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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 Undergraduate
Foreign exchange risk management strategies and practices
Foreign Exchange Risk Management in the Companies of the Steel Industry in Eastern European Countries
Paper Doctorate
Economic Issues in Alcohol: Marketing,
The ethics and economics of marketing alcohol to consumers who can legally consume it and even to those who are under age is discussed in the article the Economic Issues in Alcohol: Marketing, Business & Money (Hanson,…
Paper Doctorate
Fashion industry sustainability and the role of local production
This study stated the objective of answering the question of how sustainability applies to local fashion production and to explain the connection between global fashion industries and fast fashion business to the sustainability fashion products. From the literature reviewed in this study, it is very clear that local fashion sustainability and the global fashion industry serve to support and bolster one another as the global fashion industry through using local sustainable fashion products support the continued proper use of resources and through using these resources the global fashion industry is publicly held to be ethical and something that consumers do not mind spending their hard earned money on. The global fashion industry when using for example, crocodile skins, uses a product that is sustainable and that continues to be sustainable due to the investment of the global fashion industry in this products and the same is true of other such products.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Fiscal and federal policy
¶ … policies, discuss the way fiscal policy can influence the macroeconomics aspects related to one country and how and when the full employment situation can be achieved. The conclusions at the end will sum up the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Locke One of the Single
One of the single most influential characters in the history of nation building is John Locke. His theories and writings demonstrate a basis for support of actions that had already been taken to eliminate monarchical…
Paper Masters
Labor Economics -- the Ripple
The litany of dry unemployment data read from a teleprompter by an attractive, well-groomed cable TV newsreader tends to go in and out of the ears of many Americans. Those out of work probably don't want to hear any…
Paper Doctorate
Rationalist theories in international relations: critique and alternative perspectives
Rationalist Theories of International Relations
Research Paper Undergraduate
For-Profit Education vs. Non-Profit Education
RESEARCH on for-PROFIT SCHOOLS and UNIVERSITIES
Paper Undergraduate
Charles P. Kindleberger in 1978,
In 1978, MIT Professor Emeritus Charles P. Kindleberger published Manias, Panics and Crashes. There had been a long gap in literature on the subject of speculative bubbles and subsequent crashes, but Kindleberger was…
Paper Undergraduate
Church and Colonial Latin America
The relationship between the Catholic Church and Latin America is one that goes back to the earliest history of European Spain's first explorations of South America. The Church has had an integral role in the…