Edexcel Economics Unit 1 Definitions
Edexcel Economics Unit 1 Definitions
Unit 1:
Term:
Opportunity cost
Free market economy
Centrally planned economy
Mixed economy
Factors of production
Division of labour
Specialisation
Positive statement
Normative statement
Normal good
Inferior good
Definition:
The value of the next best
alternative foregone.
An economy in which all
resources are allocated by the
price (free market) mechanism
An economy in which all
resources are allocated by the
government
An economy in which resources
are allocated partly through the
price mechanism and partly
through government intervention
Inputs used in the production of
goods and services;
Capital,
Entrepreneurship,
Labour,
Land
The maximum output potential
for two good or services, when
all resources are fully employed,
in a given time period.
A process whereby the
production procedure is broken
down into different tasks, and
labour are allocated to particular
tasks.
Specialisation occurs when
workers are assigned specific
tasks within a production
process.
An objective statement based on
fact that can be tested. A
scientific approach to economics
without value-judgement.
A subjective statement based on
value judgement that cannot be
tested. A non-scientific approach
to economics.
A good for which demand
increases as incomes increase.
YED is positive for normal goods.
A good for which demand
decreases as incomes increase.
YED is negative for inferior
Substitutes
Complements
Producer surplus
Direct tax
Indirect tax
Incidence of tax?
Ad valorem tax
Unit tax
Subsidy
goods.
Substitute goods are in
competitive demand.
XED is positive for substitutes.
Complementary goods are in
joint demand.
XED is negative for
complements.
The responsiveness of the
quantity demanded of a good to
a change in the price of that
good.
The responsiveness of the
quantity demanded of a good to
a change in consumer incomes.
Elastic PED
Inelastic PED
The responsiveness of the
quantity demanded of one good
to a change in price of another
good.
The responsiveness of the
quantity supplied of a good to a
change in price of that good.
The difference between the price
consumers are willing to pay for
a good and the actual market
price.
The difference between the price
firms are willing to sell a good for
and the actual market price.
A tax levied directly on an
individual or organisation.
A tax levied on the purchase
goods and services.
The way in which the burden of
tax is divided between buyers
and sellers.
A tax set as a percentage of the
price of a good.
A tax set as a fixed amount per
unit of a good.
A government grant to firms to
increase production or lower the
price of a good, by decreasing
production costs for a firm.
A minimum hourly rate of pay an
employer can pay its worker, set
by the government.
Market failure
Government failure
Externality
Social cost
Private cost
External cost
Social benefit
Private benefit
External benefit
Public good
Private good
Free-rider problem
Merit good
Demerit good
Asymmetric information
Imperfect information
Buffer stock scheme
Mobility of labour
Occupational mobility of labour
Occupational immobility of
labour
Geographical immobility of
labour
Frictional unemployment
Structural unemployment
Welfare loss
Welfare gain
Economic growth
Renewable resource
Non-renewable resource
Equilibrium
Surplus
Shortage
Tradable pollution permits
(carbon emissions trading)
consumed.
Where supply meets demand.
Excess supply
Excess demand
A system where firms in major
polluting industries are given an
allowance to emit carbon dioxide
Incentive to not pollute fine for
going over allowance
Market for permits develops
Can make profits from selling
permits incentive to reduce
carbon emissions
A legal (maintained by the govt.)
floor price, below which the price
cannot fall.