interest". Compound interest is the result of reinvesting interest, rather than paying it out, so that interest in the next period is then earned on the principal sum plus any previously accumulated interest. Contrast simple interest.
- computable general equilibrium (CGE)
- A class of economic models that use actual economic data to estimate how an economy might react to changes in policy, technology, or other external factors.
- computational economics
- A research discipline at the interface of economics, computer science, and management science[89] which encompasses computational modeling of economic systems, whether agent-based,[90] general-equilibrium,[91] macroeconomic,[92] or rational-expectations,[93] computational econometrics and statistics,[94] computational finance, computational tools for the design of automated internet markets, programming tools specifically designed for computational economics, and pedagogical tools for the teaching of computational economics.
- concentration ratio
- The sum of the percentage market shares of (a pre-specified number of) the largest firms in an industry, which is used to quantify market concentration in an industry.
- conspicuous consumption
- The consumer practice of buying and using goods of a higher quality, price, or in greater quantity than practical.[95]
- conspicuous compassion
- The ostentatious use of charity meant to enhance the reputation and social prestige of the donor.[96]
- consumer
- A member of a household that spends on goods and services.
- consumer choice
- A theory of microeconomics that relates preferences to consumption expenditures and to consumer demand curves. It analyzes how consumers maximize the desirability of their consumption as measured by their preferences subject to limitations on their expenditures, by maximizing utility subject to a consumer budget constraint.[97]
- consumer confidence
- An economic indicator that measures the degree of optimism that consumers feel about the overall state of the economy and their personal financial situation.
- consumer credit
- A loan afforded to a consumer for the payment of goods and services which they will have to repay to the lender over time usually plus interest.
- consumer price index (CPI)
- Measures changes in the price level of market basket of consumer goods and services purchased by households.The CPI is a statistical estimate constructed using the prices of a sample of representative items whose prices are collected periodically. Sub-indices and sub-sub-indices are computed for different categories and sub-categories of goods and services, being combined to produce the overall index with weights reflecting their shares in the total of the consumer expenditures covered by the index. It is one of several price indices calculated by most national statistical agencies. The annual percentage change in a CPI is used as a measure of inflation. A CPI can be used to index (i.e. adjust for the effect of inflation) the real value of wages, salaries, and pensions; to regulate prices; and to deflate monetary magnitudes to show changes in real values. In most countries, the CPI, along with the population census, is one of the most closely watched national economic statistics.
- consumer surplus
- the difference between the maximum price a consumer is willing to pay and the actual price they do pay. If a consumer is willing to pay more for a unit of a good than the current asking price, they are getting more benefit from the purchased product than they would if the price was their maximum willingness to pay. They are receiving the same benefit, the obtainment of the good, with a smaller cost as they are spending less than they would if they were charged their maximum willingness to pay.[98]
- consumerism
- Economic policies which emphasize consumption.
- consumption
- According to mainstream economists, only the final purchase of goods and services by individuals constitutes consumption, while other types of expenditure—in particular, fixed investment, intermediate consumption, and government spending—are placed in separate categories (see consumer choice). Other economists define consumption much more broadly, as the aggregate of all economic activity that does not entail the design, production and marketing of goods and services (e.g. the selection, adoption, use, disposal and recycling of goods and services).
- consumption function
- A mathematical function which describes a relationship between consumption and disposable income.[99][100] The concept is believed to have been introduced into macroeconomics by John Maynard Keynes in 1936, who used it to develop the notion of a government spending multiplier.[101]
- contract curve
- In microeconomics, the contract curve is the set of points representing final allocations of two goods between two people that could occur as a result of mutually beneficial trading between those people given their initial allocations of the goods. All the points on this locus are Pareto efficient allocations, meaning that from any one of these points there is no reallocation that could make one of the people more satisfied with his or her allocation without making the other person less satisfied. The contract curve is the subset of the Pareto efficient points that could be reached by trading from the people's initial holdings of the two goods.
- contract theory
- The study of how economic actors can and do construct contractual arrangements, generally in the presence of asymmetric information. Because of its connections with both agency and incentives, contract theory is often categorized within a field known as law and economics.
- convergence
- The hypothesis that poorer economies' per capita incomes will tend to grow at faster rates than richer economies.
- convexity
- In the Arrow–Debreu model of general economic equilibrium, agents have convex budget sets and convex preferences: at equilibrium prices, the budget hyperplane supports the best attainable indifference curve.[102] The profit function is the convex conjugate of the cost function.[103][104] Convex analysis is the standard tool for analyzing textbook economics.[103] Non‑convex phenomena in economics have been studied with nonsmooth analysis, which generalizes convex analysis.[105]
- coordination good
- A good created by the coordination of people within civil society.[106] Coordination goods are non-rivalrous, but may be partially excludable through the means of withholding cooperation from a non-cooperative state.[107]
- corporate tax
- A type of direct tax levied on the income or capital of corporations and other similar legal entities.
- corporation
- A type of business organization owned by many people but treated by law as though it were an individual person; it can own property, pay taxes, make contracts, and contribute to political causes.
- cost
- 1. The value of money that is used up to produce a good or deliver a service, and hence is no longer available for further use. In business, the cost may be one of acquisition, in which case the amount of money expended to acquire a good or service is counted as the cost; in this case, money is the input that is gone in order to acquire the thing. This acquisition cost may be the sum of the cost of production as incurred by the original producer and of further costs of transaction as incurred by the acquirer over and above the price paid to the producer. Usually, the price designated by the producer also includes a mark-up for profit over the cost of production.
- 2. More generally, a performance metric that is totaling up as a result of a process or as a differential for the result of a decision.[108] Hence cost is the metric used in the standard modeling paradigm applied to economic processes. Costs (pl.) are often further described based on their timing or their applicability.
- cost curve
- A graph of the costs of production as a function of total quantity produced. In a free market economy, productively efficient firms optimize their production process by minimizing cost consistent with each possible level of production, and the result is a cost curve; and profit maximizing firms use cost curves to decide output quantities. There are various types of cost curves, all related to each other, including total and average cost curves; marginal ("for each additional unit") cost curves, which are equal to the differential of the total cost curves; and variable cost curves. Some are applicable to the short run, others to the long run.
- cost of living
- The cost of maintaining a certain standard of living. Changes in the cost of living over time are often operationalized in a cost-of-living index. Cost of living calculations are also used to compare the cost of maintaining a certain standard of living in different geographic areas. Differences in cost of living between locations can also be measured in terms of purchasing power parity rates.
- cost overrun
- A situation involving unexpected incurred costs. A cost overrun occurs when an underestimation of the actual cost during budgeting results in costs that are in excess of budgeted amounts.
- cost the limit of price
- A maxim indicating a (prescriptive) version of the labor theory of value. It suggests that the price of a good should be equal to its cost, implying that profit, rent, and interest could be considered unjust economic arrangements.
- Cournot competition
- A model used to describe an industry structure in which companies compete on the amount of output they will produce, which they decide on independently of each other and at the same time.
- cost-benefit analysis (CBA)
- A systematic approach to estimating the strengths and weaknesses of alternative options (for example in transactions, activities, or functional business requirements). It is often used to determine the option or options that provide the best approach to achieve benefits while preserving savings.[109] Cost-benefit analysis may be used to compare potential (or completed) courses of actions, or estimate (or evaluate) the value against costs of a single decision, project, or policy. Common areas of application include commercial transactions, functional business decisions, policy decisions (especially government policy), and project investments.
- cost-of-production theory of value
- The theory that the price of an object or condition is determined by the sum of the cost of the resources that went into producing it. The cost can comprise any of the factors of production (including labor, capital, or land) as well as taxation.
- cost-push inflation
- A purported type of inflation caused by increases in the cost of important goods or services where no suitable alternative is available. As businesses face higher prices for underlying inputs, they are forced to increase prices of their outputs.
- credit bureau
- An agency that tracks the credit, employment, and housing history of consumers and assigns them a credit score.
- credit card
- A payment card issued to users (cardholders) to enable the cardholder to pay a merchant for goods and services based on the cardholder's promise to the card issuer to pay them at a later time for the cost of the good or service plus other agreed-upon fees and charges.[110] The card issuer (usually a bank) creates a revolving account and grants a line of credit to the cardholder, from which the cardholder can borrow money for payment to a merchant or as a cash advance.
- credit score
- A numerical value assigned to a person's potential ability to repay debt. A good credit score in the United States is approximately 700.
- credit rating
- An evaluation of the credit risk of a prospective debtor (an individual, business, company, or government), predicting their ability to pay back the debt, and an implicit forecast of the likelihood of the debtor defaulting on the debt.[111] Credit rating represents an evaluation of a credit rating agency of the qualitative and quantitative information for the prospective debtor, including information provided by the prospective debtor and other non-public information obtained by the credit rating agency's analysts. A subset of credit rating called credit reporting or credit score is a numeric evaluation of an individual's credit worthiness, which is conducted by a credit bureau or consumer credit reporting agency.
- credit union
- A financial institution that is usually local and owned by its members.
- creditor
- A person or a firm that lends money to a borrower.
- criticism of capitalism
- A critique of political economy that involves the rejection of, or dissatisfaction with the economic system of capitalism and its outcomes.
- crisis theory
- A set of theories concerning the causes[112] and consequences of the tendency for the rate of profit to fall in a capitalist system.
- critique of work
- cross elasticity of demand (XED)
- Measures the sensitivity of a good's demand to the price of a different good.
- crowding out
- A phenomenon that occurs when increased government involvement in a sector of a market economy substantially affects the remainder of the market, either on the supply or demand side of the market.
- crowding-in effect
- An increase in private investment that results from government spending. It occurs because public investment makes the private sector more productive, as well as because government spending may have a stimulative effect on the economy.
- cultural economics
- The branch of economics that studies the relationship between culture and economic outcomes. Here, "culture" is defined by shared beliefs and preferences of respective groups. Programmatic issues include whether and how much culture matters to economic outcomes and what its relation is to institutions.[113] As a growing field in behavioral economics, the role of culture in economic behavior is increasingly being demonstrated to cause significant differentials in decision-making and the management and valuation of assets.
- currency
- Money in any form when in actual use or circulation as a medium of exchange, especially circulating banknotes and coins.[114][115] A more general definition is that a currency is a "system" of money (monetary units) in common use, especially within a particular nation.
- current account
- A country's current account is one of the two components of its balance of payments, the other being the capital account (also known as the financial account). The current account consists of the balance of trade, net primary income or factor income (earnings on foreign investments minus payments made to foreign investors) and net cash transfers, that have taken place over a given period of time. The current account balance is one of two major measures of a country's foreign trade (the other being the net capital outflow). A current account surplus indicates that the value of a country's net foreign assets (i.e. assets less liabilities) grew over the period in question, and a current account deficit indicates that it shrank. Both government and private payments are included in the calculation. It is called the current account because goods and services are generally consumed in the current period.[116][117]
- cyclical unemployment
- Unemployment resulting from the business cycle. It is unpredictable.
D[edit]
- DAD–SAS model
- A macroeconomic model based on the AD-AS model, but examining the relationship between inflation and income, rather than price level and income. DAD is short for Dynamic Aggregate Demand, and SAS is short for Surprise Aggregate Supply.
- dead cat bounce
- A small, brief recovery in the price of a declining asset.[118]
- deadweight loss
- A loss of economic efficiency that occurs when the free-market equilibrium for a good or service is not achieved. Deadweight loss can be caused by monopoly pricing in the case of artificial scarcity, an externality, a tax or subsidy, or a compulsory price ceiling or price floor such as a minimum wage.
- Debreu's representation theorems
- A set of preference representation theorems proved by Gerard Debreu. They specify some conditions on the preference relation that guarantee the existence of a representing utility function.
- debt
- Total money owed.
- debit card
- A debit card is a payment card that allows you to make purchases and withdraw cash from your bank account. Debit cards are also known as "check cards." They look and work similarly to credit cards, but they use money that's already in your checking account instead of money you borrow.
- debtor
- An entity that owes a debt to another entity. The entity may be an individual, a firm, a government, a company, or another legal person. The counterparty to which the debt is owed is called a creditor. When the counterparty of the arrangement is a bank, the debtor is more often referred to as a borrower.
- deficit spending
- The amount by which spending exceeds revenue over a particular period of time; it is the opposite of budget surplus. The term may be applied to the budget of a government, private company, or individual.
- deflation
- A decrease in the general price level of goods and services.[119] Deflation occurs when the inflation rate falls below 0% (a negative inflation rate); though inflation reduces the value of currency over time, deflation increases it. This allows more goods and services to be bought than before with the same amount of currency. Deflation is distinct from disinflation, which occurs when the inflation rate decreases but is still positive.[120]
- deflator
- A value that allows data to be measured over time in terms of some base period, usually through a price index, in order to distinguish between changes in the money value of a gross national product (GNP) that come from a change in prices, and changes from a change in physical output. It is the measure of the price level for some quantity. A deflator serves as a price index in which the effects of inflation are nulled.[121][122][123] It is the difference between real and nominal GDP.[124][125]
- deleveraging
- A reduction in debt. At the micro-economic level, it is measured as the reduction of the leverage ratio, or the percentage of debt in the balance sheet of a single economic entity, such as a household or a firm. At the macro-economic level, it is usually measured as a decline of the total debt to GDP ratio in the national accounts.
- demand
- The whole range of quantities that a person or group with a given income and preferences demands at various prices.
- demand curve
- A line on a graph that represents how much of a good or service buyers are going to consume at various prices.
- demand deposit
- Demand deposits, bank money or scriptural money are funds held in demand deposit accounts in commercial banks.[126] These account balances are usually considered money and form the greater part of the narrowly defined money supply of a country.[127]
- demand shock
- A sudden event that increases or decreases demand for goods or services temporarily.
- demand-pull inflation
- A purported type of inflation caused by an increase in aggregate demand greater than the increase in aggregate supply. As real gross domestic product rises and unemployment falls, the economy moves along the Phillips curve and prices increase.
- demographic economics
- The application of economic analysis to demography, the study of human populations, including size, growth, density, distribution, and vital statistics.[128][129]
- dependent care plan
- A pre-tax account used to pay for either child or adult care while a married couple works, looks for work, or studies.
- depreciation
- The gradual decrease in the economic value of the capital stock of a firm, nation, or other entity, either through physical depreciation, obsolescence, or changes in the demand for the services of the capital in question. If the capital stock is in one period , gross (total) investment spending on newly produced capital is and depreciation is , the capital stock in the next period, , is . The net increment to the capital stock is the difference between gross investment and depreciation, and is called net investment.
- depression
- A sustained, long-term decrease in economic activity in one or more economies. It is a more severe economic downturn than a recession, which is a slowdown in economic activity over the course of a normal business cycle.
- deregulation
- The process of removing or reducing economic regulations, or the total repeal of governmental regulation of the economy. It became common in advanced industrial economies in the 1970s and 1980s, as a result of new trends in economic thinking about the inefficiencies of government regulation, and the risk that regulatory agencies would be controlled by the regulated industry to its benefit, and thereby hurt consumers and the wider economy.
- Diamond–Dybvig model
- A model of bank runs and related financial crises. The model shows how banks' mix of illiquid assets (such as business or mortgage loans) and liquid liabilities (deposits which may be withdrawn at any time) may give rise to self-fulfilling panics among depositors.
- differentiated Bertrand competition
- A variation of Bertrand competition where each firm produces a somewhat differentiated product, and consequently faces a demand curve that is downward-sloping for all levels of the firm's price. This provides a solution to the Bertrand paradox (economics).
- diminishing marginal utility
- A situation where each additional, or marginal, unit of a good or service that is consumed brings less utility than the previous unit.
- diminishing returns
- The decrease in the marginal (incremental) output of a production process as the amount of a single factor of production is incrementally increased, while the amounts of all other factors of production stay constant. The law of diminishing returns states that in all productive processes, adding more of one factor of production while holding all others constant ("ceteris paribus"), will at some point yield lower incremental per-unit returns.[130] It does not imply that adding more of a factor will decrease the total production, a condition known as negative returns, though in practice this is common.
- discounting
- A mechanism in which a debtor obtains the right to delay payments to a creditor, for a defined period of time, in exchange for a charge or fee.[131] Essentially, the party that owes money in the present purchases the right to delay the payment until some future date.[132]
- discrete choice
- A set of models that describe, explain, and predict choices between two or more discrete alternatives, such as entering or not entering the labor market, or choosing between modes of transport. These models examine situations in which the potential outcomes are discrete, such that the optimum is not characterized by standard first-order conditions.
- discretionary income
- Money available after one pays taxes and all other necessary expenses like housing and transportation.
- disequilibrium macroeconomics
- A tradition of research centered on the role of disequilibrium in economics.
- disinflation
- A decrease in the rate of inflation; a slowdown in the rate of increase of the general price level of goods and services in an economy's gross domestic product over time. It is the opposite of reflation. Disinflation is also distinct from deflation, which occurs when the inflation rate is negative.
- dispersed knowledge
- The notion that no single agent has information as to all of the factors which influence prices and production throughout the system.[133]
- disposable income
- Money available after one pays taxes; income available for personal consumption and saving.
- disposition effect
- The tendency to sell an asset that has accumulated in value and resist selling an asset that has declined in value.
- dissaving
- Negative saving, which occurs when spending is greater than disposable income. This spending may be financed by already accumulated savings, such as money in a savings account, or it can be borrowed.
- distribution
- The way total economic output, income, or wealth is distributed among individuals or among the factors of production (such as labor, land, and capital).[134] In general theory and the national income and product accounts, each unit of output corresponds to a unit of income.
- dividends
- Payments by a corporation of all or part of its profit to its stockholders (the corporate owners).
- dividend imputation
- A corporate tax system in which some or all of the tax paid by a company may be attributed, or imputed, to the shareholders by way of a tax credit to reduce the income tax payable on a distribution.
- divorce
- The dissolution of a marriage, which in many countries, is considered a contract of property which is shared among the spouses.
- Dixit–Stiglitz model
- A model of monopolistic competition which formalises consumers' preferences for product variety by using a CES function.[135] In the model, variety preference is inherent within the assumption of monotonic preferences because a consumer with such preferences prefers to have an average of any two bundles of goods as opposed to extremes.
- dollar auction
- A non-zero sum sequential game that illustrates a paradox brought about by traditional rational choice theory in which players are compelled to make an ultimately irrational decision based completely on a sequence of apparently rational choices made throughout the game.[136]
- Domar serfdom model
- A mid-to-late 20th century model that develops a hypothesis concerning the causes of agricultural slavery or serfdom in historical societies.
- Dorfman-Steiner theorem
- A theorem which specifies the optimal level of advertising that a firm should undertake.
- double marginalization
- A vertical externality that occurs when two firms with market power (i.e., not in a situation of perfect competition), at different vertical levels in the same supply chain, apply a mark-up to their prices.[137] This is caused by the prospect of facing a steep demand curve slope, prompting the firm to mark-up the price beyond its marginal costs.[138]
- doughnut economics
- A visual framework for sustainable development – shaped like a doughnut or lifebelt – combining the concept of planetary boundaries with the complementary concept of social boundaries.[139] The name derives from the shape of the diagram, i.e. a disc with a hole in the middle.
- Downs–Thomson paradox
- A paradox that states that the equilibrium speed of car traffic on a road network is determined by the average door-to-door speed of equivalent journeys taken by public transport or the next best alternative. Although consistent with economic theory, it is a paradox in that it contradicts the common expectation that improvements in the road network will reduce traffic congestion.
- dual-sector model
- A model in developmental economics that explains the growth of a developing economy in terms of a labour transition between two sectors, the subsistence or traditional agricultural sector and the capitalist or modern industrial sector.
- Duggan–Schwartz theorem
- A result about voting systems designed to choose a nonempty set of winners from the preferences of certain individuals, where each individual ranks all candidates in order of preference.
- duopoly
- A situation in which there are exactly two suppliers for a particular good or service.
- dynamic discrete choice
- Models that simulate an agent's choices over discrete options that have future implications. Rather than assuming observed choices are the result of static utility maximization, observed choices in DDC models are assumed to result from an agent's maximization of the present value of utility, generalizing the utility theory upon which discrete choice models are based.[140]
- dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE)
- A method in macroeconomics that attempts to explain economic phenomena, such as economic growth and business cycles, and the effects of economic policy, through econometric models based on applied general equilibrium theory and microeconomic principles.
E[edit]
- Easterlin paradox
- A finding in happiness economics which states that at a point in time happiness varies directly with income both among and within nations, but over time happiness does not trend upward as income continues to grow: while people on higher incomes are typically happier than their lower-income counterparts at a given point in time, higher incomes don't produce greater happiness over time.[141]
- ecological model of competition
- A reassessment of the nature of competition in the economy which models the economy on biology (growth, change, death, evolution, survival of the fittest, complex inter-relationships, non-linear relationships) rather than physics.
- econometrics
- The application of statistical methods to economic data in order to give empirical content to economic relationships.[142] More precisely, it is "the quantitative analysis of actual economic phenomena based on the concurrent development of theory and observation, related by appropriate methods of inference".[143]
- economic base analysis
- A theory that posits that activities in an area divide into two categories: basic and nonbasic. Basic industries are those exporting from the region and bringing wealth from outside, while nonbasic (or service) industries support basic industries.
- economic calculation problem (ECP)
- A criticism of using economic planning as a substitute for market-based allocation of the factors of production.[144][145] It is argued that economy planning necessarily leads to an irrational and inefficient allocation of resources.
- economic cost
- The combination of losses of any goods that have a value attached to them by any one individual.[146][147] Economic cost is used as means to compare the prudence of one course of action with that of another.
- economic democracy
- A socioeconomic philosophy that proposes to shift ownership[148][149][150] and decision-making power from corporate shareholders and corporate managers (such as a board of directors) to a larger group of public stakeholders that includes workers, consumers, suppliers, communities and the broader public.
- economic development
- Broad improvement in the economic well-being or quality of life of a nation, region, or community, often but not necessarily as a consequence of economic growth.
- economic efficiency
- A variety of concepts which denote some situation where desired outputs (such as utility) are maximized given available inputs. This can include allocative efficiency, distributive efficiency, dynamic efficiency, financial market efficiency, Kaldor–Hicks efficiency, operational efficiency, Pareto efficiency, and productive efficiency.
- economic equilibrium
- A situation in which economic forces such as supply and demand are balanced and in which, in the absence of external influences, the values of economic variables do not change. For example, in the standard textbook model of perfect competition, equilibrium occurs at the point at which quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal.[151] Market equilibrium in this case is a condition in which a market price is established through competition such that the amount of goods or services sought by buyers is equal to the amount of goods or services produced by sellers. This price is often called the competitive price or market clearing price and will tend not to change unless demand or supply changes, and the quantity is called the "competitive quantity" or market clearing quantity. However, the concept of equilibrium in economics also applies to imperfectly competitive markets, where it takes the form of a Nash equilibrium.
- economic growth
- An increase in the inflation-adjusted market value of the goods and services produced by an economy over time. It is conventionally measured as the percent rate of increase in real gross domestic product, or real GDP.[152]
- economic indicator
- Any measurable unit of the economy which helps economists assess the past or make predictions about the future, such as unemployment rate and gross domestic product.
- economic interdependence
- The existence of necessary relationships between different sectors of the economy and how the decisions and actions of one will impact the others.
- economic model
- A theoretical construct representing an economic process by a set of variables and a set of logical and/or quantitative relationships between them. Economic models are usually simplified, often mathematical, frameworks designed to illustrate complex processes. Frequently, economic models posit structural parameters.[153] A model may have various exogenous variables, and those variables may change to create various responses by economic variables. Methodological uses of models include investigation, theorizing, and fitting theories to the world.[154]
- economic rent
- Any monies collected by a firm above and beyond what is required to keep an entrepreneur owner interested in continuing in business.
- economic security
- The condition of having stable income or other resources to support a standard of living now and in the foreseeable future. It includes probable continued solvency, predictability of the future cash flow of a person or other economic entity, such as a country, and employment security or job security.
- economic shortage
- A situation in which the demand for a particular good or service exceeds its supply within a particular market. A shortage is the opposite of a surplus.
- economic surplus
- A situation in which the supply of a good or service exceeds its demand within a particular market, often as a result of the current price being below the economic equilibrium.
- economic system
- A system of production, resource allocation, and distribution of goods and services within a society or a given geographic area. It includes the combination of the various institutions, agencies, entities, decision-making processes, and patterns of consumption that comprise the economic structure of a given community. As such, an economic system is a type of social system. The mode of production is a related concept.[156] All economic systems have three basic questions to ask: what to produce, how to produce it, and in what quantities and who receives the output of production.
- economics
- The social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services within economies.[157]
- economies of agglomeration
- The major subfield of urban economics which explains how urban agglomeration occurs in locations where cost savings can naturally arise.[158] This term is most often discussed in terms of economic firm productivity. However, agglomeration effects also explain some social phenomenon, such as large proportions of the population being clustered in cities and major urban centres.[159]
- economies of scale
- The cost advantages that enterprises obtain as a result of the increased efficiency offered by a certain scale of operation (typically measured by amount of output produced), with cost per unit of output decreasing with increasing scale. At the basis of economies of scale there may be technical, statistical, organizational, or related factors to the degree of market control.
- economies of scope
- The cost advantages that enterprises obtain as a result of the increased efficiency offered by variety rather than by volume, with cost per unit of output decreasing with increasing variety.[160] In economics, "scope" is synonymous with broadening production through diversified products. For example, a gas station that sells gasoline can also sell soda, milk, baked goods, etc. through their customer service representatives, which may make the sale of gasoline more efficient.[161]
- economist
- A practitioner in the discipline of economics.
- economy
- An area of the production, distribution, trade, and consumption of goods and services by different agents. In its broadest sense, an economy may be defined as "a social domain that emphasizes the practices, discourses, and material expressions associated with the production, use, and management of resources".[162]
- Edgeworth box
- A graphical representation of a market with just two commodities, X and Y, and two consumers. The dimensions of the box are the total quantities Ωx and Ωy of the two goods.
- Edgeworth paradox
- A situation in which two players cannot reach a state of equilibrium with pure strategies, i.e. each charging a stable price. It was proposed to solve the Bertrand paradox.
- Edgeworth's limit theorem
- A theorem stating that the core of an economy shrinks to the set of Walrasian equilibria as the number of agents increases to infinity. That is, among all possible outcomes which may result from free market exchange or barter between groups of people, while the precise location of the final settlement (the ultimate division of goods) between the parties is not uniquely determined, as the number of traders increases, the set of all possible final settlements converges to the set of Walrasian equilibria.
- effective demand {(ED)
- The demand for a product or service which occurs when purchasers are constrained in a different market.
- efficiency dividend
- An annual reduction in resources available to an organization.[163] It is usually applied as a percentage of operational (running) costs.
- efficiency wage
- Originally referred to the wage per efficiency unit of labor.[164] Marshallian efficiency wages are those calculated with efficiency or ability exerted being the unit of measure rather than time.[164] Today, efficiency wage refers to the idea that higher wages may increase the efficiency of the workers by various channels, making it worthwhile for the employers to offer wages that exceed a market-clearing level.
- efficient envy-free division
- A division of resources among agents that is both Pareto efficient (PE) and envy-free (EF).
- efficient market hypothesis (EMH)
- A hypothesis that states that asset prices reflect all available information. A direct implication is that it is impossible to "beat the market" consistently on a risk-adjusted basis since market prices should only react to new information.
- elastic demand
- Demand that is sensitive to changes in price, such that changes in price have a relatively large effect on the quantity of the good demanded. Contrast inelastic demand.
- elasticity
- The measurement of the proportional change of an economic variable in response to a change in another. Colloquially, elasticity is often interpreted as how easy it is for a supplier or consumer to change their behavior and substitute another good, the strength of an incentive over choices per the relative opportunity cost.
- elasticity of complementarity
- Measures the sensitivity of relative factor prices to a change in relative inputs.
- elasticity of intertemporal substitution (EIS)
- Measures the sensitivity of the growth rate of consumption to the real interest rate.[165]
- elasticity of substitution
- Measures the sensitivity of the relative use of two goods to a change in their relative prices.
- electronic money transfer
- Electronic funds transfer (EFT) is the digital transfer of money from one bank account to another, usually through computer-based systems, without the involvement of bank staff.
- Elliott wave principle
- A form of technical analysis that financial traders use to analyze financial market cycles and forecast market trends by identifying extremes in investor psychology and price levels, such as highs and lows, by looking for patterns in prices.
- Ellsberg paradox
- A paradox in which people's decisions are inconsistent with subjective expected utility theory. It is generally taken to be evidence of ambiguity aversion, in which a person tends to prefer choices with quantifiable risks over those with unknown, incalculable risks.
- employee benefits
- Any forms of compensation to an employee in addition to wages or salary for example, parental leave and vacation pay.
- endogenous growth theory
- A theory that economic growth is primarily the result of endogenous and not external forces.[166] Endogenous growth theory holds that investment in human capital, innovation, and knowledge are significant contributors to economic growth. The theory also focuses on positive externalities and spillover effects of a knowledge-based economy which will lead to economic development.
- endogenous variable
- A variable whose measure is determined by the model.
- energy modeling
- Engel curve
- engineering economics
- Previously known as engineering economy, is a subset of economics concerned with the use and "...application of economic principles"[167] in the analysis of engineering decisions.[168]
- entrepreneurship
- The efforts by a person, known as an entrepreneur, in organizing resources for the creation of something new or taking risks to create new innovations and production.
- envelope theorem
- A major result about the differentiability properties of the value function of a parameterized optimization problem.[169] As we change parameters of the objective, the envelope theorem shows that, in a certain sense, changes in the decision variable(s) of the objective do not contribute to the change in the objective function.
- environmental economics
- A sub-field of economics concerned particularly with environmental issues.
- equal opportunity
- A state of fairness in which job applicants are treated similarly, unhampered by artificial barriers or prejudices or preferences, except when particular distinctions can be explicitly justified.[170]
- equilibrium
- The point at which quantity demanded and quantity supplied are equal and both consumer and producer are satisfied.
- equilibrium price
- The market price at which both the supplier and consumer will trade and both are satisfied.
- equity
- The concept or idea of fairness in economics, particularly in regard to taxation or welfare economics. More specifically, it may refer to equal life chances regardless of identity, to provide all citizens with a basic and equal minimum of income, goods, and services or to increase funds and commitment for redistribution.[171]
- equity home bias puzzle
- ergodicity economics
- Eurosclerosis
- excess burden of taxation
- excess supply
- A situation in which the quantity of a good or service supplied is more than the quantity demanded,[173] and the price is above the equilibrium level determined by supply and demand; that is, the quantity of the product that producers wish to sell exceeds the quantity that potential buyers are willing to buy at the prevailing price. It is the opposite of an economic shortage.
- exchange rate
- The rate at which one currency is exchanged for another. It is also commonly regarded as the value of one country's currency relative to another currency.[174]
- exchange rate regime
- exchange-traded fund
- A group of securities that are traded in an exchange market.
- excludability
- exogenous growth model
- exogenous variable
- expected utility hypothesis
- expeditionary economics
- An emerging field of economic enquiry that focuses on the rebuilding and reconstructing of economies in post-conflict nations and providing support to disaster-struck nations. It focuses on the need for good economic planning on the part of developed nations to help prevent the creation of failed states. It also emphasizes the need for the structuring on new firms to rebuild national economies.[175]
- expenditure function
- experimental economics
- externality
- A cost or benefit that falls not on the person(s) directly involved in an activity, but on others. Externalities can be positive or negative.
- extreme poverty
F[edit]
- factors of production
- Inputs (resources) used to create goods and services, including land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship.
- factor price
- factor price equalization
- factor income
- fair trade
- fair trade debate
- fascism
- Faustmann's formula
- federal funds rate target
- Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
- The twelve-member committee of the United States Federal Reserve that meets several times a year to decide the course of action that should be taken to control the money supply of the United States.
- Federal Reserve System
- The central bank of the United States, created by Congress in 1913 and charged with the duty of regulating the money supply and monitoring its member banks.
- Fed model
- Fei–Ranis model of economic growth
- Feldman–Mahalanobis model
- Feldstein–Horioka puzzle
- feudalism
- fiat money
- final good
- finance
- The study of money and how it is used. Specifically, it deals with the questions of how an individual, company, or government acquires the money needed—called capital in the company context—and how they then spend or invest that money.[176] Finance is often split into three areas: personal finance, corporate finance, and public finance. At the same time, finance is about the overall "system", i.e. the financial markets that allow the flow of money, via investments and other financial instruments, between and within these areas; this "flow" is facilitated by the financial services sector. A major focus within finance is thus investment management—called money management for individuals, and asset management for institutions—and finance then includes the associated activities of securities trading, investment banking, financial engineering, and risk management.
- financial deepening
- financial economics
- financial institution
- Any firm, such as a bank, that is in the business of holding money for those who save and lending money to those who need loans.
- financial markets
- Markets where people trade the property rights to assets (like real estate or stocks) or where savers lend money to borrowers.
- financial planning
- A series of steps used by a person or a firm to achieve a financial goal.
- financial risk
- The risk assumed by a saver or investor on future outcomes that involve financial losses and gains.
- financial transaction
- An agreement or communication carried out between a buyer and a seller to exchange an asset for payment.
- financial transaction tax
- fiscal conservatism
- fiscal multiplier
- The ratio of change in national income arising from a change in government spending.
- fiscal policy
- A government’s policy on taxes and spending.
- fiscal theory of the price level
- Fisher equation
- Fisher separation theorem
- fixed costs
- Costs that have to be paid even if a firm is not producing anything.
- foreign exchange market
- A global decentralized or over-the-counter market for the trading of currencies. This market determines the foreign exchange rate. It includes all aspects of buying, selling and exchanging currencies at current or determined prices. In terms of trading volume, it is by far the largest market in the world, followed by the credit market.[177]
- fractional-reserve banking
- framing effect
- free good
- free market
- An economic system in which the prices for goods and services are self-regulated by the open market and by consumers. In a free market, the laws and forces of supply and demand are free from any intervention by a government or other authority and from all forms of economic privilege, monopolies, and artificial scarcities.[178] Proponents of the concept of the free market contrast it with a regulated market in which a government intervenes in supply and demand through various methods such as tariffs used to restrict trade and to protect the local economy. In an idealized free-market economy, prices for goods and services are set freely by the forces of supply and demand and are allowed to reach their point of equilibrium without intervention by government policy.
- free-rider problem
- free trade
- Trade between countries that occurs with few or no trade barriers.
- Freiburg school
- freshwater economics
- frictional unemployment
- Unemployment that is a result of workers moving from one job to another, as opposed to structural unemployment.
- Friedman rule
- Friedman's k-percent rule
- Frisch–Waugh–Lovell theorem
- full employment
- full employment output (Y*)
- How much output is produced in the economy when full employment exists in the labor market.
- full-reserve banking
- functions of money
- The four classic functions or uses of money as summarized by William Stanley Jevons in 1875: a medium of exchange, a common measure of value (or unit of account), a standard of value (or standard of deferred payment), and a store of value. This analysis later became a fundamental concept of macroeconomics. Most modern textbooks now list only three functions, that of medium of exchange, unit of account, and store of value, not considering a standard of deferred payment as a distinguished function, but rather subsuming it in the others.
- fundamental theorems of asset pricing
- fundamental theorems of welfare economics
- future value
G[edit]
- gains from trade
- Gale–Shapley algorithm
- Galor–Zeira model
- Gandhian economics
- GDP deflator
- general equilibrium theory
- Georgism
- Gerschenkron effect
- Gibbard–Satterthwaite theorem
- Gibbard's theorem
- Gibrat's law
- Gibson's paradox
- Giffen good
- gift economy
- Gini coefficient
- global labor arbitrage
- gold standard
- good
- Goodhart's law
- Goodwin model
- Gorman polar form
- Gossen's 1st law
- Gossen's 2nd law
- Gossen's 3rd law
- government revenue
- The total revenue received by all three levels of government (federal, state, and local) in the form of taxes and tariffs.
- government spending
- The total expenditure made by all three levels of government (federal, state, and local) for public services.
- grand supercycle
- great moderation
- Green economy
- Green paradox
- Greenwood–Hercowitz–Huffman preferences
- Gresham's law
- Grinold and Kroner Model
- Grosch's law
- gross domestic product (GDP)
- The value of all goods and services produced in the economy in a given period of time, usually a quarter or a year.
- gross income
- All sources of total income before any deductions or taxes are withdrawn.
- gross national income (GNI)
- gross private domestic investment
- Grossman model of health demand
- growth recession
- A situation in which economic growth is slow but not low enough to be a recession, yet unemployment still increases. [179]
- guns versus butter model
H[edit]
- happiness economics
- Harrington paradox
- Harris–Todaro model
- Harrod–Domar model
- Hauser's law
- health economics
- health insurance
- A contracted program where the person insured receives payment for health services when needed in return for a monthly premium payment. Firms may offer some payment of premiums to their employees as part of a benefits package.
- Heckscher–Ohlin model
- Heckscher–Ohlin theorem
- hedonic index
- hedonic regression
- Henry George theorem
- Herfindahl–Hirschman index
- heterodox economics
- Hicksian demand function
- hiding hand principle
- Hindu rate of growth
- Hirschman cycle
- historical school
- Hodrick–Prescott filter
- Holmström's theorem
- home bias in trade puzzle
- home bias puzzle
- homo economicus
- Hotelling's law
- Hotelling's lemma
- hourglass economy
- household
- The sector of the economy which purchases goods from the product market and sells labor, land, and entrepreneurship ability to the factor market in the circular flow market.
- housing starts
- The number of new houses being built during a period of time.
- Huff model
- human capital
- The knowledge and skills that people use to help them produce output.
- human capital flight
- humanistic economics
- hyperinflation
- Inflation which occurs at an extremely high rate, usually in excess of 20 or 30 per cent per month.
I[edit]
- Icarus paradox
- immiserizing growth
- implicit cost
- import
- import substitution industrialization
- import quota
- impossible trinity
- imputation
- Inada conditions
- incentive
- income
- income distribution
- income effect
- The change in consumption resulting from a change in income.
- income elasticity of demand (YED)
- Measures the sensitivity of a good's demand to income.
- Income tax
- A tax levied on income, weather being on an individual or a business.
- increasing returns
- A situation where each additional amount of a resource used in a production process brings forth successively larger amounts of output.
- indifference curve
- Indigo era
- indirect inference
- Individual Retirement Account (IRA)
- A retirement (savings) instrument that allows a person to save money through time while deferring taxes on that income until retirement.
- induced consumption
- induced demand
- industrial organization
- industry
- A sector of the economy in which different firms produce similar or identical goods or services.
- inelastic demand
- Demand that is not very sensitive to changes in price, such that changes in price have a relatively small effect on the quantity of the good demanded. Contrast elastic demand.
- inferior good
- inflation
- When the overall level of prices in the economy is rising.
- inflationism
- inflation rate
- A measure of how the overall level of prices in the economy changes over time. If the inflation rate is positive, prices are rising; if the inflation rate is negative, prices are falling.
- inflation targeting
- information asymmetry
- information economics
- input–output model
- installment credit
- A loan that offers a borrower a fixed, amount of money over a specified period of time. This way, the borrower knows upfront the number of monthly payments, or “installments,” they will need to make and how much each monthly payment will be for the life of the loan.
- institutional complementarity
- insurance
- A contracted agreement for an exchange of money for a guarantee of compensation at the time of a loss, damage, illness, or death.
- insurance co-pay
- A fixed amount paid by an insured individual for a healthcare service.
- insurance deductible
- The amount paid by the insured individual before any payment is made by the insurer.
- insurance policy limit
- The maximum or total amount an insurer will pay for losses or damages to assets or health services to people.
- intensity of preference
- interest
- interest rate
- The price you have to pay to borrow money.
- interest rate parity
- intermediate consumption
- international economics
- international futures
- international trade
- intertemporal choice
- intertemporal equilibrium
- intra-industry trade
- inventory bounce
- investment
- Any increase in the economy's stock of capital.
- investment fund
- invisible hand
- Adam Smith’s famous idea that when constrained by competition, each firm’s greed causes it to act in a socially optimal way, as if guided to do the right thing by an invisible hand.
- IS–LM model
- IS/MP model
- isoquant
J[edit]
- Jaimovich–Rebelo preferences
- JEL classification codes
- Jevons paradox
- Joan Robinson's growth model
- job demands-resources model
- job hunting
- joint product pricing
- Jones model
- Juglar cycle
- just price
- A theory of ethics which attempts to set standards of fairness for economic transactions.
K[edit]
- Kaldor–Hicks efficiency
- Kaldor's facts
- Kaldor's growth laws
- Kaldor's growth model
- Keynes effect
- Keynesian beauty contest
- Keynesian cross
- Keynesian economics
- A diverse set of macroeconomic theories about how in the short run (and especially during recessions) economic output can be strongly influenced by the total amount of spending that occurs within an economy, known as aggregate demand. Keynesian economists generally argue that because aggregate demand is often unstable and behaves erratically, it does not necessarily or predictably equal the aggregate supply, which can cause market economies to experience inefficient macroeconomic outcomes in the form of recessions (when demand is low) and inflation (when demand is high), and that these outcomes can be mitigated by monetary policy actions by a central bank and fiscal policy actions by a government authority, which can help stabilize output over the business cycle.
- Keynes–Ramsey rule
- Keynes's theory of wages and prices
- Khazzoom–Brookes postulate
- King–Plosser–Rebelo preferences
- Kitchin cycle
- Kiyotaki–Moore model
- Knightian uncertainty
- A lack of any quantifiable knowledge about some possible occurrence, as opposed to the presence of quantifiable risk (e.g., that in statistical noise or a parameter's confidence interval). The concept acknowledges some fundamental degree of ignorance, a limit to knowledge, and an essential unpredictability of future events.
- knowledge spillover
- Kondratiev wave
- Kraków school
- Kuhn's theorem
- Kuznets curve
- Kuznets swing
L[edit]
- labor
- People's physical and mental talents and efforts that are used to help produce goods and services. Wage earners usually get paid a set amount of money per hour.
- labor economics
- labor rights
- labor theory of value
- Laffer curve
- laissez-faire
- Lange model
- Lausanne school
- law of demand
- An economic rule stating that quantity demanded and price move in opposite directions, i.e. as demand increases, price decreases, and vice versa.
- law of diminishing marginal utility
- An economic rule stating that the additional satisfaction a consumer gets from purchasing one more unit of a product will decrease with each additional unit purchased.
- law of increasing costs
- law of supply
- leakage
- leakage effect
- leapfrogging
- lease
- Lehman wave
- lemon market
- lending
- Leontief paradox
- Leontief production function
- Leontief utilities
- leprechaun economics
- Distortion of national accounts data by corporate tax schemes.
- Lerman ratio
- Lerner index
- An index ranging from 0 to 1 that measures a firm's market power given the price it sets and its marginal cost.
- Lerner paradox
- Lerner symmetry theorem
- Lewis–Mogridge position
- liability
- Financial responsibility for something.
- liberal paradox
- limit price
- loan
- local multiplier effect
- The additional economic benefit accrued to a geographic area from money being spent in the local economy.
- local tax
- Any tax paid to a city or county, e.g. sales taxes, school taxes, or property taxes.
- location model
- long run
- long-run shutdown condition
- A situation where a firm’s total revenues exceed its variable costs but are less than its total costs. The firm continues to operate until its fixed cost contracts expire.
- long-term financing
- LoopCo
- loose money policy
- A monetary policy that makes credit inexpensive and abundant, possibly leading to inflation.
- Lorenz curve
- loss aversion
- Lucas critique
- Lucas paradox
- Lundberg lag
- luxury good
M[edit]
- macroeconomic model
- macroeconomic policy instruments
- macroeconomic populism
- macroeconomic regulation and control
- macroeconomics
- The study of the economy as a whole, concentrating oneconomy-wide factors such as interest rates, inflation, and unemployment. Macroeconomics also encompasses the study of economic growth and how governments use monetary and fiscal policy to try to moderate the harm caused by recessions.
- major trading partner
- In international trading, a country or group of countries with which one country trades more than with others.
- Malthusian growth model
- Malthusianism
- managerial economics
- Mandeville's paradox
- manorialism
- Marchetti's constant
- marginal cost
- The additional increase in total cost when one more unit of output is produced.
- marginal efficiency of capital
- marginalism
- marginal product of capital
- marginal product of labor
- marginal propensity to consume
- marginal propensity to import
- marginal propensity to save
- marginal rate of substitution
- marginal rate of technical substitution
- marginal revenue
- The additional income earned from selling one more unit of a good; sometimes equal to price.
- marginal utility
- The change in total utility that results from consuming the next unit of a good or service. Marginal utility can be positive or negative.
- marginal value
- market
- market basket
- A bundle of goods and services selected to measure inflation. Economists define a market basket, such as the Consumer Price Index, and then track how much money it takes to buy this basket from one period to the next.
- market economy
- An economy in which almost all economic activity happens in markets, with little or no interference by the government; often referred to as a laissez-faire ("leave alone") economic system.
- market failures
- Situations where markets deliver socially non-optimal outcomes. Two common causes of market failure are asymmetric information and public goods.
- market structure
- The structure of a market as a whole, taking into consideration two main factors: the number of firms in the market and whether goods offered are identical, similar, or differentiated.
- market production
- Term that economists use to capture what happens when one individual offers to make or sell something to another individual at a price agreeable to both.
- market system
- markets
- Places where buyers and sellers come together to trade money for a good or service.
- Marshallian demand function
- Marxian economics
- Master's Degree
- A postgraduate academic degree completed after a bachelor's degree in which the student studies a specific topic of their choice. It is usually awarded by a research university after the completion of its program requirements, normally two more years.
- Matthew effect
- Mayfield's paradox
- Meade Conflict
- medium of exchange
- mental accounting
- mercantilism
- merger simulation
- Metcalfe's law
- Methodenstreit
- Metzler paradox
- microeconomics
- A branch of economics that studies individual people and individual businesses. For people, microeconomics studies how they behave when faced with decisions about where to spend their money or how to invest their savings. For businesses, it studies how profit-maximising firms behave individually, as well as when competing against each other in markets.
- Mincer earnings function
- minimum wage
- Minsky moment
- missing market
- mixed economy
- An economic system blending elements of a market economy with elements of a planned economy, free markets with state interventionism, or private enterprise with public enterprise.
- mobile payment
- Mobile payments are payments made via the use of a mobile device, such as a smartphone or tablet, to pay for goods, services, or bills. Mobile payments can be made remotely or near, meaning the customer's device is in the same location as the merchant's point of sale (POS).
- modern monetary theory
- modern portfolio theory
- modified gross national income
- Modigliani–Miller theorem
- monetarism
- A school of thought in monetary economics which emphasizes the role of governments in controlling the amount of money in circulation (the money supply). Monetarists assert that variations in the money supply have major influences on national output in the short run and on price levels over longer periods, and that the objectives of monetary policy are best met by targeting the growth rate of the money supply rather than by engaging in discretionary policy.
- monetary circuit theory
- monetary-disequilibrium theory
- monetary economics
- monetary/fiscal debate
- monetary policy
- Using changes in the money supply to change interest rates in order to stimulate or slow down economic activity.
- monetary reform
- monetary system
- money
- Anything customarily used as a medium of exchange, a unit of accounting, and a store of value.
- money illusion
- money market account (MMA)
- A savings account that earns interest and that has some checking account features.
- money multiplier
- money supply
- MONIAC
- monopolistic competition
- A situation in which many firms with slightlydifferent products compete. Production costs are above what may be achieved by perfectly competitive firms, but society benefits from the productdifferentiation.
- monopoly
- A firm with no competitors in its industry. A monopoly firm produces less output, has higher costs, and sells its output for a higher price than it would if constrained by competition.
- monopsony
- moral hazard
- mortgage
- motivation
- moving equilibrium theorem
- multiplier
- multiplier uncertainty
- Any lack of perfect knowledge of the multiplier effect of a particular policy action, such as a monetary or fiscal policy change, upon the intended target of the policy.
- Mundell–Fleming model
- mutual fund
- mutual fund separation theorem
- mutualism
N[edit]
- Nakamura number
- Nash equilibrium
- national average salary
- national income and product accounts
- national income policy agreement
- national tax
- Any tax paid to a national or federal government, e.g. income tax, tariffs, and social security taxes.
- national wealth
- The total value of capital and private property that is owned within a country.
- natural monopoly
- An industry in which one large producer can produce output at a lower cost than many small producers. It undersells its rivals and ends up as the only firm surviving in its industry.
- natural resource economics
- need
- Any good or service that is fundamentally necessary for survival, such as food, clothing, and shelter.
- Neoclassical economics
- Neoclassical synthesis
- Neoliberalism
- Neo-Ricardianism
- Neo-Schumpeterian economics
- net income
- The income amount that is left over after all deductions and income taxes are withdrawn.
- net national income
- net national product
- network effect
- New Keynesian economics
- new trade theory (NTT)
- nominal interest rates
- Interest rates that measure the returns to a loanin terms of money borrowed and money returned (as opposed to real interest rates).
- nominal prices
- Money prices, which can change over time due to inflation. (See also real prices.)
- nominal wages
- Wages measured in money. (See also real wages.)
- non-convexity
- non-price determinant of demand
- Any reason other than price that changes the will to buy a good or service, for example, fads, income, taste, future expectation, and population.
- non-price determinant of supply
- Any reason other than price that changes the will to produce a good or service, for example, changes in taxes and input costs, price of substitutes, future expectations, and changes in technology.
- non-rivalry
- normal good
- normative economics
- The part of economics that deals with normative statements, i.e., statements expressing a value judgment about the desirability of a situation. As opposed to positive economics.
- North–South model
- Norwegian paradox
- no-trade theorem
O[edit]
- occupational choice model
- occupational licensing
- Okun's law
- Okishio's theorem
- oligopoly
- An industry with only a few firms. If these firms collude, they form a cartel, which may reduce output and drive up profits in the same way a monopoly does.
- oligopsony
- open energy modelling initiative
- open energy system models
- open-market operations
- The buying and selling of government bonds by a central bank; that is, transactions that take place in the public, or open, bond market.
- open music model
- opportunity cost
- The value of the next best alternative thing that could have been done. It measures what is given up in order to do the most preferred thing.
- ordinary good
- organizational economics
- Ostrom's law
- overheating
- overlapping generations model
- overshooting model
- overtaking criterion
P[edit]
- Paasche price index
- A price index method which measures the amount of money at current-year prices that an individual requires to purchase a current-year bundle of goods and services divided by the cost of purchasing that same bundle in a base year.
- Pacman conjecture
- parable of the broken window
- paradox of competition
- paradox of flexibility
- paradox of prosperity
- paradox of thrift
- paradox of toil
- paradox of value
- parallel economic model
- parental dividend
- Pareto efficiency
- Pareto principle
- participation
- participatory economics
- partnership
- A business that two or more individuals own and operate together.
- pay check stub (statement)
- An itemization of income, taxes withheld, benefits payments (if any), and other information that are presented to an employee of a firm every time they are paid.
- pay-day lending
- A relatively small amount of money lent at a high rate of interest on the agreement that it will be repaid when the borrower receives their next paycheck.
- Peltzman effect
- penetration pricing
- per capita
- A unit of account per person, usually placed at the end of an economic indicator.
- perfect competition
- A situation where numerous small firms producingidentical products compete against each other in a given industry. Perfect competition leads to firms producing the socially optimal output level at the minimum possible cost per unit.
- personal property
- Possessions such as jewelry, furniture, and real estate that people can amass through time.
- Phillips curve
- physical capital
- All human-made goods that are used to produce other goods and services, such as tools, machines, and buildings.
- physiocracy
- Pigou effect
- Pigouvian tax
- Polak model
- policy mix
- policy-ineffectiveness proposition
- polytomous choice
- population economics
- See demographic economics.
- Pork cycle
- positive economics
- The part of economics that deals with positive statements, i.e., statements concerning what "is," "was," or "will be," excluding statements of what is, was, or will be moral. As opposed to normative economics.
- post-Keynesian economics
- PPP puzzle
- Prebisch–Singer hypothesis
- predatory lending
- Predatory lending is a practice that involves deception, fraud, or aggressive sales tactics to lead a borrower into a loan that is not what they expected. The goal is to make it difficult for the borrower to repay debt, often resulting in the borrower paying too much in fees and/or interest.
- preference
- The dollar price for acquiring an insurance policy.
- price
- The amount of money it takes to buy a product or produce a product.
- price ceiling
- A market intervention in which the government ensures that the price of a good or service stays below the free market price.
- price controls
- price discrimination
- price elasticity of demand (PED)
- Measures the sensitivity of a good's demand to its price.
- price elasticity of supply (PES)
- Measures the sensitivity of a good's supply to its price.
- price floor
- A market intervention in which the government keeps the price of a good or service above its free-market price.
- price index
- A normalized average of price relatives for a given class of goods or services in a given region and during a given period of time. It is a statistic designed to help to compare how these price relatives, taken as a whole, differ between geographical locations or time periods. Notable price indices include consumer price index, producer price index, and GDP deflator.
- price level
- price point
- price–specie flow mechanism
- price war
- pricing
- pricing science
- The application of social and business science methods to the problem of setting prices.
- prime rate
- The interest rate at which a bank will agree to lend to customers with good credit. Floating interest rates are often expressed as a percentage above or below the prime rate.
- principal–agent problem
- principle of effective demand
- private good
- An item that yields positive benefits to people that is excludable, i.e. its owners can prevent others from using the good or consuming its benefits. A private good, as an economic resource is scarce, which can cause competition for it.
- producer
- An entity, either a person or firm, which supplies goods or services.
- producer price index
- producer surplus
- The gain that producers receive when they can sell their output at a price higher than the minimum amount for which they are willing to make it.
- product differentiation
- product market
- In the circular flow model, the sector which facilitates goods and output from firms to households in return for revenue and profit.
- production
- production possibilities curve
- A graph showing the maximal combinations of goods and services that can be produced from a fixed amount of resources in a given period of time.
- productive efficiency
- A term describing firms that produce goods and services at the lowest possible cost.
- productivism
- productivity paradox
- production set
- Proebsting's paradox
- profit
- profit motive
- progressive tax
- A tax schedule that states that the more income one earns, the higher the tax rate will be.
- property tax
- A tax levied on a property which is usually based on its value or a transfer of ownership.
- proportional tax
- A tax schedule that states that regardless of income, the same tax rate will be applied to all income earners.
- prospect theory
- proxemics
- public bad
- public choice
- public economics
- Or economics of the public sector, is the study of government policy through the lens of economic efficiency and equity. Public economics builds on the theory of welfare economics and is ultimately used as a tool to improve social welfare.
- public good
- Goods or services that cannot be profitably produced by private firms because they are impossible to provide to just one person; if you provide them to one person, you have to provide them to everybody. Public goods non-excludable (you can’t prevent anyone from consuming them) and non-rival (it costs no extra to supply one extra person).
- pure competition
- purchasing power
- The value of the sum of money and the ability of buying products with that money.
- purchasing power parity (PPP)
Q[edit]
- quantitative easing (QE)
- quantity demanded
- The amount of a good or service that a consumer is able and willing to purchase at a given price based on their income and preferences.
- quantity supplied
- The amount of a good or service that a supplier is able and willing to produce at a given market price.
- quantity theory of money
- The theory that the overall level of prices in the economy is proportional to the quantity of money circulating in the economy.
- quota
- A limited quantity of a product that can be produced, imported, or exported.
R[edit]
- Rabin fairness
- Ragnar Nurkse's balanced growth theory
- Rahn curve
- Ramsey problem
- Ramsey–Cass–Koopmans model
- норма прибыли
- норма доходности ценообразование
- рациональный выбор
- Идея делать выбор, используя логику, и что люди будут выбирать наиболее выгодный из предложенных вариантов.
- институционализм рационального выбора
- теория рационального выбора
- рациональные ожидания
- Теория, согласно которой люди оптимально меняют свое поведение в ответ на изменения в политике. В зависимости от ситуации их поведенческие изменения могут существенно ограничить эффективность политических изменений.
- рациональное ценообразование
- нормирование
- Рейганомика
- реальная теория делового цикла
- эффект реального дохода
- Изменение потребления в результате изменения дохода с поправкой на инфляцию .
- реальные процентные ставки
- Процентные ставки, которые компенсируют инфляцию, измеряя доходность по кредиту в единицах предоставленного и возвращенного имущества (в отличие от номинальных процентных ставок ).
- реальный ВВП
- Валовой внутренний продукт , скорректированный с учетом инфляции путем применения дефлятора цен.
- реальные цены
- От того, от какой части одного вида вещей (например, отработанных часов) вам придется отказаться, чтобы получить товар или услугу, независимо от того, что происходит с номинальными ценами .
- реальная заработная плата
- Заработная плата измеряется не в самих деньгах (как номинальная заработная плата ), а в том, какой объем продукции можно купить за эти деньги.
- эффект отскока
- рецессии
- Часть делового цикла , в течение которой общий объем производства в экономике падает.
- возмещения
- Часть делового цикла , в ходе которой общий объем производства экономики увеличивается.
- рефляция
- регенеративная экономическая теория
- региональная наука
- регрессивный налог
- Налоговая таблица, в которой говорится, что чем больше дохода человек зарабатывает, тем ниже налоговое бремя.
- регулирование
- Государственные ограничения для коммерческой фирмы.
- относительная цена
- арендовать
- Цена на кредит недвижимости. Это может быть жилое или коммерческое помещение, например, многоквартирное или офисное здание.
- затраты на противодействие
- отвратительный рынок
- ресурс
- ресурсное проклятие
- истощение ресурсов
- рынок ресурсов
- (Также известный как рынок факторов производства.) В модели кругового потока - сектор, который передает ресурсы от домохозяйств к фирмам в обмен на выплату дохода.
- розничные продажи
- Покупка готовой продукции и услуг домохозяйствами и фирмами.
- возвращается к масштабу
- выявленное сравнительное преимущество
- выявленное предпочтение
- доход
- Общий доход от реализации продукции.
- Возобновляемый кредит
- Возобновляемый кредит — это кредитная линия, которая остается доступной в течение долгого времени, даже если остаток погашен полностью. Заемщики могут получить доступ к кредиту до определенной суммы, а затем иметь постоянный доступ к этой сумме.
- Рикардианская экономика
- Рикардианская эквивалентность
- права
- право на труд закон
- Закон штата запрещает профсоюзам принуждать рабочих вступать в профсоюз и платить профсоюзные взносы.
- неприятие риска
- соотношение риска и доходности
- Прямая связь между риском инвестиций и ожидаемой доходностью или прибылью; чем выше риск, тем выше вероятность получения прибыли или убытка, и наоборот.
- соперничество
- Эффект Робин Гуда
- Экономика Робинзона Крузо
- Надежность
- Способность финансовой торговой системы оставаться эффективной. [180]
- Ростовская модель взлета
- Этапы роста Ростоу
- Рот 401к
- Roth 401(k) — это пенсионный сберегательный счет, спонсируемый работодателем, который финансируется за счет долларов после уплаты налогов. Это означает, что подоходный налог уплачивается сразу с заработка, который работник вычитает из каждой зарплаты и вносит на счет. При выходе на пенсию снятие средств со счета не облагается налогом.
- Модель Роя
- Личность Роя
- Теорема Рыбчинского
С [ править ]
- Школа Саламанки
- зарплата
- Сумма дохода, выплачиваемая работнику фирмы; обычно это установленная сумма в год.
- экономика морской воды
- экономия
- сохранение личности
- Закон Сэя
- дефицит
- Любая ситуация, в которой у людей недостаточно ресурсов для удовлетворения всех своих потребностей . Феномен дефицита – это то, что создает потребность в экономике.
- Модель сегрегации Шеллинга
- Скитовский парадокс
- сектор
- Часть или компонент более крупной экономики , такой как домохозяйства, фирмы или правительство.
- отраслевые балансы
- сеньораж
- услуга
- экономика услуг
- парадокс восстановления сервиса
- Лемма Шепарда
- посменная работа
- шоковая терапия
- короткий пробег
- нехватка
- состояние кратковременного останова
- фирмы Ситуация, в которой общие доходы меньше ее переменных издержек , и фирме лучше немедленно закрыться и потерять только свои постоянные издержки .
- термоусадочная инфляция
- больничный
- Пособие, предоставляемое сотрудникам фирмы в качестве условия трудоустройства, при котором работник может взять выходные в случае плохого самочувствия.
- сизифизм
- Смихула волны
- эффект сноба
- Ситуация, когда спрос на определенный товар со стороны людей с более высоким уровнем дохода обратно пропорционален спросу на него со стороны людей с более низким уровнем дохода. [181]
- Экономическая система, в которой государство владеет некоторыми факторами производства, включая целые отрасли, например, систему здравоохранения страны.
- Любая ситуация, когда предельная полезность действия индивида увеличивается, поскольку его коллеги также участвуют в этом действии. Например, исследователи показали, что люди с большей вероятностью будут заниматься спортом, когда их сверстники занимаются спортом. [182]
- Уровень выпуска, который максимизирует выгоды, которые общество может получить от ограниченного предложения ресурсов.
- социоэкономика
- единоличное владение
- Бизнес, которым владеет и управляет один человек.
- солидарная экономика
- Остаток Солоу
- Модель Солоу – Свона
- Теорема Саншайн-Мантла-Дебре
- суверенный фонд благосостояния
- стабилизационная политика
- стагфляция
- Одновременное экономическое явление, во время которого инфляция и безработица. растут
- стандарт отсрочки платежа
- уровень жизни
- государственный налог
- Любой налог , уплачиваемый правительству штата, например , налоги с продаж , подоходный налог штата и плата за номерной знак.
- устойчивая экономика
- липкие цены
- Цены, которые медленно приспосабливаются к потрясениям. Жёсткость цен может привести к затяжному спаду.
- стохастический граничный анализ
- фондовый рынок
- Вторичный рынок, на котором покупаются и продаются ценные бумаги, например акции.
- модель, согласованная с потоком запасов
- Стокгольмская школа
- акции (корпоративные акции)
- Доли собственности корпорации, дающие право владельцу на часть прибыли или дивидендов.
- Теорема Столпера – Самуэльсона
- средство сбережения
- Петербургский парадокс
- стратегические дополнения
- Теория поколений Штрауса – Хау
- структурная безработица
- Безработица создается из-за снижения спроса на навыки работника.
- идеальное равновесие в подигре
- субъективная теория стоимости
- заменить товар
- Продукт, который может удовлетворить полезность другого.
- эффект замещения
- Когда потребители реагируют на повышение цены товара, потребляя меньше этого товара и больше других товаров.
- невозвратные издержки
- солнечное пятно
- равновесие солнечных пятен
- поставлять
- Общее количество определенного вида товара , который был произведен и доступен.
- спрос и предложение
- Экономическая модель рынков, которая отделяет покупателей от продавцов, а затем суммирует поведение каждой группы с помощью одной линии на графике. Поведение покупателей фиксируется кривой спроса , тогда как поведение продавцов фиксируется кривой предложения . Поместив эти две кривые на один и тот же график, экономисты могут показать, как покупатели и продавцы взаимодействуют на рынках, чтобы определить, сколько того или иного конкретного товара будет продано, а также цену, по которой он, скорее всего, будет продан.
- цепочка поставок
- кривая предложения
- Линия на графике, показывающая, сколько товаров или услуг продавцы собираются производить по различным ценам.
- график поставок
- Диаграмма, показывающая, какое количество товара предложит поставщик по разным ценам.
- шок предложения
- Внезапная нехватка товара.
- экономика предложения
- Теория макроэкономики , которая постулирует, что снижение налоговых ставок, ослабление государственного регулирования и разрешение свободной торговли являются наиболее эффективным способом стимулирования экономического роста, поскольку увеличение предложения товаров и услуг по более низким ценам приводит к увеличению занятости и увеличению расходов потребителей. Сравните экономику спроса .
- излишек
- Ситуация, когда предложение превышает спрос, обычно в результате высоких цен.
Т [ править ]
- экономическая таблица
- ощупью
- тариф
- Налог, взимаемый правительством страны или наднациональным союзом стран или учреждений на импорт или экспорт товаров. Импортные пошлины могут служить источником дохода для правительства, а также формой регулирования внешней торговли путем налогообложения иностранных товаров с целью стимулирования или защиты отечественной промышленности, производящей ту же или аналогичную продукцию. Наряду с импортными и экспортными квотами , тарифы являются одним из наиболее часто используемых инструментов протекционизма .
- налог
- модель налоговых льгот
- налоговые льготы по долгу
- налоговый кредит
- налоговый вычет
- налоговая ставка
- налогооблагаемый доход
- Сумма дохода, подлежащая обложению налогом. Эта сумма может быть или не быть общим валовым доходом человека или фирмы.
- Правило Тейлора
- условия торговли
- Правила, которые страны навязывают друг другу, чтобы торговать друг с другом.
- тэтчеризм
- теория фирмы
- теория второго лучшего
- Теория, касающаяся ситуации, когда одно или несколько условий оптимальности не могут быть удовлетворены. Он показывает, что если одно условие оптимальности в экономической модели не может быть удовлетворено, возможно, что следующее лучшее решение предполагает изменение других переменных от значений, которые в противном случае были бы оптимальными. [183]
- термоэкономика
- Закон Тирлуолла
- отбросьте парадокс
- жесткая денежная политика
- Действия Федеральной резервной системы, которые ограничивают рост денежной массы страны с целью снижения или устранения инфляции.
- временные предпочтения
- теория временных предпочтений, представляющая интерес
- временная стоимость денег
- Теорема Топкиса
- Индекс Торнквиста
- Индекс цен или количества, который измеряет средневзвешенное геометрическое значение родственников, используя в качестве весов средние арифметические доли стоимости за два или более периода. [184]
- общая стоимость
- общий излишек
- Сумма излишка производителя и излишка потребителя .
- торговля
- традиционная экономика
- Экономика, в которой производство и распределение осуществляются в соответствии с давними культурными традициями.
- трагедия антиобщественности
- трагедия общего пользования
- стоимость транзакции
- Затраты на совершение любой экономической сделки при участии на рынке . [185]
- трансфертный платеж
- Любое перераспределение доходов и богатства посредством выплаты государством платежей без получения товаров или услуг взамен.
- мультипликатор трансфертных платежей
- Мультипликатор, на который увеличится совокупный спрос при увеличении трансфертных выплат (например, расходов на социальное обеспечение, выплат по безработице). [186]
- трансфертное ценообразование
- проблема трансформации
- экономика транспорта
- модель треугольника
- Дилемма Триффа
- впадина
- Парадокс Таллока
- магистральная модель денег
- теория магистрали
У [ править ]
- игра ультиматум
- Асимметричная игра для двух игроков, ставшая популярным инструментом экономических экспериментов.
- неполная занятость
- Работа на работе, для которой требуется чрезмерная квалификация, или работа неполный рабочий день, когда желательна работа на полную ставку.
- безработица
- Недостаточное использование любого фактора производства , чаще всего относится к труду .
- расчетная единица
- Доллар США
- Официальная валюта США, обычно сокращенно USD.
- унитарный эластичный
- универсальный банк
- универсальный базовый доход
- незапланированные расходы
- Расходы, которые происходят без предварительного рассмотрения или составления бюджета.
- необеспеченный кредит
- Кредит, не требующий залога от заемщика. Вместо этого кредиторы одобряют необеспеченные кредиты на основе кредитоспособности заемщика.
- неквалифицированный труд
- Труд , для выполнения которого не требуются специальные навыки, образование или подготовка.
- городская экономика
- утилитаризм
- полезность
- Полезность товара или услуги для удовлетворения потребности или желания.
- задача максимизации полезности
- теорема о представлении полезности
- Состояние Удзавы
- Модель Удзавы – Лукаса
- Теорема Удзавы
V [ edit ]
- отпускные
- Выгода для сотрудников от фирмы, позволяющая сотрудникам взять отпуск для отдыха. Это пособие обычно предоставляется в течение нескольких недель.
- ценить
- налог на добавленную стоимость (НДС)
- переменные затраты
- Любые затраты, которые изменяются пропорционально количеству товаров или услуг, производимых фирмой. [187] Переменные затраты также представляют собой сумму предельных издержек по всем произведенным единицам продукции.
- Веблен хорошо
- скорость обращения денег
- Относится к тому, как быстро деньги переходят от одного держателя к другому. Это может относиться к скорости поступления денег , которая представляет собой частоту, с которой средняя одна и та же единица валюты используется для покупки новых товаров и услуг, произведенных внутри страны, в течение определенного периода времени. [188] Другими словами, это количество раз, когда одна единица денег тратится на покупку товаров и услуг в единицу времени. [188]
- Закон Вердорна
- школа Вирджинии
- Теорема фон Неймана – Моргенштерна о полезности
В [ править ]
- заработная плата
- Денежная компенсация (или вознаграждение , расходы на персонал, труд), выплачиваемая работодателем в обмен работнику на выполненную работу. Оплата обычно рассчитывается как фиксированная сумма за каждую выполненную задачу ( заработная плата за задание или сдельная ставка ), либо по часовой или дневной ставке ( наемный труд ), либо на основе какого-либо другого легко измеряемого количества выполненной работы.
- наемный труд
- наемное рабство
- Закон Вагнера
- Закон Вальраса
- хотеть
- Желания часто отличают от потребностей. Потребность — это то, что необходимо для выживания (например, еда и кров), тогда как потребность — это просто то, что человек хотел бы иметь. Некоторые экономисты отвергают это различие и утверждают, что все это просто потребности, имеющие разную степень важности. С этой точки зрения желания и потребности можно понимать как примеры общей концепции спроса.
- богатство
- Изобилие , ценных которые можно финансовых активов или физического имущества преобразовать в форму, пригодную для транзакций . Сюда входит основное значение древнеанглийского слова weal , которое происходит от индоевропейской основы слова. [189] Современная концепция богатства имеет значение во всех областях экономики , особенно для экономики роста и экономики развития , однако значение богатства зависит от контекста. Людей или компании, обладающие значительным собственным капиталом, часто называют богатыми . Чистая стоимость определяется как текущая стоимость активов за вычетом обязательств (исключая основную сумму на трастовых счетах). [190]
- эффект богатства
- Изменение расходов, сопровождающее изменение восприятия богатства . [191] Обычно эффект богатства положительный: расходы меняются в том же направлении, что и воспринимаемое богатство.
- благосостояние
- Вид государственной поддержки граждан этого общества. Благосостояние может предоставляться людям с любым уровнем дохода, как и социальное обеспечение (и тогда его часто называют сетью социальной защиты ), но оно обычно предназначено для обеспечения того, чтобы люди могли удовлетворить свои основные человеческие потребности, такие как еда и жилье. Социальное обеспечение пытается обеспечить минимальный уровень благосостояния , обычно это либо бесплатная, либо субсидированная поставка определенных товаров и социальных услуг, таких как здравоохранение , образование и профессиональная подготовка . [192]
- стоимость благосостояния бизнес-циклов
- стоимость благосостояния от инфляции
- экономика благосостояния
- Раздел экономики, использующий микроэкономические методы для оценки благосостояния (благосостояния) на совокупном (в масштабе всей экономики) уровне. [193]
- ловушка благосостояния
- Теорема Веллера
- готовность принять (WTA)
- Минимальная сумма денег, которую человек готов принять, чтобы отказаться от блага или смириться с чем-то негативным, например с загрязнением окружающей среды . Он эквивалентен минимальной денежной сумме, необходимой для продажи товара или приобретения чего-либо, нежелательного для принятия человеком.
- готовность платить (ГП)
- Максимальная цена, при которой или ниже которой потребитель обязательно купит одну единицу товара. [194] Это соответствует стандартному экономическому представлению о резервированной цене для потребителя . Однако некоторые исследователи концептуализируют ГП как диапазон.
- Модель страны чудес
- производительность труда
- Мир3
- Сектор невозобновляемых ресурсов World3
- Закон Райта
Х [ править ]
Ю [ править ]
- урожай
- В финансах доходность по ценной бумаге — это сумма денежных средств (в процентном отношении), которая возвращается владельцам ценных бумаг в виде процентов или дивидендов, полученных от них. Обычно он не включает в себя изменения цен, что отличает его от общего дохода . Доходность применяется к различным заявленным нормам доходности по акциям (обыкновенным, привилегированным и конвертируемым ), инструментам с фиксированным доходом (облигации, векселя, векселя, полосы, нулевой купон) и некоторым другим страховым продуктам инвестиционного типа (например, аннуитетам ).
З [ править ]
- Парадокс Зельдера
- игра с нулевой суммой
- В теории игр и экономической теории игра с нулевой суммой — это математическое представление ситуации, в которой выигрыш или потеря полезности каждого участника точно уравновешиваются потерями или выигрышами в полезности других участников. Если общие выигрыши участников сложить и общие потери вычесть, их сумма будет равна нулю. Таким образом, разрезание торта , при котором взятие большего куска уменьшает количество торта, доступного для других, настолько же, насколько увеличивает количество, доступное для этого получателя, является игрой с нулевой суммой, если все участники одинаково ценят каждую единицу торта (см. предельную полезность). ).
См. также [ править ]
Ссылки [ править ]
- ^ «26 Кодекса США § 401 — Квалифицированные пенсионные планы, планы участия в прибылях и бонусы в виде акций» . Институт правовой информации, юридический факультет Корнелльского университета.
- ^ «Что такое пенсионный план 401 (a)?» . Закс.com . Проверено 25 апреля 2021 г.
- ^ «Планы 401(a) и правила переноса (что вам нужно знать)» . ГудФинансовыеЦенты . 23 мая 2017 года . Проверено 25 апреля 2021 г.
- ^ «403(b) Основы плана» . irs.gov . Служба внутренних доходов . Проверено 2 сентября 2016 г.
- ^ «Чем 403(b) отличается от 401(k)?» . cnn.com . Проверено 2 сентября 2016 г.
- ^ Пресс, Шерил; Патчелл, Роберт. «M. РАЗДЕЛ 457 ПЛАНЫ ОТЛОЖЕННЫХ КОМПЕНСАЦИЙ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫХ И МЕСТНЫХ САМОУПРАВЛЕНИЙ И РАБОТОДАТЕЛЕЙ, Освобожденных от налогов» (PDF) . irs.gov . Проверено 2 сентября 2016 г.
- ^ Налоговая служба (30 мая 2018 г.). «Негосударственные планы отсроченных компенсаций по статье 457(b)» . www.irs.gov . Проверено 20 сентября 2018 г.
- ^ «Публикация IRS 4406» (PDF) . Служба внутренних доходов. Октябрь 2004 г. Архивировано (PDF) из оригинала 11 ноября 2008 г. Проверено 28 октября 2008 г.
- ^ Дирдорф, Алан В. (2006). Условия торговли: Глоссарий международной экономики . Хакенсак: Мировое научное издательство. ISBN 978-981-256-603-4 .
- ^ Секстон, Роберт; Фортура, Питер (2005). Изучаем экономику . Нельсон Образовательная Лимитед. ISBN 978-0-17-641482-5 .
Это сумма спроса на все конечные товары и услуги в экономике. Его также можно рассматривать как объем реального ВВП, требуемый при различных уровнях цен.
- ^ О'Салливан, Артур ; Стивен М. Шеффрин (2022). Экономика . Парамус, Нью-Джерси: Учебная компания Savvas. п. 307. ИСБН 978-0-13-063085-8 .
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- ^ Мадхани, премьер-министр (2010). «Ребалансировка фиксированной и переменной заработной платы в торговой организации: перспектива делового цикла». Обзор компенсаций и льгот . 42 (3): 179–189. дои : 10.1177/0886368709359668 . S2CID 154281029 .
- ^ Мошандреас, Мария (2000). Экономика бизнеса , 2-е издание, Thompson Learning, описание на предварительный просмотр глав и ссылки .
- ^ Словарь делового английского языка Longman
- ^ Но сравните Киз, Марк; Салоу, Жерар; Ричардсон, Пит (1991). Измерение выпуска продукции и факторов производства для делового сектора в странах ОЭСР: база данных делового сектора ОЭСР . Рабочие документы Департамента экономики и статистики ОЭСР. Том. 99. Организация экономического сотрудничества и развития. п. я . Проверено 7 июня 2015 г.
[...] недавняя работа Департамента экономики и статистики ОЭСР по созданию международной базы данных о бизнес-секторе (BSDB) для использования в широком спектре анализа вопросов производства и поставок [...].
- ^ «Информация БЛС» . Глоссарий . Отдел информационных услуг Бюро статистики труда США. 28 февраля 2008 года . Проверено 5 мая 2009 г.
- ^ Чернева (2011)
- ^ «Определение камерализма в английском языке» . Оксфордские словари . Издательство Оксфордского университета. Архивировано из оригинала 1 января 2019 года.
Экономическая теория, распространенная в 18 веке. Германия, которая выступала за сильное государственное управление, управляющее централизованной экономикой прежде всего на благо государства.
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Рыночные инструменты – это правила, которые поощряют поведение посредством рыночных сигналов, а не посредством четких указаний относительно уровней или методов контроля загрязнения.
- ^ Боулдинг, Кеннет Э. «Капитал и проценты» . Британская энциклопедия . Проверено 22 июля 2017 г.
- ^ Яновский, М.: Анатомия систем социального учета , Лондон; Чепмен и Холл, 1965.
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Чистый капитализм определяется как система, в которой все средства производства (физический капитал) находятся в частной собственности и управляются классом капиталистов с целью получения прибыли, в то время как большинство других людей являются рабочими, которые работают за зарплату или заработную плату (и которые не владеют капитал или продукт).
- ^ Россер, Мариана В.; Россер, Дж. Баркли (23 июля 2003 г.). Сравнительная экономика в трансформирующейся мировой экономике . МТИ Пресс . п. 7. ISBN 978-0-262-18234-8 .
В капиталистических экономиках земля и произведенные средства производства (основной капитал) принадлежат частным лицам или группам частных лиц, организованным как фирмы.
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Капитализм, как способ производства, есть экономическая система производства и обмена, ориентированная на производство и продажу товаров на рынке с целью получения прибыли, где производство товаров состоит из использования формально свободного труда рабочих. в обмен на заработную плату за создание товаров, в которых производитель извлекает прибавочную стоимость из труда рабочих в виде разницы между заработной платой, выплачиваемой рабочему, и стоимостью товара, произведенного им для получения этой прибыли.
- ^ Гилпин, Роберт (5 июня 2018 г.). Вызов глобального капитализма: мировая экономика в 21 веке . Издательство Принстонского университета. ISBN 978-0-691-18647-4 . OCLC 1076397003 .
- ↑ Хейлбронер, Роберт Л. «Капитализм». Архивировано 28 октября 2017 года в Wayback Machine . Стивен Н. Дюрлауф и Лоуренс Э. Блюм, ред. Новый экономический словарь Пэлгрейва . 2-е изд. (Пэлгрейв Макмиллан, 2008 г.) дои : 10.1057/9780230226203.0198 .
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1 Деятельность по купле-продаже, особенно в крупных размерах.
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Все коммунисты без исключения предлагают, чтобы народ в целом или какая-нибудь отдельная его часть, например деревня или коммуна, владела всеми средствами производства — землей, домами, фабриками, железными дорогами, каналами и т. д.; что производство должно вестись сообща; и что офицеры, выбранные тем или иным способом, должны распределять среди жителей плоды своего труда.
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Одним из широко распространенных различий было то, что социализм обобществил производство только тогда, когда коммунизм обобществил производство и потребление.
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