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        |   The study of scarcity.   - the study in which a society decides how to use its scarce resources to satisfy unlimited wants.  |  | 
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        |   wants - accessories  e.g - handbag   needs - essentials e.g - food, water and shelter |  | 
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        |     wants that complement one another   e.g - car and fuel  |  | 
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        |     good or services that can be substituted  eg - butter and margarine  |  | 
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        |     wants that are never satisfied and keep reoccuring  eg - food |  | 
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        |     a choice must be made because wants are infinite and resources to satisfy those wants are finite  |  | 
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        | land - everything to do with nature labour - all physical and interlectual work by humans capital - any man-made instrument of production eg - a needle is used to make a jumper enterprise - either a business owner or a manager who combines all three FOP's to produce a commodity |  | 
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        |   the consumer, the king or queen of the market place who decides on the economic problem - what to produce? - how to produce? - for whom to produce? - how much to produce? |  | 
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 graph designed to weigh up the pro's and con's in order to make an economic decision  |  | 
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 the quantity demanded of a good or service is inverse to the price of that good or service |  | 
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        |       the quantity supplied of a good or service varies positively with the price of a good or service |  | 
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        |     the equilibrium price is established when there is a 'right price' which is just high enough for sellers and just low enough for buyers. |  | 
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        |       measures the responsiveness in changes of demand |  | 
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        |     the percentage change in quantity demanded exceeds the percentage change in price    10% increase in $ = 20% decrease in demand |  | 
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        |     the percentage change in quantity demanded is less than the percentage change in price   10% increase in $ = 5% decrease in demand |  | 
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 the percentage change in price is equal to the percentage change in demand    10% increase in $ = 10% decrease in demand |  | 
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        |       the maximum price fixed by the government eg - rent control: highest rent for a buliding set by the governmet at $200/week.  |  | 
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        |         the absolute minimal price fixed by the goverment  |  | 
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 occurs when a group of people all want the same rescource  eg - economics class all wanting an economics book |  | 
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        |     Intervention in the Price Mechanism  |  | Definition 
 
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 Subsides- gov services which private enterprise doesn't want to pay for ( public transport- doesn't turn a profit |  | 
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 The Government reduces the level of intervention in the market place eg - telstra, Qantas, hospitals, prisons |  | 
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 the system or process by which price changes bring about equality between supply and demand |  | 
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   term used to described a persons tendancy or desire to act in a certain way            |  | 
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     satisfaction gained by the purchase of a commodity   |  | 
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        |       income that leaves the circular flow- outflow if expenditure  eg - savings, income tax, imports |  | 
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        |       investment expenditure ( company building factory) gov. expenditure ( hospitals and exports) |  | 
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 Consumptions+Income+Government+Exports- Imports |  | 
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        |       Factors determining Demand   |  | Definition 
 
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 - price of a commodity - buyers income - buyers tastes - population change - buyers expectations for the future |  | 
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        |       Part of the income that is subject to change or removal eg - travel, food, clothing |  | 
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        |       Factors determining Supply |  | Definition 
 
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     - $ of a commodity - $ of production - technology used in production 
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        |     Intervention with the Price Mechanism  |  | Definition 
 
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 successful commodity launched into the market place eg - suppliers take advantage of the MP iphone- Samsung copy |  | 
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        |       1 producer/supplier dominating the market  |  | 
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        |       two producers/ suppliers dominating the market eg - (coles and woolworths) opposite of perfect competition  |  | 
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