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What is Economics?

The study of economics focuses on the study of the production, consumption, and transfer of wealth. Because wealth is defined in a wide variety of ways, the study of economics can be construed narrowly or broadly, and is interrelated with the study of sociology, philosophy, history, psychology, and culture. Economics is viewed, by some, as the study of scarcity, but economic principles apply even when resources are not scarce. It is also considered the study of resources. Many people believe that economics is primarily about money or financial resources because economic study focuses on topics like banking, wealth, and finances. However, economics is not synonymous with finance. Finance refers to the management, creation or study of money, banking, credit, investments, assets and liabilities. It consists of financial systems and financial instruments and is divided into three sub-categories: public finance, corporate finance, and personal finance. Economics includes those areas, but is not limited to them. Furthermore, an education in economics is not only useful in economics-specific careers such as accountant, economist, financial risk analyst, investment analysis, and statistician, but also teaches skills that are transferable to other areas and industries. Macroeconomics examines the economy from the broader perspective. It looks at economic trends including: inflation, deflation, recession, depression, price levels, wage levels, employment, unemployment, gross domestic product, national income, and rate of growth. Macroeconomics is concerned with monetary policy, which, in the United States, is set by the Federal Reserve, often referred to as the Fed; international trade policies; tax policies; aggregate demand; and aggregate supply. Microeconomics examines the economy from a narrower perspective. It looks at how individuals, whether people or firms, interact in the market, and at specific buyer-seller transactions. However, in an increasingly global economy, with large firms dominating some areas of industry, it can become difficult to separate microeconomic and macroeconomic studies. Elasticity refers to the change in consumer demand. Demand for some products remains fairly stable, regardless of fluctuations in price. For example, the demand for water is fairly non-elastic. However, when there are substitute goods available, demand for a product may be very elastic. Microeconomics also examines income distribution, particularly income inequality. It also looks at how different types of ownership can alter the basic rules of supply and demand. For example, monopolies and oligopolies, where either a single or a small number of companies control all of a product, can artificially inflate prices. Another critical component of economic studies is an understanding of supply and demand. Demand refers to how willing people are to purchase a particular product. In other words, what is the desire or need for that product. Supply refers to how much of the product is available. Supply does not refer only to the total amount of the good or resource that is available, but to the amount of the resource or good that is accessible. Generally, as demand rises, prices also rise, and sellers are likely to make a greater supply available at that cost. However, as supply rises, then the price that can be charged for the item tends to drop, even if there is no decrease in overall demand, because consumers can search for a less expensive option. Market equilibrium refers to the market price at which buyers will buy the same number of goods that sellers are willing to sell at a particular market price. [ Show Less ]

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Paper Doctorate
Adjusting the economics in the USA
The financial crisis has driven Obama's government to a fiscal cliff that seems particularly depressing. Come midnight, December 31, 2012, and certain laws are set to change including introduction of a 2% tax increase for workers, elimination of certain tax breaks for businesses, elevation in the alternative minimum tax, elimination of tax cuts from 2001-2003, and the beginning of taxes associated with Obama's health care law. Spending cuts will also go into effect for more than 1000 government programs including the defense budget and Medicare. The prospects of the fiscal cliff are attractive for few parties outside of Obama himself. It is a concern for investors and the impact on the economy may be huge. We are barely out of one recession, but the CBO estimates that the policies of the fiscal cliff would cut gross domestic product (GDP) by four percentage points in 2013, sending the economy straight into another recession. Simultaneously, unemployment would rise by almost a full percentage point, with a loss of about two million jobs (Kenny, nd). Dealing with significant unemployment as we are at eh moment in conjunction with the imminent problem of hitting the "debt ceiling", the country is ill-prepared for dealing with any ‘fiscal cliff'. This essay proposes that tax increase is necessary to pass through this current fiscal crisis and that the government should raise tax not only on all of its wealthy citizens (not just corporations) but also on the middle-class populace.
Paper High School
Teens and the Media One
Culture in the modern age is characterized by more complexity than ever before; particularly after the mass use of the Internet. Each particular ethnicity and culture must adapt into the culture as a hole, yet the way the Internet has changed the way humans act with each other has no precedent in history – not even the telephone changed culture this dramatically.
Paper Undergraduate
Cognitive bias in decision making
My main cognitive shortfall that I suffer from is my-confirmation, perhaps otherwise called naive realism.
Essay Doctorate
Requirements documentation and upload processes
Consumer behavior was described by Levitt to be "homogenized". This paper give a critique of Levitt's paper which gave this assertion. Levitt's argument is applicable to the current market situation where everyone wants to by what everyone else is buying. This is presented with a collage from two respondents from two different countries.
Paper Undergraduate
Risk Management Diversified Worldwide Industries
Diversified Worldwide Industries faces a number of different risk types. Operating in a number of different businesses in a number of different countries helps to diversify away some of the risk, but the organization…
Essay Masters
Children's literature: themes, genres, and educational impact
Two classics of nineteenth century American children's literature--Mark Twain's Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Louisa May Alcott's Little Women--are discussed in terms of the issues of work and play. Tom Sawyer's episode of fence-whitewashing is discussed, in terms of how it presents children's work and play as a parody of capitalism. Alcott's description of the "experiment" of all play and no work for the March sisters is examined in terms of how women's work is defined socially. In both cases, the issue of slavery is brought up to provide a point of comparison to the child's problematic role in the economy of work.
Paper Doctorate
Religion Good for Children? Faith and Religion
This article examines whether religion is good for children since religion has continued to play a significant role in the development of the society throughout the history of mankind. The paper seeks to demonstrate that while parents consider religion an important step in raising their children, the main concern is whether it's good for kids. In attempts to answer this question, the article begins with evaluating religion and children and then shows why religion is good for kids.
Essay Undergraduate
Economic Evaluation in Health Care
The passage of ObamaCare in 2010 represented a seismic shift in the healthcare market and brought the overall debate about the right balance of government intervention, taxation and consumer responsibility. This research proposal and information seeks to find out whether the current state of affairs is the right one and, if not, what is the right move.
Essay Undergraduate
Role of Behavioral Economics in Business Decision-Making Process
Many academics advocate that markets are "efficient." They argue that all stock and business information is embedded in the current price of an asset. As new information enters the market, the asset price immediately adjusts to reflect the new market sentiment. As a result of these efficient markets, investors can only hope to achieve the market rate of return given the amount of risk taken. There is very little opportunity, according to the academics to achieve higher rates of return in regards to capital expenditures than the overall market warrants. It is my contention however that the markets are inefficient in both valuations and subsequent reappraisals of assets and capital projects. Behavior finance and the teachings embedded within its theories are proof of the inefficient market theory
Term Paper Doctorate
Paul Tough the Book, Whatever it Takes,
Whatever It Takes – Paul Tough Introduction The book, Whatever It Takes, by Paul Tough became a best seller because it captured the attention of people in both a scholarly way and yet because of its easy-to-read, entertaining format, and because the issues that Tough writes about are very important to the future of America. That important issue involves education and getting families from disadvantaged communities to rise up and seize opportunities to become enriched socially and economically. Tough highlights the ups and the downs of an expensive, 97-block project called the Harlem Children's Zone. This paper reviews and critiques the book. Thesis: An impoverished community can be awakened to a fresh new approach to education, and with cooperation and hard work, the children in that community can be given a far better future. This book is the perfect illustration of important socioeconomic transitions that must take place for that brighter future.