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Chapter 3 Vocabulary
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the study of the consumption, production, distribution, and exchange of goods and services economics
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tangible (touchable) things such as food, clothing, cars, MP3 players, and DVDs goods
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are activities people do for a fee services
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The person or business that makes the goods or provides the services producer
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A person who purchases a product or service consumer
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come from nature; they are part of the natural environment and include water, trees, and minerals. natural resource
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the people who produce goods or provide services. human resource
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the money or property—factories, tools, bridges, machines, and other items—used to produce goods and services. capital resource
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Any resource may at times be limited. As a result, the limited resource affects what and how much of a product can be produced scarcity
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occurs when you give up one thing in order to achieve a more desirable outcome. trade-off is something like a compromise. trade-off
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the quantity of a good or service offered for sale. Producers regulate supply by deciding how much of a good or service to offer for sale. supply
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the quantity of a good or service consumers are willing and able to buy. demand
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the amount left after costs are subtracted from the price. profit
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customs, habits, and beliefs determine how the four basic economic questions are answered traditional economy
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the government controls the economy and answers the four basic economic questions. command economy
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individuals answer the four basic economic questions based on supply and demand. This economic system is also known as free enterprise. market economy
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they cannot be replaced by nature once they are used nonrenewable resource
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they can replace themselves over time renewable resource
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are nonrenewable, inorganic substances that were formed by Earth’s geological processes. Coal, salt, oil, natural gas, and sand/gravel and stone mineral resources
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solid masses of salt found deep below Earth’s surface. rock salt
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a mixture of salt and water brine
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are plants and animals, also called flora and fauna, respectively. Biological resources differ from mineral resources in that they are renewable and can replenish themselves over time. biological resources
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refers to the manufacture, production, and sale of goods. industry
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the careful management of a natural resource to prevent its destruction conservation
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they raised only enough crops to feed their families subsistence farmer
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crops produced for resale and not for family use. The first cash crops were tobacco, corn, and fruit cash crop
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soft coal, best used for making steel bituminous
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any material that is processed to make another product raw material
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business or trade between states interstate commerce
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