Search CEE Glossary
A
Ability-to-Pay PrincipleThe belief that people should be taxed according to their ability to pay, regardless of the benefits they receive. The U.S. individual income tax is based on this principle.
Absolute AdvantageThe ability to produce more units of a good or service than some other producer, using the same quantity of resources.
Accounting LossTotal explicit costs are greater than total explicit revenue which results in a loss.
Accounting ProfitTotal revenue less total costs except for the opportunity cost of capital.
Adaptive ExpectationsExpectations about inflation or other economic events.
Add-On RateA method of calculating interest on a loan, based on the assumption that the borrower holds the original principal for the entire loan period.
Adjusted Balance MethodA method of calculating finance charges by basing them on the opening balance owed after subtracting the payments made during the month.
Advertisements AdvertisingUsing advertisements (public notices, displays or presentations often based on celebrity endorsements, appeals to authority, bandwagon effects and attractive imagery) to promote the sale of goods or services.
Aggregate Demand (AD)A schedule (or graph) that shows the value of output (real GDP) that would be demanded at different price levels.
Aggregate Supply (AS)A schedule (or graph) that shows the value of output (real GDP) that would be produced at different price levels. In the long run, the schedule shows a constant level of real GDP at all price levels, determined by the economy's productive capacity at full employment. In the short run, the aggregate supply schedule may show different levels of real GDP as the price level changes.
Allocative EfficiencyTaking advantage of every opportunity to make some individuals better off in their own estimation while not worsening the condition of anyone else.
AllowanceA sum of money paid regularly to a person, often by a parent to a child; sometimes paid in compensation for services rendered.
AlternativeOne of many choices or courses of action that might be taken in a given situation.
American Stock Exchange (AMEX) Amount Past DueIn a credit arrangement, the amount of money owed and not repaid on time.
Annual FeeThe yearly charge for having a credit card or credit account.
Annual Percentage Rate (APR)The percentage of the principal of a loan to be paid as interest in one year. Differs from an add-on rate in that an APR is calculated on the declining balance of the loan. The Truth in Lending Act requires lenders to disclose APRs to prospective borrowers.
Annual Percentage YieldIncome earned on an investment in a year, divided by the amount of the original investment.
Annual Rate of ReturnIncome earned on an investment in a year, divided by the amount of the original investment.
Appreciation of a Currency Asian Financial CrisisThe situation that began in 1997-1998 when investors withdrew large amounts of money from several Asian countries due to fears that assets were overpriced. This led to currency devaluations and set off a panic resulting in runs on banks, plummeting stock prices, business failures and loss of jobs. Some of the countries involved were Thailand, South Korea, Indonesia and Malaysia.
AssetSomething of monetary value owned by an individual or an organization.
AssumptionsBeliefs or statements presupposed to be true.
Automated Teller Machine (ATM)A machine that provides cash and performs banking services (for deposits and transfers of funds between accounts, for example) automatically when accessed by customers using plastic cards coded with personal identification numbers (PINs).
Average CostNCEE - Total cost (TC) divided by the amount produced.
Average Daily Balance MethodA method of calculating finance charges based on the average amount owed for each day of the billing cycle.
Average Fixed Cost (AFC)Total fixed costs divided by the amount produced.
Average Revenue (AR)Total revenue divided by the amount produced.
Average tax rate (or ratio) Average Variable Cost (AVC)Total variable costs divided by the quantity produced.
B
Bait and SwitchThe action (generally illegal) of advertising goods that are an apparent bargain (the bait) with the intention of inducing customers to buy more expensive items (the switch), on the pretext that the advertised item is no longer available.
Balance of PaymentsThe record of all transactions (in goods, services, physical and financial assets) between individuals, firms and governments of one country with those in all other countries in a given year, expressed in monetary terms.
Balance of Payments DeficitAn imbalance in a nation's balance of payments where more currency is flowing out of the country than is flowing in. This unequal flow of currency is considered unfavorable and can lead to a loss of foreign currency reserves.
Balance of Payments SurplusAn imbalance in a nation's balance of payments in which more currency is flowing into the country than is flowing out. This unequal flow of currency is considered favorable and can lead to an increase in foreign currency reserves.
Balance of TradeThe part of a nation's balance of payments accounts that deals only with its imports and exports of goods and services. The balance of trade is divided into the balance on goods (merchandise) and the balance on services. If the value of a country's exports of goods and services is greater than its imports, it has a balance of trade surplus. If the value of a country's imports of goods and services is greater than its exports, it has a balance of trade deficit.
Balance SheetAn itemized statement listing the total assets and total liabilities of a given business to portray its net worth at a given moment in time.
Balanced BudgetA financial plan in which income is equal to expenses.
BankA financial institution that provides various products and services to its customers, including checking and savings accounts, loans and currency exchange.
Bank AccountAn arrangement by which a bank holds funds on behalf of a depositor. Also, the balance of funds held under such an arrangement, credited to and subject to withdrawal by the depositor.
Bank ReservesThe percentage of a bank's deposits that it keeps on hand, i.e., does not lend out.
Bank Service ChargesFees paid by bank customers for financial services, for example, check-cashing fees, fees for overdrafts from accounts, fees for using the ATMs of other banks and fees for using bank-issued credit cards.
Bank StatementA monthly summary providing the status of a depositor's financial accounts (checking and/or savings).
BankingThe industry involved with conducting financial transactions. Also, conducting business with a bank, e.g., maintaining a checking or savings account or obtaining a loan.
Bankruptcy Barriers to EntryFactors that restrict entry into an industry and give cost advantages to existing firms. Examples would include the large size of existing firms, control over an essential resource or information, and legal rights such as patents and licenses.
Barriers to TradeRestrictions on trade such as tariffs, quotas and regulations.
BarterTrading a good or service directly for another good or service, without using money or credit.
Bear/bear market BenefitMonetary or non-monetary gain received because of an action taken or a decision made.
Benefits and Costs Benefits and Costs Analysis Benefits-Received PrincipleThe belief that people should be taxed according to the benefits they receive from the good or service the tax supports. The gasoline tax is an example.
Blue Chip StocksStocks in large, nationally known companies that have been profitable for a long time and are well-known and trusted.
Board of GovernorsThe Federal Reserve's governing and monetary policy-making body; consists of seven governors appointed by the President to staggered 14-year terms.
BondA certificate of indebtedness issued by a government or a publicly held corporation, promising to repay borrowed money to the lender at a fixed rate of interest and at a specified time.
Bond fund Bond rating BorrowTo receive and use something belonging to somebody else, with the intention of returning or repaying it--often with interest in the case of borrowed money.
BorrowerAn individual who has received and used something belonging to somebody else, with the intention of returning or repaying it--often with interest in the case of borrowed money.
BrandA trade name used to identify a product produced by a particular company, distinguishing it from similar products produced by competitors.
Broker BudgetA spending-and-savings plan, based on estimated income and expenses for an individual or an organization, covering a specific time period.
Budget DeficitRefers to national budgets; occurs when government spending is greater than government income in a given year. A yearly deficit adds to the public debt.
Budget SurplusRefers to national budgets; occurs when government income is greater than government spending in a given year.
Bull/bull market BusinessAny activity or organization that produces or exchanges goods or services for a profit.
Business Cycle Business CyclesFluctuations in the overall rate of national economic activity with alternating periods of expansion and contraction; these vary in duration and degrees of severity; usually measured by real gross domestic product (GDP).
Business PlanA description of an enterprise including its name, its goals and objectives, the product(s) sold and distributed, the work skills needed to produce those products, and the marketing strategies used to promote them.
Businesses and HouseholdsTwo sectors of the circular flow. Businesses hire resources from households; the payments for these resources represent household income. Households spend their income for goods and services produced by the businesses; household spending represents revenue for businesses.
Buying on marginC
CapacityIn the context of credit transactions, capacity is one of the Three Cs of Credit. It is an indicator of how creditworthy a prospective borrower is likely to be, as determined by the borrower's current and future earnings relative to current debt. High earnings and low debt, for example, indicate a strong capacity to make payments on the loan in question.
CapitalResources and goods made and used to produce other goods and services. Examples include buildings, machinery, tools and equipment. In the context of credit transactions, capital is one of the Three Cs of Credit. It is an indicator of how creditworthy a prospective borrower is likely to be as determined by the borrower's current financial assets and net worth.
Capital AccountPart of a nation's balance of payments accounts; records capital outflows, i.e., expenditures made by the nation's residents to purchase physical capital and financial assets from the residents of foreign nations; also records capital inflows, i.e., expenditures by residents of foreign nations to purchase physical capital and financial assets from residents of the nation in question.
Capital Account BalanceForeign government and private investment in the United States netted against similar U.S. investment in foreign countries.
Capital GainA profit realized from the sale of property, stocks or other investments.
Capital goods Capital LossA loss suffered upon the sale of property, stocks or other investments for less money than the purchase price of the asset in question.
Capital ResourcesResources made and used to produce and distribute goods and services; examples include tools, machinery and buildings.
Capitalization CashMoney in the form of paper currency or coins (as distinct from checks, money orders or credit).
Cash AdvanceIn a credit arrangement, the amount charged to a borrower's account for cash received; an instant loan.
Cash AvailableIn a credit arrangement, the difference between the cash-advance limit and withdrawals made (advances issued); the remaining balance.
Cash-Advance LimitIn a credit arrangement, the maximum amount that can be issued for a cash advance.
Causes of Inflation Central Banking SystemA nation's central bank that is established to regulate the money supply and oversee the nation's banks. In the United States the Federal Reserve is the central bank.
Certificate of Deposit (CD)A certificate issued by a bank to a person depositing money in an account for a specified period of time (often six months, one year or two years). A penalty is charged for early withdrawal from CD accounts.
CharacterIn the context of credit transactions, character is one of the Three Cs of Credit. It is an indicator of how creditworthy a prospective borrower is likely to be, as determined by the borrower's handling of past debts and his or her stability in jobs and residences.
Characteristics of Money Charity CheckA written order to a financial institution directing the financial institution to pay a stated amount of money, as instructed, from the customer's account.
Check RegisterA form (usually located in the back of a checkbook) on which users of checking accounts may record checks they have written and deposits they have made. Information thus recorded helps people keep track of balances in their accounts.
Checking AccountA financial account into which people deposit money and from which they withdraw money by writing checks.
ChoiceDecision made or course of action taken when faced with a set of alternatives.
Circuit breaker Circular FlowThe movement of output and income from one sector of the economy to another; often illustrated as a circular flow diagram.
Closing price Coincident IndicatorsEconomic variables, such as payroll employment, industrial production, personal income, and manufacturing and trade sales, that tend to change at the same time that real output changes.
CoinsGovernment-issued pieces of metal that have value and are used as money.
CollateralSomething of value (often a house or a car) pledged by a borrower as security for a loan. If the borrower fails to make payments on the loan, the collateral may be sold; proceeds from the sale may then be used to pay down the unpaid debt.
Collision Insurance CoverageInsurance that pays for repairs to an automobile, or replacement of the automobile (minus the deductible in each case), if the automobile is hit by another car.
CollusionA secret agreement between firms to fix prices or engage in other activities to restrict competition in an industry; illegal in the United States.
Command EconomyAn economy in which most economic issues of production and distribution are resolved through central planning and control.
Commission Commodities MarketThe market for the purchase and sale of commodity (a basic product, usually, but not always, agricultural or mineral) futures, contracts for the sale and delivery of commodities at some future time.
Common stock CommunismIn theory, an economic system based on a classless society, common ownership of all resources, the complete disappearance of government and income allocated according to need. In practice, communism usually refers to the command economic system in existence in the former Soviet Union before its downfall in 1990-1991, and in other countries such as China and Cuba.
Communities and Cities Comparative AdvantageThe ability to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than some other producer. This is the economic basis for specialization and trade.
Comparison ShoppingExamining different brands or models of a product (to learn about variations in quality, size, etc.), or the prices charged by different sellers (to learn about possible cost-savings), before deciding what to buy.
CompetitionAttempts by two or more individuals or organizations to acquire the same goods, services, or productive and financial resources. Consumers compete with other consumers for goods and services. Producers compete with other producers for sales to consumers.
Complementary Goods and ServicesGoods and/or services that are typically used together, such as hamburger and hamburger buns, or tennis rackets and tennis lessons.
Complements Compound InterestInterest that is earned not only on the principal but also on the interest already earned.
Compound interest CompoundingPaying interest on the principal and on interest already earned. For example, if someone deposits $2,000 in an account that pays interest at 8 percent, he or she will earn $160 in interest after one year, for a balance of $2,160. If the depositor leaves this sum in the account for another year, however, he or she will earn $172.80 in interest because the 8 percent rate will apply to the new balance of $2,160, not the original $2,000 deposit. The longer the money is left in the account, the more dramatic the compounding effect.
Comprehensive Insurance CoverageInsurance that pays for repairs to an automobile, or replacement of an automobile (minus the deductible in each case), if the automobile is stolen or damaged by something other than a collision (for example, by a hail storm).
Concentration RatioThe percentage of the total industry by the largest firms (generally four or eight) in an industry. The concentration ratio provides a measure of domination in an industry by a few firms and serves as a measure of whether an industry is an oligopoly.
ConsequenceA result or effect of an action or decision; may be positive or negative.
ConsumeTo buy and use a good or service.
Consumer EconomicsThe study of economics that addresses decisions of consumers in the marketplace and personal money management.
Consumer Price Index (CPI)A price index that measures the cost of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services and compares the cost of this basket in one time period with its cost in some base period. Changes in the CPI are used to measure inflation.
Consumer SurplusThe difference between the price a consumer would be willing to pay for a good or service and the price that consumer actually has to pay.
ConsumersPeople who use goods and services to satisfy their personal needs and not for resale or in the production of other goods and services.
ConsumptionSpending by households on goods and services. The process of buying and using goods and services.
Contractionary Fiscal PolicyA decrease in government spending and/or an increase in taxes designed to decrease aggregate demand in the economy and control inflation.
Corporate bond CorporationA legal entity owned by shareholders whose liability for the firm's losses is limited to the value of the stock they own.
Cost Cost-Push InflationInflation caused by rising costs of production.
Cost/Benefit AnalysisA process of examining the advantages (benefits) and disadvantages (costs) of each available alternative in arriving at a decision.
CostsAn amount that must be paid or spent to buy or obtain something. The effort, loss or sacrifice necessary to achieve or obtain something.
Costs of ProductionAmounts paid for resources (land, labor, capital and entrepreneurship) used to produce goods and services.
Council of Economic AdvisersA three-member group that gathers information on the economy, reports on economic developments and recommends strategies to the President.
Coupon Coupon bond Coupon rate of return CreditThe opportunity to borrow money or to receive goods or services in return for a promise to pay later.
Credit AgreementA written promise to repay something that is borrowed.
Credit ApplicationA request for a loan, submitted to a lender (for example, a bank or a credit union) by a prospective borrower. The credit application provides background information which the lender uses to assess the prospective borrower's creditworthiness--his or her ability to repay the loan.
Credit CardA small, specially coded plastic card issued by a bank, business, etc., authorizing the cardholder to purchase goods or services on credit.
Credit CostsCharges associated with the acceptance of a loan, including the finance charge and transaction fees (for example, loan fees, annual or monthly fees on a credit account).
Credit HistoryA record of past borrowing and repayments.
Credit LimitThe maximum amount of money that will be extended to a person by a financial institution or credit-card issuer.
Credit RatingAn evaluation of a borrower's ability to repay a loan based on his or her character, capacity and capital.
Credit rating Credit RecordA report about a person's credit history, including his or her ability and willingness to repay debts, based on how reliably he or she has repaid debts in the past. Also known as a credit report.
Credit ReportA report about a person's credit history, including his or her ability and willingness to repay debts, based on how reliably he or she has repaid debts in the past. Also known as a credit record.
Credit UnionA nonprofit financial institution owned by its members; offers various financial services including accounts and loans; regulated by the National Credit Union Association (NCUA).
Credit-Card StatementA monthly summary from a credit-card company conveying information about a cardholder's purchases, payments, balance due and fees.
CreditorA person or company to whom money is owed.
CreditworthinessThe extent to which a person is deemed suitable to receive credit, especially as shown by reliability in repaying loans in the past.
Cross-Price Elasticity of DemandThe percentage change in the quantity demanded for one good divided by the percentage change in the price of a related good, everything else held constant. It measures the degree to which goods are substitutes or complements. When the cross-price elasticity of demand is positive, the goods are substitutes; when the cross-price elasticity of demand is negative, the goods are complements.
Crowding-OutIncreased interest rates and decreased private investment caused by government borrowing.
CurrencyThe money in circulation in any country.
Currency BoardA government organization existing in a few countries that establishes a fixed exchange rate for the nation's currency.
Currency DevaluationWhen a government adjusts the value of the nation's currency so that it buys less of foreign currencies than before.
Currency markets Current AccountPart of a nation's balance of payments accounts; records exports and imports of goods and services, net investment income and transfer payments with other countries.
Current Account BalanceThe inflow of the goods, services, investment income and transfer accounts into the United States from foreign countries netted against the outflow of goods, services, investment income and transfer accounts from the United States to foreign countries.
Cyclical UnemploymentUnemployment caused by fluctuations in the overall rate of economic activity or phase of the business cycle.
D
Deadweight Loss Dealer Debit CardA small, specially coded plastic card issued by a bank; allows the cardholder to transfer funds electronically and immediately from his or her checking account, as if the cardholder were writing a check to pay for a purchase.
DebtMoney owed to someone else. Also the state or condition of owing money. Can be individual, corporate or government debt.
Debt financing Debt for Individual Deceptive PracticesMisleading methods used by businesses to sell goods or services. Examples include misleading prices, bait-and-switch tactics and false advertising.
Decision Decision MakingReaching a conclusion after considering alternatives and their results.
Decision-Making GridA graph-like form into which people may enter notations about the costs and benefits of various alternatives; used for assistance in making decisions.
DeductibleRegarding insurance policies: A set amount an insured person must pay per loss before the insurance company will pay a claim.
Definition of Money DeflationA sustained decrease in the average price level of all the goods and services produced in the economy.
DemandThe quantity of a good or service that buyers are willing and able to buy at all possible prices during a period of time.
Demand DepositAn account from which funds may be withdrawn by writing a check at any time and without having to obtain the approval of the financial institution in advance.
Demand-Pull InflationInflation caused by increasing demand for output or "too much money chasing too few goods."
DepositMoney put into a financial account. Also, to place money in a financial account.
DepreciationA reduction in the value of capital goods over time due to their use in production.
Depreciation of a Currency Depreciation of CurrencyA decline in the price of one currency relative to another.
DepressionA severe, prolonged economic contraction.
Derived DemandDemand resulting from what a good or service can produce, not demand for the good or service itself.
Determinants of DemandFactors other than the price of a good or service that change (shift) the demand schedule, causing consumers to buy more or less at every price. Factors include income, number of consumers, preferences and prices of related goods.
Determinants of SupplyFactors other than the price of a good or service that change (shift) the supply schedule, causing producers to supply more or less at every price. Factors include number of producers, production costs, and technology and productivity.
Diminishing Marginal Utility Direct DepositThe electronic transfer of a payment (for a month's salary, for example) directly from the payer's account to the recipient's account.
Direct RelationshipThe relationship that exists when the values of related variables move in the same direction. Also known as a positive relationship.
Discount broker Discount RateThe interest rate the Federal Reserve charges commercial banks for loans.
Discouraged WorkersUnemployed people who have given up looking for work and are therefore not counted as part of the labor force.
DisincentiveA factor, often a monetary policy or disadvantage, that discourages people from doing something.
Disposable IncomeThe amount of money a person has left to save or spend after income taxes, Social Security taxes and other required deductions have been taken out of his or her pay.
DistributionThe allocation or dividing up of the goods and services a society produces.
Distribution of IncomeThe way in which the nation's income is divided among families, individuals or other designated groups.
Diversification DiversifyTo invest in a variety of stocks, bonds, money market accounts, etc., in order to spread risk.
DividendA share of a company's net profits paid to stockholders.
Dividend reinvestment plan (DRIP) Division of LaborAn arrangement in which workers perform only one step or a few steps in a larger production process (as when working on an assembly line).
Donation Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) Durable GoodsGoods intended to last for a period of more than three years.
E
Earn Earned IncomeMoney received for work performed; may include salary, wages, tips, professional fees, commissions, etc.
Easy-Money PolicyMonetary policy designed to stimulate the economy by increasing the level of bank reserves through lowering the discount rate, lowering reserve requirements or buying securities through open market operations.
Economic DevelopmentThe process of improving the quality of human lives through raising living standards. Economic development is broader than economic growth, which is concerned with year-to-year increases in production. Economic development deals with the economic, social and political institutions that govern the way the economy and society function.
Economic EfficiencyA situation in which no one in a society can be made better off without making someone else worse off.
Economic EquityThe application of our concepts of what is "fair" or "unfair" and what is "right" or "wrong" to an economic policy. Ultimately deals with the distribution of income and wealth.
Economic forecasting Economic FreedomThe freedoms of the marketplace--the freedom of consumers to decide how they wish to allocate their spending among various goods and services; the freedom of workers to choose to change jobs, join unions and go on strike; the freedom of individuals to establish businesses and to decide what to produce and when to change their pattern of production; and the freedom of savers to decide when and where to invest their savings.
Economic Functions of GovernmentIn a market economy, government agencies establish and maintain a legal system to regulate both commercial and social behavior, promote competition, respond to market failures by providing public goods and adjusting for externalities, redistribute income and establish macroeconomic stabilization policies. To perform these functions, governments must shift resources from private uses by taxing and/or borrowing.
Economic GrowthAn increase in real output as measured by real GDP or per capita real GDP.
Economic IncentivesFactors that motivate and influence the behavior of individuals and organizations, including firms and government agencies. Prices, profits and losses are important economic incentives in a market economy.
Economic InstitutionsOrganizations such as households and families; formal organizations such as corporations, government agencies, banks, labor unions and cooperatives; a system of law; customary ways of doing things such as the use of money, collective bargaining and the observance of certain holidays; and controlling values and beliefs.
Economic investing Economic LossTotal revenue is less than total costs when total costs include all opportunity costs.
Economic ProfitA firm's total revenue minus all explicit and implicit costs of production, including opportunity costs.
Economic RentPayment for the use of something that is in fixed or perfectly inelastic supply; earnings in excess of the earnings required to keep a resource in its current use; the portion of a resource's earnings that is not necessary to keep the resource in its present use.
Economic SecurityProtection against economic risks, such as unemployment, accidents on the job, business failures or natural disasters, over which people have little or no control.
Economic SystemsThe institutional framework of formal and informal rules that a society uses to determine what to produce, how to produce and how to distribute goods and services.
Economic WantsDesires that can be satisfied by consuming a good or service. Economists do not differentiate between wants and needs.
Economic Way of ThinkingA reasoning process that involves considering costs as well as benefits in making decisions.
EconomicsThe study of how people, firms and societies choose to allocate scarce resources with alternative uses.
Economizing BehaviorConsidering the costs and benefits of various alternatives and choosing the one with the greatest net benefits.
Elasticity Elasticity of Demand Electronic Funds Transfer ActA federal law providing consumer protection for people who use ATMs and debit cards. The law limits users' liability for unauthorized charges made on cards that have been lost or stolen.
Employment Employment RateThe percentage of the total population aged 16 or over that is employed.
EndorsementA signature on the back of a check instructing the bank as to how the check may be cashed. There are three types of endorsement. Blank endorsement: The signature makes the check as good as cash to anybody who holds it. Restrictive endorsement: The signature tags the check for a specific purpose, such as "for deposit only" to a checking or savings account. Special endorsement: The signature allows the holder to transfer the check to another person.
EntrepreneurOne who draws upon his or her skills and initiative to launch a new business venture with the aim of making a profit. Often a risk-taker, inclined to see opportunity when others do not.
EntrepreneurshipA characteristic of people who assume the risk of organizing productive resources to produce goods and services; a resource.
Equal Credit Opportunity ActA federal law that prevents lenders from denying credit on the basis of an applicant's sex, marital status, race, national origin, religion, or age, or because an applicant receives public assistance.
Equilibrium PriceThe price at which the quantity demanded by buyers equals the quantity supplied by sellers; also called the market-clearing price.
Equilibrium QuantityThe quantity demanded and quantity supplied at the equilibrium or market-clearing price.
Equities EquityStock, both common and preferred. Also, the value of mortgaged property after accounting for charges against it or money owed.
Equity financing European Union (EU)An association of European nations created by the Maastricht Treaty signed in 1992. The EU has eliminated quotas and tariffs among its members and created other common economic policies.
Excess ReservesA bank's cash reserves beyond the required reserves, which can be loaned.
ExchangeTrading a good or service for another good or service, or for money.
Exchange RateThe price of one nation's currency in terms of another nation's currency.
Expansion Expansionary Fiscal PolicyAn increase in government spending and/or a decrease in taxes designed to increase aggregate demand in the economy, thus increasing real output and decreasing unemployment.
ExpensesPayments for goods and services.
Experimental EconomicsThe study of people's behavior in the marketplace by scientific testing in the laboratory.
Explicit CostThe monetary payment a firm must make to obtain a resource.
ExportsGoods and services produced in one nation and sold in other nations.
ExternalitiesEconomic side-effects or third-party effects, in which some of the benefits or costs associated with the production or consumption of a product affect someone other than the direct producer or consumer of the product. Can be positive or negative.
F
Face value Factor EndowmentsThe theory that differences in factor endowments among countries result in different opportunity costs; countries have comparative advantages in the production of commodities that are intensive in the use of the factors of production with which their endowments are relatively abundant.
Factor PricesThe prices of land, capital, labor and entrepreneurship.
Factors of ProductionProductive resources; what is required to produce the goods and services that people want; natural resources, human resources, capital goods and entrepreneurship.
Fair Credit Billing ActA federal law that requires creditors to mail out bills at least 14 days before payment is due and also establishes procedures for resolving billing errors on credit accounts.
Fair Credit Reporting ActA federal law governing the activities of credit bureaus and creditors. It requires creditors to furnish accurate and complete information to borrowers; it also establishes a process consumers may use to correct inaccuracies in credit reports.
Fair Debt Collection Practices ActA federal law that bars collection agencies from using threats, harassment or abuse in their efforts to collect debts.
Fair-Return PriceA price that allows a regulated monopoly, such as gas, electric and telephone companies, to earn the approved profit.
Federal BudgetThe taxing and spending plan of the national government.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC)A federal agency that guarantees depositors' savings up to $100,000 per account in most commercial banks, savings banks and savings associations.
Federal funds rate Federal Income TaxA tax paid by individuals and businesses to the federal government to fund such services as national defense, human services, and the monitoring and regulation of trade.
Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA)A federal system of old-age, survivors, disability and health-care insurance (Medicare) which requires employers to withhold (or transfer) wages from employees' paychecks and deposit that money in designated accounts.
Federal ReserveThe central bank of the United States. Its main function is controlling the money supply through monetary policy. The Federal Reserve System divides the country into 12 districts, each with its own Federal Reserve bank. Each district bank is directed by its nine-person board of directors. The Board of Governors, which is made up of seven members appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate to 14-year terms, directs the nation's monetary policy and the overall activities of the Federal Reserve. The Federal Open Market Committee is the official policy-making body; it is made up of the members of the Board of Governors and five of the district bank presidents.
Federal Reserve Structure Finance ChargeThe total cost of credit, including interest and transaction fees.
Financial institutions Financial IntermediariesBanks, credit unions, pension funds, insurance companies, mutual fund companies and other financial institutions that bring together savers and borrowers and buyers and sellers of stocks and bonds.
Financial markets Financial PlanningSetting short-, medium- and long-range goals; then collecting and analyzing income and expenditure information to determine how to meet one's goals.
Financial RiskThe chance that an individual, business or government will not be able to return money invested.
FirmsEconomic units that demand productive resources from households and supply goods and services to households and government agencies.
Fiscal PolicyChanges in the expenditures or tax revenues of the federal government, undertaken to promote full employment, price stability and reasonable rates of economic growth.
Fixed Costs (FC)Costs of production that do not change as a firm's output level changes; costs that must be paid whether the firm produces or not.
Fixed Exchange RateAn exchange rate that is set and therefore prevented from rising or falling with changes in supply and demand for a nation's currency.
Fixed ExpensesExpenditures that are the same from week to week or month to month, such as mortgage or rent payments and car payments.
Fixed IncomeIncome that stays the same from week to week or month to month. Usually refers to income from pensions or bonds.
Flexible (Floating) Exchange RateAn exchange rate that is determined by the international demand for and supply of a nation's money; a rate free to rise or fall (to float).
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)Investment that involves ownership of a firm or business in another country. FDI involves things such as constructing factories on foreign soil, rather than investing in stock markets (portfolio investment). The investing company frequently provides financial, managerial and technical assistance and other resources to the foreign country.
Foreign Exchange MarketThe market where the demand for and supply of foreign currencies determines exchange rates.
Foreign InvestmentThe purchase of financial and/or physical assets in one county by businesses or people in another county. This term can refer to either foreign direct investment or investment in foreign financial assets, such as stocks.
Fractional Reserve Banking SystemA system in which banks are required to hold only a specified fraction of their deposits available for withdrawal by depositors. The rest may be lent out, thus "creating money."
FraudWrongful or criminal deception intended to manipulate a person for the purpose of gain, usually financial.
Fraud RiskThe chance that an investment has been misrepresented.
Free RiderOne who enjoys the benefits of a good or service without paying for it.
Free TradeThe voluntary exchange of goods and services in the absence of trade barriers and restrictions.
Frictional UnemploymentUnemployment caused by the short-term movement of people between jobs and by first-time job seekers entering the labor force; always present in a dynamic economy.
Full EmploymentThe natural rate of employment; generally considered to be about 93-95 percent of the labor force, allowing for frictional unemployment of 5-7 percent.
Full-service broker Functional Distribution Functional Distribution of IncomeThe division of an economy's total income into wages and salaries, rent, interest, and profit; shows the breakdown of income received by individuals and businesses based on the type of resources provided to the productive process.
Functions of Money Future ConsequencesG
Gains from TradeThe increased output resulting from trade; with trade, each individual, region or nation is able to concentrate on producing goods and services that it produces efficiently, while trading to obtain goods and services that it does not produce.
Gift Money Gini Coefficient GlobalizationAlthough there is no one precise definition, the term usually refers to the increased flow of trade, people, investment, technology, culture and ideas among countries.
GoalSomething a person or organization plans to achieve in the future; an aim or desired result.
GoodsTangible objects that satisfy economic wants.
Government ExpendituresGoods and services provided by government and paid for by taxing and borrowing. Federal government expenditures include national defense and a system of justice. State and local government expenditures include police, roads and public education.
Government FailurePolicy and budget choices by government officials that result in inefficiency.
Government Failures/Public-Choice Analysis Government RevenuesFunds raised through taxing and borrowing to pay for government expenditures.
Government SpendingSpending by all levels of government on goods and services; includes categories like military, schools and roads.
Grace PeriodA period of time allowed for payment of money owed; after the grace period has elapsed, interest may be charged.
Great Depression Gross Domestic Product (GDP)The market value of all final goods and services produced in a country in a calendar year.
Gross IncomeA total amount of money earned (from salaries, wages, etc.) before taxes and other deductions are withheld. Also known as gross pay.
Gross PayA total amount of money earned (from salaries, wages, etc.) before taxes and other deductions are withheld. Also known as gross income.
Growth FundA mutual fund whose major objective is long-term capital growth. Growth funds offer the potential for substantial gains over time, but shares fluctuate in value during ups and downs in financial markets.
Growth stockH
Heterogeneous ProductsProducts (goods or services) that are differentiated by real or imagined differences in quality or other features, such as color, taste, styling, warranties or complimentary services provided to those who buy the products.
Homogeneous ProductsProducts (goods or services) that are identical, with no differentiating features.
Horizontal MergerA combination formed when two businesses producing the same goods or services merge.
HouseholdsIndividuals and family units that buy goods and services (as consumers) and sell or rent productive resources (as resource owners).
HousingAccommodation in houses, apartments, etc.
Human CapitalThe health, education, experience, training, skills and values of people. Also known as human resources.
Human Capital InvestmentInvestment of time, effort and resources in education and training--to increase one's own knowledge, skills, health, etc., or to develop those assets in others.
Human ResourcesThe health, education, experience, training, skills and values of people. Also known as human capital.
HyperinflationA very rapid rise in the overall price level.
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Identity TheftUnauthorized, illegal use of a person's legal and financial identification (for example, his or her Social Security number or PIN).
Imperfect CompetitionAny market structure in which firms are not price takers, but instead must seek the price and output levels that maximize their profits.
Implicit CostThe monetary income a firm sacrifices when it employs a resource it owns to produce a product rather than supplying the resource in the market; equal to what the resource could have earned in the best-paying alternative employment.
Implicit Price DeflatorA price index that compares the prices of all the goods and services produced in the current-year gross domestic product (GDP) to the price levels that prevailed for those same goods and services in an earlier year or years. The implicit price deflator is used to adjust values of nominal or current-price GDP to obtain values for real GDP.
ImportsGoods and services bought from sellers in another nation.
Impulse BuyingBuying goods or services without comparison shopping or forethought about costs and benefits.
IncentiveAny reward or benefit, such as money, advantage or good feeling, that motivates people to do something.
IncomePayments earned by households for selling or renting their productive resources. May include salaries, wages, interest and dividends.
Income EffectA portion of the effect on quantity demanded caused by a change in the price of a good or service. A fall in price, for example, increases a consumer's real income and leads to a change in the quantity demanded of that good or service.
Income Elasticity of DemandThe percentage change in the demand for a good or service divided by the percentage change in income.
Income fund Income InequalityThe unequal distribution of an economy's total income among families, individuals or other designated groups.
Income StatementThe report of the revenue generated and expenses incurred by a firm in a designated time period, such as a month, a quarter or a year.
Income stock Income TaxPayments made by individuals and corporations to the federal government (and to some state and local governments) based on income received (both earned and unearned).
Index FundA mutual fund whose objective is to match the composite investment performance of a large group of stocks or bonds such as those represented by the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite Stock Index.
Indirect RelationshipThe relationship that exists when the values of related variables move in the opposite direction. Also known as a negative relationship.
Individual Retirement Account (IRA)An account in which an individual may set aside earned income in a tax-deferred savings plan for his or her retirement. There are two types of IRAs, traditional and Roth, each with its own qualifications and rules governing contributions and withdrawals.
Inferior GoodA commodity whose quantity demanded falls when the consumer's real income rises.
InflationA rise in the general or average price level of all the goods and services produced in an economy. Can be caused by pressure from the demand side of the market (demand-pull inflation) or pressure from the supply side of the market (cost-push inflation).
Inflation RiskThe chance that the rate of inflation will exceed the rate of return on an investment.
Initial Public Offering (IPO)A company's first sale of stock to the public. When a company "goes public," it sells blocks of stock shares to an investment firm that specializes in initial offerings of stocks and resells them to the public.
InnovationA new idea or method.
Insider trading Institutional InvestorA financial intermediary, such as a pension fund or a mutual fund, that buys stock and other investments for clients.
InsuranceA practice or arrangement whereby a company provides a guarantee of compensation for specified forms of loss, damage, injury or death. People obtain such guarantees by buying insurance policies, for which they pay premiums. The process allows for the spreading out of risk over a pool of insurance policyholders, with the expectation that only a few policholders will actually experience losses for which claims must be made. Types of insurance include automobile, health, renter's, homeowner's, disability and life.
Intensive Growth InterdependenceA situation in which decisions made by one person affect decisions made by other people, or events in one part of the world or sector of the economy affect other parts of the world or other sectors of the economy.
InterestMoney paid regularly, at a particular rate, for the use of borrowed money.
Interest RateThe price paid for using someone else's money, expressed as a percentage of the amount borrowed.
Interest Rate RiskThe chance that interest rates may change (upward) while the saver is "locked in" to a (lower) rate for a time deposit (a CD, for example) or a bond.
Intermediate GoodA good that is used in the production of final goods and services.
Intermediate-Term GoalSomething a person or organization plans to achieve from one to five years in the future.
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)The government agency that collects federal income taxes.
International Monetary Fund (IMF)An international organization established to supervise exchange-rate arrangements and to lend money to member countries having difficulties meeting their financial obligations to other countries.
Inventors InventoryAn itemized list of goods held by a person or business. Also a quantity of goods held in stock.
InvestingThe process of putting money someplace with the intention of making a financial gain. Investment possibilities include stocks, bonds, mutual funds, real estate, and other financial instruments or ventures.
InvestmentThe purchase of capital goods (including machinery, technology or new buildings) that are used to produce goods and services. In personal finance, the amount of money invested in stocks, bonds, mutual funds and other investment instruments.
Investment bank Investment ReturnThe additional income earned from saving or investing money, often expressed as an annual percentage of the amount invested.
Investment, economic Investment, financial Investment, personal Invisible HandA figure of speech representing the idea that firms and individuals making decisions in their own self-interest will at the same time create economic order and promote society's interests; coined by Adam Smith.
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JobA piece of work usually done on order at an agreed-upon rate. Also a paid position of regular employment.
Junk bondK
Keogh PlanA federally-approved, tax-deferred savings program for self-employed people, allowing them to set money aside for their retirement.
Keynesian EconomicsA school of thought that emphasizes the role government plays in stabilizing the economy by managing aggregate demand.
Keynesian TheoryThe macroeconomic theory holding that business cycles are caused by changes in aggregate demand and that such cycles can and should be influenced by fiscal and monetary policy undertaken to promote economic stability.
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LaborThe quantity and quality of human effort available to produce goods and services.
Labor ForceThe people in a nation who are aged 16 or over and are employed or actively looking for work.
Labor MarketThe labor supply and labor demand curves. The intersection of the labor supply and labor demand curves determines the equilibrium wage and the quantity of hours people work at this equilibrium wage.
Labor UnionAn economic institution that represents an organized group of workers (by industry or by type of worker regardless of the industry) to negotiate with management by means of collective bargaining.
Lagging IndicatorsEconomic variables such as the prime interest rate, labor cost per unit of output, inventories to sales ratio and unemployment duration that tend to change after real output changes.
Land"Gifts of nature" that can be used to produce goods and services; for example, oceans, air, mineral deposits, virgin forests and actual fields of land. When investments are made to improve fields of land or other natural resources, those resources become, in part, capital resources. Also known as natural resources.
Late FeeIn a credit arrangement, a fee charged when payment is received after the due date.
Law of DemandAs the price of a good or service rises (or falls), the quantity of that good or service that people are willing and able to buy during a certain period of time falls (or rises).
Law of Diminishing Marginal ReturnsDescribes a phenomenon observed in all short-run production processes, when at least one input (usually capital) is fixed. As more and more units of a variable input (usually labor) are added to the fixed input, the additional (marginal) output associated with each increase in units of the variable input will eventually decline. In other words, successive increases in a variable factor of production added to fixed factors of production will result in smaller increases in output.
Law of Diminishing Marginal UtilityA widely observed relationship in which the additional satisfaction (marginal utility) associated with consuming additional units of the same product in a given amount of time eventually declines.
Law of Increasing Opportunity CostAs production of a good increases, the opportunity cost of the increase in production rises.
Law of SupplyAs the price of a good or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale during a certain period of time period rises (or falls), the quantity of that good or service supplied rises (or falls).
Leading Economic IndicatorsEconomic variables such as unemployment claims, manufacturers' new orders, stock prices, and new plant and equipment orders that tend to change before real output changes.
Legal and Social FrameworkThe system of laws, institutions, traditions and customs, and incentives that forms the basis of a society and its economy.
Legal Forms of BusinessForms of business organizations protected by a nation's laws; in the United States, the three forms of business organization are the corporation, partnership and sole proprietorship.
Legal Foundations of a Market EconomyThe laws and institutions that support a market economy; examples include protection of private property and enforcement of contracts.
LendTo grant someone the use of something, on condition that the object borrowed or its equivalent will be returned (often with interest, in the case of money).
LenderOne who lends; may be an individual or a business.
Letter of ApplicationA letter written by a job-seeker to a prospective employer in which the job-seeker may introduce himself or herself, express interest in a particular job, describe his or her qualifications for that job, request an interview and generally seek to convince the employer that he or she would make a great employee.
Levels of Competition LiabilityLegal responsibility to pay for damages or losses one has caused.
Liability Insurance CoverageAutomobile insurance that pays for costs of bodily injury and property damage when the insured person damages someone or something with his or her car.
Limit order Limited liability Liquid InvestmentsInvestments or savings (such as savings accounts and money market mutual funds) from which money can be accessed immediately.
LiquidateTo wind up the affairs of a company by identifying liabilities and selling off assets in order to make payments to creditors.
LiquidityThe ease with which savings or investments can be turned into cash.
Liquidity RiskThe chance that an investor will find it difficult to turn an investment into cash (by trying to sell a house, for example, in a down market for real estate).
Load Load fund Loan ScamAn illegal scheme in which somebody runs an advertisement, targeted to people who have run up large debts, offering a personal-debt consolidation loan on terms that seem to be very attractive. The consumer is instructed to send in a fee in order to obtain the loan. The loan never arrives.
Loanable Funds MarketMarket in which the supply and demand for money, in the form of bank deposits and loans, determine the interest rate.
Long RunA period of time long enough for firms to change the quantities of all the resources they use; the exact amount of time varies depending on the industry.
Long-Term GoalSomething a person or organization plans to achieve at least five years in the future.
Lorenz CurveM
Macroeconomic EquilibriumThe equilibrium level of output and the price level where aggregate demand equals aggregate supply.
Macroeconomic Indicators Macroeconomic PoliciesGovernment actions designed to affect economic activity in an attempt to reach one or more macroeconomic goals, such as reducing unemployment and inflation. Also called economic policies, the most common types are fiscal policy and monetary policy.
MacroeconomicsThe study of economics concerned with the economy as a whole, involving aggregate demand, aggregate supply, and monetary and fiscal policy.
Maintaining Competition Maintaining Regulation Margin requirement Marginal AnalysisA decision-making tool for comparing the additional or marginal benefits of a course of action to the additional or marginal costs.
Marginal BenefitThe additional gain from consuming or producing one more unit of a good or service; can be measured in dollars or satisfaction.
Marginal CostThe increase in a producer's total cost when it increases its output by one unit.
Marginal Physical Product (MPP)The additional quantity that is produced when one additional unit of a resource is used in combination with the same quantities of all other resources.
Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)Change in consumption as a proportion of change in disposable income; the ratio of the change in consumption to the change in disposable income that produces the change in consumption.
Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)Change in saving as a proportion of change in disposable income; the ratio of the change in saving to the change in disposable income that produces the change in saving.
Marginal Resource Product Marginal Revenue (MR)The addition to a producer's total revenue resulting from the addition of one unit to total output.
Marginal Revenue Product (MRP)The change in the total revenue of the firm when it employs one additional unit of a resource.
Marginal tax rate (or ratio) Marginal UtilityThe extra value or satisfaction that a consumer obtains from consuming one additional unit of output.
Market Market EconomyAn economy that relies on a system of interdependent market prices to allocate goods, services, and productive resources and to coordinate the diverse plans of consumers and producers, all of them pursuing their own self-interest.
Market FailuresThe systematic overproduction or underproduction of some goods and services that occurs when producers or consumers do not have to bear the full costs of transactions they undertake. Usually related to externalities or the need for public goods.
Market order Market Price RiskThe chance that the value of an investment will go down because of a change in supply and demand.
Market StructureThe degree of competition in a market, ranging from many buyers and sellers to few or even single buyers or sellers.
MarketsPlaces, institutions or technological arrangements where or by means of which goods or services are exchanged. Also, the set of all sale and purchase transactions that affect the price of some good or service.
Mathematics Maturity Median IncomeThe middle value or midpoint of incomes of people in a specified area where half of the incomes are above the middle value and half of the incomes are below it.
MedicareA federal health-care program that pays for certain medical and hospital costs for people aged 65 and older (and for some people who are under the age of 65 and disabled). Part of Social Security.
Medium-Term GoalSomething a person or organization plans to achieve from one to five years in the future.
MicroeconomicsThe study of economics concerned with individual units of the economy such as households, firms and markets; with how prices and outputs are determined in those markets; and with how the price mechanism allocates resources and distributes income.
Minimum PaymentIn a credit arrangement, the lowest amount that a borrower must pay toward the credit balance each month in order to avoid a penalty.
Monetarist TheoryA school of thought that emphasizes the role changes in the money supply play in determining national income and price level. Monetarists argue that in the long run only changes in the money supply change the price level.
Monetary IncentiveA factor related to money, income or economic wealth that encourages people to do something.
Monetary PolicyChanges in the supply of money and the availability of credit initiated by a nation's central bank to promote price stability, full employment and reasonable rates of economic growth.
MoneyAnything that is generally accepted as final payment for goods and services; serves as a medium of exchange, a store of value and a standard of value. Characteristics of money are portability, stability in value, uniformity, durability and acceptance.
Money ManagementA system for income and spending that allows for the achievement of financial and consumer goals.
Money Market AccountAn interest-bearing account similar to a checking account. Deposits may be added at any time; some money market accounts limit the withdrawals depositors may make without paying a penalty. Also known as money market deposit account.
Money Market Deposit AccountAn interest-bearing account similar to a checking account. Deposits may be added at any time; some money market deposit accounts limit the withdrawals depositors may make without paying a penalty. Also known as money market account.
Money market fund Money Market Mutual Fund (MMMF)A fund restricted by law to investing in the short-term money market. MMMFs provide low risk and low returns, but they maintain their investment value.
Money OrderA certificate purchased for a specific amount of money and signed over by the purchaser to the person or business named on the certificate.
Money SupplyNarrowly defined by economists as currency in the hands of the public plus checking-type deposits; also called M1. Other definitions of the money supply (M2, M3) include various savings deposits, money market deposits and money market mutual fund balances.
Monopolies Monopolistic CompetitionA market structure in which slightly differentiated products are sold by a large number of relatively small producers, and in which the barriers to new firms entering the market are low.
MonopolyA market structure in which there is a single supplier of a good or service. Also, a firm that is the single supplier of a good or service for which there are no close substitutes; also known as a monopolist.
MonopsonyA market situation in which there is only one buyer of a resource. Also, a firm that is the only buyer of a resource; also known as a monopsonist.
MortgageA special type of loan for the purchase of a house or other real estate.
Multinational CorporationA corporation that operates in two or more countries.
Multiplier EffectThe idea that a small increase in spending by consumers, businesses or government can cause large changes in economic production. The multiplier also works in reverse when spending decreases.
Municipal bond Mutual FundA pool of money used by a company to purchase a variety of stocks, bonds or money market instruments. Provides diversification and professional management for investors.
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NASDAQAn electronic marketplace enabling buyers and sellers to get together via computer and hundreds of thousands of miles of high-speed data lines to trade stocks. NASDAQ used to be the acronym for National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System.
National DebtThe total amount owed by the national government to those from whom it has borrowed to finance the accumulated difference between annual budget deficits and annual budget surpluses; also called public debt.
Natural MonopolyAn industry in which the advantages of large-scale production make it possible for a single firm to produce the entire output of the market at a lower average cost than a number of firms each producing a smaller quantity.
Natural Resources"Gifts of nature" that can be used to produce goods and services; for example, oceans, air, mineral deposits, virgin forests and actual fields of land. When investments are made to improve fields of land or other natural resources, those resources become, in part, capital resources. Also known as land.
Negative ExternalityA negative side effect that results when the production or consumption of a good or service affects the welfare of people who are not the parties directly involved in a market exchange. Sometimes referred to as "third-party cost" or "spillover cost," it is a cost imposed on third parties by the production or consumption of other parties.
Net asset value per share (NAV) Net ExportsExports minus imports.
Net PayThe amount of money a person receives within a pay period after taxes and other deductions are taken out of his or her paycheck.
Net WorthThe current value of a person's assets minus liabilities.
New Balance New Classical TheoryA school of thought that holds that people's expectations are important and therefore government policies will have a limited effect on the business cycle since individuals and firms will take government policies into account when making decisions. Changes in real national income are a product of unexpected changes in the level of prices.
New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)The oldest stock exchange in the United States, founded in 1792.
No-load fund Nominal Gross Domestic Product (GDP)The total market value, measured in current prices, of all final goods and services produced in a nation during a given period of time, usually one year.
Nominal Rate of ReturnThe rate of return from an investment before adjusting for inflation.
Non-clearing Markets Non-monetary IncentiveA factor not related to money, income or economic wealth that encourages people to do something.
Non-price CompetitionCompetition by firms trying to attract customers by methods other than reducing prices; examples include advertising and promotional gifts.
Non-price Determinants Non-sufficient Funds (NSF)A term or notation used by banks in reference to checks written for more than the balance in a bank customer's checking account. An NSF is, in colloquial terms, a check that bounces. Banks charge penalty fees for NSF checks.
NonexclusionA property of certain goods and services such that (once the goods or services are provided) they cannot be denied to or withheld from people who have not paid for the goods or services; examples include street lights and national defense.
Nonprofit OrganizationAn organization that is exempt from federal (and sometimes state) taxes; receives income from donors, subsidized beneficiaries and, indirectly, taxpayers; and therefore should provide its goods or services free or below cost.
Normal GoodA commodity whose quantity demanded goes up when the consumer's real income rises.
Normal Rate of ProfitProfits just high enough to compensate producers for the explicit and implicit costs (including opportunity costs) they incur in producing a particular good or service, without leading to any net entry or exit by producers in that market. Also called normal profits. Normal profits are an economic cost of production; they mark a point at which any lower level of profit would lead a producer to pursue some other use of his or her resources.
O
OccupationA job or profession; also a category of work, sometimes identified by the degree of skill required.
Odd lot OligopolyA market structure in which a few, relatively large firms account for all or most of the production or sales of a good or service in a particular market, and where barriers to new firms entering the market are very high. Some oligopolies produce homogeneous products; others produce heterogeneous products.
Open Market OperationsThe buying and selling of government bonds by the Federal Reserve to control bank reserves and the money supply.
Operating CostsThe expenses of doing business.
Opportunity CostThe second-best alternative (or the value of that alternative) that must be given up when scarce resources are used for one purpose instead of another.
Opportunity Cost of Saving for the Future OutsourcingSometimes called offshoring, outsourcing occurs when a firm in one country tries to reduce costs by locating production facilities in other countries and/or by hiring cheaper foreign workers.
Over-the-counter market (OTC) Over-the-counter stock OverdraftA check written for more than the balance in one's checking account; in colloquial terms, a check that bounces. The bank will mark such a check NSF, for "non-sufficient funds," and will charge a penalty fee for the nuisance involved in handling a bounced check.
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PACED Decision-Making ProcessA decision-making process designed to help people solve problems in a rational, systematic way. It includes the following steps: State the Problem, List Alternatives, Identify Criteria, Evaluate Alternatives, and Make a Decision.
Paper MoneyCertificates of various denominations generally recognized and accepted as a medium of exchange within a nation and elsewhere. Paper money is issued and backed by national governments or, in the case of the euro, by a group of governments.
PartnershipA business with two or more owners who share the firm's profits and losses.
Passbook Savings AccountA savings account offering high liquidity but usually a low rate of interest. Deposits and withdrawals are recorded in the saver's passbook.
Payday LoanA loan issued to a borrower who writes a post-dated check made out to a lender (usually a company specializing in payday loans and other financial services targeted to low-income customers) for the amount he or she wishes to borrow plus a fee. The lender then gives the borrower cash in the amount stated on the check, minus the fee, and holds the check until the borrower's next payday, when the lender cashes it. No credit background check is required. The cost (in fees and interest) to those who use payday loans is often high, however, when calculated as an APR.
Paying yourself first Payment Payment Due DateIn a credit arrangement, the date by which the minimum payment must be made.
Payroll DeductionAn amount of money automatically subtracted from an employee's gross pay for taxes, insurance, retirement benefits, etc.
Peak Peak Pegged Exchange RateAn exchange rate that is fixed within a certain range or against a major currency or basket of currencies.
Pension FundAn account established by a business to fund retirement benefits for its workers. Pension funds invest in stocks, bonds, mutual funds and real estate.
Per Capita Gross Domestic Product (GDP)The total market value of all final goods and services produced in an economy in a given year divided by the population.
Perfect CompetitionA market structure in which a large number of relatively small firms produce and sell identical products and in which there are no significant barriers to entry into or exit from the industry. Firms in perfect competition are price takers and in the long run will earn only normal profits.
Perfectly Elastic DemandA situation in which even the smallest change in price will cause consumers to change their consumption by a huge amount. Buyers will purchase as much of a product or resource as is available at a constant price.
Perfectly Elastic SupplyA situation in which the smallest change in price would lead to an infinite change in quantity supplied. Sellers will make available as much of the product or resource as buyers will purchase at a constant price.
Perfectly Inelastic DemandA situation in which there is no change in the quantity demanded as the price changes.
Perfectly Inelastic SupplyA situation in which supply will not change regardless of the change in price or the length of time allowed for change.
Periodic ExpenseAn expenditure that occurs occasionally and for which people budget money.
Periodic IncomeMoney received but not earned on a regular schedule--for example, from occasional baby-sitting jobs, summer jobs and gifts from relatives.
Personal Distribution of IncomeA classification of the income received by individuals or families; shows the number of people in various income categories, ranging from those receiving the highest level of income to those receiving the lowest.
Personal Finance Personal ResourcesThe time, money and skills that a person has.
Phillips Curve Physical Capital PIN (Personal Identification Number)A confidential code used to access private financial information or to make transactions (at an ATM, for example).
Planned Economic SystemAn economic system where the questions of what to produce, how to produce and for whom to produce are answered by means of a central plan rather than by markets. In the former Soviet Union, a State Planning Committee (Gosplan) oversaw planning for the production and distribution of most goods and services.
Planned SpendingThoughtful, deliberate spending, reflecting a consumer's judgment that the benefits to be obtained warrant the costs to be paid.
PortfolioA person's or an institution's collection of savings and investments.
Positive ExternalityA beneficial or positive side effect that results when the production or consumption of a good or service affects the welfare of people who are not the parties directly involved in a market exchange. Sometimes referred to as "third-party benefit" or "spillover benefit," it is a benefit obtained without compensation by third parties from the production or consumption of other parties.
Potential Gross Domestic Product (GDP)The real GDP an economy would produce if its labor and other resources were fully employed.
PovertyThe state of being poor, variously defined. Sometimes defined relatively--by reference, for example, to the average household income in a nation or region. Sometimes defined absolutely--by reference, for example, to the income needed to provide for adequate food, housing and clothing in a nation or region.
Preferred stock PremiumThe fee paid for insurance protection.
Previous BalanceIn a credit arrangement, last month's balance.
PriceThe amount of money that people pay when they buy a good or service; the amount they receive when they sell a good or service.
Price CeilingA legally established maximum price that may be charged for a good or service.
Price DiscriminationCharging different customers different prices for the same good or service.
Price earnings (P/E) ratio Price Elasticity of DemandThe responsiveness of the quantity demanded of a good or service to changes in its price. The price elasticity of demand is the percentage change in quantity demanded divided by the percentage change in price.
Price Elasticity of SupplyThe responsiveness of the quantity supplied of a good or service to changes in its price. The price elasticity of supply is the percentage change in quantity supplied divided by the percentage change in price.
Price FloorA legally established minimum price that may be charged for a good or service.
Price LeadershipAn arrangement in an oligopolistic industry in which one firm makes pricing decisions for the entire industry; one firm sets the price and the other firms follow.
Price LevelThe weighted average of the prices of all goods and services in an economy; used to calculate inflation.
Price StabilityThe absence of inflation or deflation; a broad social goal and criterion for measuring the performance of an economic system.
Price TakerA firm that is unable to set a price that differs from the market price without losing profit; a firm in a perfectly competitive industry.
Prices of Inputs Primary MarketThe market where new securities are offered for sale for the first time. Investment banks buy shares of stocks directly from corporations that issue them and sell these shares to others.
PrincipalAn original amount of money invested or lent.
Private GoodA good that provides benefits only to the purchaser.
Private PropertyA basic institution in a market economy, private property involves the right to exclusive use, legal protection against invaders and the right to transfer property to other. Property rights are defined, enforced and limited through the process of government.
Producer SurplusThe difference between the price firms would have been willing to accept for their products and the price they actually receive.
ProducersPeople and firms that use resources to make goods and services.
ProductA good or service that can be used to satisfy a want.
ProductionA process of manufacturing, growing, designing, or otherwise using productive resources to create goods or services used to to satisfy a want.
Production Possibilities FrontierA table or graph that shows the full employment capacity of an economy in the form of possible combinations of two goods, or two bundles of goods, that could be produced with a given amount of productive resources and level of technology.
Productive EfficiencyA firm operating where it produces a given quantity and quality of goods at the lowest possible cost; also known as technical efficiency.
Productive ResourcesNatural resources, human resources, capital resources and entrepreneurship used to make goods and services.
ProductivityThe amount of output (goods and services) produced per unit of input (productive resources) used.
ProfitIncome received for entrepreneurial skills and risk taking, calculated by subtracting all of a firm's explicit and implicit costs from its total revenues.
Profit MaximizationWhere MR = MC; profit is at a maximum when marginal revenue equals marginal cost.
Profit MotiveThe desire to make money which motivates or causes people to work hard to produce goods and services.
Progressive TaxA tax that take a larger percentage of income from people in higher-income groups than from people in lower-income ones; the U.S. federal income tax is an example.
Property RightsLegal protection for the boundaries and possession of property. Assigning of property rights to individuals, collectives or governments depends on the economic system.
Property TaxA tax on land and structures built on it. Payments go to state and/or local governments to pay for police protection, public schools, libraries, etc.
Proportional TaxA tax that takes the same percentage of income from people in all income groups.
Prospectus Public GoodsGoods, often supplied by the government, for which use by one person does not reduce the quantity of the good available for others to use, and for which consumption cannot be limited to those who pay for the good.
Public-Choice AnalysisThe study of decision making as it affects the organization and operation of government and other collective organizations. Involves the application of economic principles to political science topics.
PurchasesIn a credit arrangement, the total amount spent during the billing cycle.
Purchasing PowerThe amount of goods and services that a monetary unit of income can buy.
Pyramid ScamAn illegal scheme of selling goods. Participants are recruited by advertisements offering big profits to those who pay a fee for agency rights, that is, rights to sell goods as a representative of the pyramid company. Each recruited agent then recruits others to join, with each new participant paying a fee to join. The key is that each person is promised commissions not only on his or her sales but on the sales of other people they recruit as distributors.
Q
Quality ComparisonExamining products to learn whether one is better than others.
Quantity DemandedThe amount of a good or service people will buy at a given price in a given period of time.
Quantity SuppliedThe amount of a good or service sellers are willing and able to offer at a given price in a given period of time.
QuotasIn international trade, the limit on the quantity of a product that may be imported or exported, established by government laws or regulations; in command economies, more typically a production target assigned by government planning agencies to the producers of a good or service.
R
Rate of ReturnEarnings from an investment, stated as a percentage of the amount invested; usually calculated on an annual basis.
Rational ExpectationsExpectations about the future rate of inflation or other economic events that people form using all available information, including predictions about the effect of present and future policy actions by the government.
Rational Expectations TheoryA branch of New Classical theory which holds that firms and individuals have rational expectations about the economy and government policies and thus may pursue their own interests in such a way as to render those policies ineffective.
Rational IgnoranceA decision not to obtain information about political issues or candidates because the costs of doing so outweigh the benefits.
Real EstateProperty such as land, houses and office buildings.
Real Estate TaxA tax on land and structures built on it (houses, factories, etc.). Payments go to state and/or local governments to pay for police protection, public schools, libraries, etc.
Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP)GDP measured in dollars of constant purchasing power. The measure is obtained by adjusting nominal GDP (GDP measured in current prices) by an appropriate price index, usually the implicit price deflator. Often used as a measure of economic activity.
Real Interest RatesThe nominal (posted) interest rate minus the rate of inflation.
Real vs. NominalTwo ways of expressing monetary values. Nominal monetary values are measured in current prices; real monetary values are measured in constant prices, that is, in prices of a given or base period. Real monetary values are obtained by adjusting nominal monetary values with an appropriate index of prices.
Real WageThe wage rate adjusted for inflation; the purchasing power of wages, the volume of goods and services that money wages will buy.
RecessionA decline in the rate of national economic activity, usually measured by a decline in real GDP for at least two consecutive quarters (i.e., six months).
Recessionary GapThe amount by which the aggregate expenditures curve must increase (shift upward) to increase the real GDP to the full-employment noninflationary level.
Redistribution of IncomeThe transfer of income (in cash or in kind) through government taxation, spending and assistance programs targeted at particular income groups, and programs designed to provide training to workers or to encourage private investments in education or other kinds of human capital. The goal is to transfer money from higher-income groups to lower-income groups.
Regressive TaxA tax that takes a larger percentage of income from people in lower-income groups than from higher-income ones. Sales taxes and excise taxes are examples.
RegulationEconomic regulation is the prescription of price and output for a specific industry, often a natural monopoly. Social regulation is the prescription of health, safety, performance, environmental, output and job standards across several industries.
Relative PriceThe price of one good in relation to the price of another good; a measure of opportunity costs and therefore the price that affects economic decision making.
Rent to OwnAn arrangement whereby consumers rent something (often furniture), making regular rental payments, and become owners of the rented object(s) after a specified period of time--sometimes automatically and sometimes with an additional payment. A legal business but very costly to consumers.
Required ReservesThe minimum amount of cash reserves (a percentage of the deposits) in dollars that a bank is required by law to keep on hand or with the Federal Reserve.
Reserve RequirementsThe fraction of banks' deposits that they are required by law to keep on hand or with the Federal Reserve.
ResourcesThe basic kinds of resources used to produce goods and services: land or natural resources, human resources (including labor and entrepreneurship), and capital.
ResumeA document describing a job-seeker to prospective employers. Usually includes the job-seeker's name, telephone number, address, e-mail address, career objective, education, work experience, abilities, awards, offices held in organizations and special interests.
Retirement AccountsAccounts such as IRAs (Individual Retirement Accounts), SEPs (Simplified Employee Pension Plans) and Keogh Plans that allow individuals to save money toward retirement on a tax-deferred basis.
ReturnEarnings from an investment, usually expressed as an annual percentage.
RevenueThe money a business receives from customers who buy its goods and services. Not to be confused with profit.
Revolving credit RiskThe chance of losing money.
Risk of Financial LossThe chance that the value of an investment (the principal) will decrease.
Risk-return relationship Risk/Reward RatioAs applied to investments: the greater the risk, the greater the potential reward. For example: passbook savings accounts offer depositors very low risk but also low rates of interest; growth stocks are much riskier, but they offer a potential for big gains.
Role of GovernmentGovernment activity in establishing a framework or rules of the game in economic life. In the United States, this activity involves preserving and fostering competition, regulating natural monopolies, providing information and services to enable the market to work better, regulating externalities, providing certain public goods, offering some economic security and income redistribution to individuals, assuring a sound monetary system and promoting overall economic stability and growth.
Rollovers Round lot Rule of 72A mathematical rule for determining the number of years it will take for an investment to double in value. The number of years is determined by dividing 72 by the annual rate of return. Thus, an investment expected to earn interest at a rate of 8 percent will double an investor's funds in 72/8, or nine years. Dividing 72 by the number of years in which an investor wishes to double his or her return will yield the necessary rate.
S
S & P 500 Salaries SalaryA regular payment, often at monthly or biweekly intervals, made by an employer to an employee, especially in the case of professional or white-collar employees. Salaries are paid for services rendered and are not based on hours worked.
SaleAn exchange of goods or services for money.
Sales RevenueThe money a business receives from customers who buy its goods and services. Not to be confused with profit.
Sales TaxTax in the form of a percent of the cost of a good or service; paid to local and state governments when goods and services are purchased.
SaveTo keep money for future use; to divert money from current spending to a savings account or another form of investment.
Savers Saving SavingsMoney set aside for a future use that is held in easily-accessed accounts, such as savings accounts and certificates of deposit (CDs).
Savings AccountAn interest-bearing account (passbook or statement) at a financial institution.
Savings BondSecurities issued by the U.S. Treasury in relatively small denominations for individual investors. Investors who buy savings bonds in effect make a loan to the government, in return for the government's promise (represented by the bond, a nontransferable debt certificate) to repay the loan with interest. The interest is free from state and local taxation. Savings bonds are considered to be risk-free investments, since they are backed by the U.S. government.
Savings InstrumentsArrangements by means of which people save money, including savings accounts, certificates of deposit (CDs), money market deposit accounts and U.S. Savings Bonds.
Savings PlanA plan for setting aside money for future use.
SCANS SkillsGuidelines for workplace success developed by the U.S. Department of Labor Secretary's Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills in 1992. The Commission determined that success in any occupation requires basic skills (reading, writing and math), thinking skills, personal qualities, interpersonal skills and the ability to acquire and use resources, information systems and technology.
ScarcityThe condition that exists because human wants exceed the capacity of available resources to satisfy those wants; also a situation in which a resource has more than one valuable use. The problem of scarcity faces all individuals and organizations, including firms and government agencies.
Secondary EffectsEffects indirectly related to a course of action whose influence will only be seen or felt later in time.
Secondary MarketA market in which stocks can be bought and sold once they are approved for public sale; for example, the New York Stock Exchange.
Secured DebtCredit with collateral (for example, a house or a car) for the lender.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Securities indexes Security Selling short Service ChargeA fee charged by a financial institution for certain financial services provided to customers.
ServicesActivities performed by people, firms or government agencies to satisfy economic wants.
Shared ConsumptionA property of a good or service such that it can be used by many without diminishing another's ability to consume the same good; examples include street lights and radio broadcasts.
Shareholder Shift in demand Shift in supply Short RunA period of time long enough for existing firms to change some--but not all--of the resources they use.
Short-Term GoalSomething a person or organization plans to achieve within a one-year time period.
ShortageThe situation that results when the quantity demanded for a product exceeds the quantity supplied. Generally happens because the price of the product is below the market equilibrium price.
Signature CardA document bearing a person's signature, held on file in a financial institution. In cases of suspected forgery, signatures of doubtful origin can be checked against those recorded on signature cards.
Simple InterestInterest paid on the initial investment (the principal) only. Calculated by multiplying the investment principal times the annual rate of return times the number of years involved.
Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) PlanA qualified, tax-deferred retirement plan for an individual with a small business.
Social SecurityA federal system of old-age, survivors', disability and hospital care (Medicare) insurance which requires employers to withhold (or transfer) wages from employees' paychecks and deposit that money in designated accounts.
Social Security TaxA tax levied on employers and employees to finance public Social Security benefits.
Sole ProprietorshipA business owned by one person who receives all the profits and is responsible for all the debts incurred by the business.
Special Interest GroupAn organization of people with a particular legislative concern. They work together to gather information, lobby politicians and publicize their concern.
Specialist SpecializationA situation in which people produce a narrower range of goods and services than they consume. Specialization increases productivity; it also requires trade and increases interdependence.
Speculation SpendUse money now to buy goods and services.
Spending Spending DiaryA record of spending over a period of time.
Spillover BenefitA beneficial or positive side effect that results when the production or consumption of a good or service affects the welfare of people who are not the parties directly involved in a market exchange. Sometimes referred to as "third-party benefit" or "positive externality."
Spillover CostA negative side effect that results when the production or consumption of a good or service affects the welfare of people who are not the parties directly involved in a market exchange. Sometimes called "third-party cost" or "negative externality."
Standard of LivingThe level of subsistence of a nation, social class or individual with reference to the adequacy of necessities and comforts of daily life.
State Income TaxA percentage of income paid by individuals and businesses to a state government to fund services such as roads, safety and health. Not all states levy an income tax.
Statement Closing DateIn a credit arrangement, the date of the last purchase billed on the statement.
Statement Savings AccountA savings account for which the bank sends a statement detailing deposits, withdrawals and interest earned once a month or once a quarter. Interest rates for statement accounts are usually lower than rates for other savings instruments, but a depositor can open a statement account with very little money and can also withdraw money from a statement account at any time.
StockAn ownership share or shares of ownership in a corporation.
Stock certificate Stock MarketA market in which the public trades stock that someone already owns; the buying and selling of stock.
Stock market crash Stock Mutual FundA mutual fund that buys stocks in order to make profits for the investors.
Stock split Stock symbol Stockholder Structural UnemploymentThe type of unemployment resulting from people's present abilities, skills, training and location not matching up with available job openings that reflect the basic structure of the economy.
Substitute Substitute Good Substitute Goods and ServicesGoods or services that may be used in place of another good or service; examples include tap water for bottled water (or vice versa) and movies for concerts (or vice versa).
SupplyThe amount of a good or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale at each possible price during a given period of time.
Supply-Side Fiscal PolicyPolicy intended to increase an economy's productive capacity by shifting aggregate supply; e.g., a tax cut giving businesses an incentive to invest and expand.
SurplusThe situation that results when the quantity supplied of a product exceeds the quantity demanded. Generally happens because the price of the product is above the market equilibrium price.
T
Take-Home PayThe amount of money a person receives within a pay period after taxes and other deductions are taken out of his or her paycheck.
TariffA tax on an imported good or service.
Tax IncidenceA measure of who actually pays a tax.
Tax LoopholeAn omission or ambiguity in the tax law that allows some people to legally avoid paying certain taxes.
Taxation TaxesCompulsory payments to governments by households and businesses.
Technical analysis Technological ChangesImprovements in a firm's ability to produce due to improved processes, methods and machines.
Three Cs of CreditThree characteristics that determine a person's qualifications for obtaining a loan: Capital: Assets owned. Character: A person's past history in repaying debts. Capacity: A person's current and future earnings relative to current debt.
Ticker Ticker tape Tools of the Federal Reserve Total Available CreditIn a credit arrangement, the total credit line minus the new balance.
Total Cost (TC)All costs associated with producing a good or service; the sum of total fixed costs plus total variable costs.
Total Credit LineIn a credit arrangement, the maximum amount that can be charged on the credit account.
Total Revenue (TR)All money received from selling a good or service; the price times the quantity sold of each item.
TradeThe exchange of goods and services for money or other goods and services.
Trade BarriersRestrictions that prevent free trade among nations. Examples include tariffs, import and export quotas, and nontariff restrictions such as licensing requirements and bureaucratic red tape.
Trade deficit Trade-offThe giving up of one benefit or advantage in order to gain another regarded as more favorable.
Trade-offs among Goals Trading volume Traditional EconomyAn economy in which customs and habits from the past are used to resolve most economic issues of production and distribution.
Tragedy of the CommonsOveruse or misuse of a commonly-owned resource, such as public grazing land or fishing waters.
Transaction CostsCosts associated with buying or selling goods and services that are not included in the money prices of those goods and services. Examples include obtaining information on prices and product quality, searching for sellers, and bargaining costs.
Transfer PaymentsMoney collected by the government from one group and given to others. Examples include Social Security benefits, unemployment insurance payments and agricultural subsidies.
Transition EconomyAn economy that is moving from one economic system to another. The term usually refers to the movement from a planned economic system into a competitive market system.
Treasury bonds Trough Trough Truth in Lending ActA federal law that requires creditors to disclose finance charges and interest rates in a standard, uniform manner.
Types of UnemploymentU
U.S. Savings BondsSecurities issued by the U.S. Treasury in relatively small denominations for individual investors. Investors who buy U.S. Savings Bonds in effect make a loan to the government, in return for the government's promise (represented by the bond, a nontransferable debt certificate) to repay the loan with interest. The interest is free from state and local taxation. U.S. Savings Bonds are considered to be risk-free investments, since they are backed by the U.S. government.
UnemploymentThe number of people without jobs who are actively seeking work.
Unemployment RateThe number of unemployed people, expressed as a percentage of the labor force.
Unintended ConsequencesThe unexpected and unplanned results of a decision or action.
Unit PricingThe cost per unit of measurement. A way for consumers to compare the costs of different sizes of the same item.
Unplanned SpendingImpulsive use of money with little or no consideration of alternatives and resulting in unplanned consequences.
Unsecured DebtDebt without collateral; credit card debt, for example.
Usury LawA law which establishes a maximum permissible interest rate for a particular type of loan. Loans at rates above the usury ceiling are illegal.
UtilityAn abstract measure of the satisfaction consumers derive from consuming goods and services.
V
Value AddedThe difference between the value of output and the value of the intermediate goods used in the production of that output.
Value of MoneyThe ability of money to buy goods and services. A wide variety of items has been used as money. Money need not have any intrinsic value. It is people's willingness to accept it that gives it value.
Variable Costs (VC)Costs of production that change as a firm's output level changes.
Variable ExpensesExpenditures that change from week to week or month to month--for food, clothing, recreation and entertainment, for example.
Variable IncomeIncome that varies from week to week or month to month.
Velocity of MoneyThe average number of times each dollar is spent on final goods and services in a year.
Venture capital Venture capital fund Vertical MergerA combination formed when two businesses, one of which supplies an ingredient of the other's product, merge.
Voluntary ExchangeTrading goods and services with other people because both parties expect to benefit from the trade.
Voluntary TradeTrading goods and services with other people because both parties expect to benefit from the trade.
W
W-2 FormA federal income tax document that employers complete and send to their employees and to the Internal Revenue Service at the end of a year; shows employee compensation and taxes withheld.
W-4 FormA federal income tax document that instructs an employer about how much money to withhold from an employee's paycheck for tax purposes.
WagePayments for labor services that are directly tied to time worked, or to the number of units of output produced.
WantsDesires that can be satisfied by consuming or using a good or service. Economists do not differentiate between wants and needs.
WithdrawalThe removal of money by a depositor from a financial account.
WithholdingMoney taken out of an employee's paycheck and sent to the government and credited to the employee's tax bill.
WorkEffort applied to achieve a purpose or result, often for pay; skills and knowledge put to use to get something done; employment at a job or in a position; occupation, profession, business, trade, craft, etc.
Work EthicA system of values in which central importance is ascribed to work and to qualities of character believed to be promoted by work; a sense of responsibility for doing a job well.
Work SkillsAbility to do things demanded in particular jobs.
WorkersPeople employed to do work, producing goods and services.
World BankAn international organization that makes loans and provides technical expertise to developing nations.
World Trade Organization (WTO)A trade agreement among over 100 nations that specifies the level of tariffs among the signatories and attempts to resolve trade disputes.