Define Economics
understanding the processes that govern production, distribution and consumption of goods and services (in an open market).
Define Neoclassical Economics (conventional)
environmental economics and natural resource economics
Define Environmental Economics
“economy in the environment”
-Focus on amenities and wastes
Define weak sustainability
Natural and human-based capital are perfect substitutes
Define Strong sustainability
Natural and human capital are complements (both required)
What is GDP
value of output produced by factors of production (producers) located in the domestic economy and equal to the sum of all of the factor incomes arising in the domestic economy
What is the equation for GDP
GDP = private consumption + gross investment + government spending + (exports - imports)
What does GDP not account for
What are the key assumptions on the demand side of neo classical economics
What are the key assumptions on the supply side of neo classical economics
2. No transaction costs
What type of relationship does price and quantity have?
An inverse one
fill in the blank: as price falls quantity demanded will __
Rise
What are the main reasons for the inverse relationship between price and quantity
What are the changes that shift a demand curve
True or false: a shift in demand curves are similar to change in quantity demanded
False: they are distinct from each other
Are supply curves and MC curve the same?
Yeah, they both show the quantity of supply of a product by a firm at each possible price
What does MC curve mean
Marginal cost curve
What is the law of supply
All else equal, if the price of a good increases, the supplier will supply more of the good
Why do marginal costs increase?
2. more expensive production occurs later
What are the causes of shifts in supply curves?
True or false: shifts in supply curves are distinct from movements up and down a supply curve (or quantity supplied)
true
Market equilibrium: the area above the price eq
the consumer surplus
Market equilibrium: what is the area below the price equilibrium
The producer surplus
When do free markets produce an efficient allocation of resources