Labor Supply
Terms
Aggregate Demand
-
The combined demand of all buyers in a market.
Aggregate Supply
-
The combined supply of all sellers in a market.
Budget Constraint
-
Outermost boundary of possible purchase combinations that a person can
make given how much money they have and the price of the goods in
consideration.
Buyer
-
Someone who purchases goods and services from a seller for money.
Demand
-
Demand refers to the amount of goods and services that buyers
are willing to purchase. Typically, demand decreases with increases in
price; this trend can be graphically represented with a demand curve.
Demand can be affected by changes in income, changes in price, and changes in
relative price.
Demand Curve
-
A demand curve is the graphical representation of the relationship between
quantities of goods and services that buyers are willing to purchase and
the price of those goods and services.
Equilibrium Price
-
The price of a good or service at which quantity supplied is equal to
quantity demanded. Also called the market-clearing price.
Equilibrium Quantity
-
Amount of goods or services sold at the equilibrium price.
Because supply is equal to demand at this point, there is no surplus
or shortage.
Firm
-
Unit of sellers in microeconomics. Because it is seen as one
selling unit in microeconomics, a firm will make coordinated efforts to
maximize its profit through sales of its goods and services. The
combined actions and preferences of all firms in a market will
determine the appearance and behavior of the supply curve.
Goods and Services
-
Products or services that are bought and sold. In a market economy,
competition among buyers and sellers sets the market
equilibrium, determining the price and the quantity sold.
Horizontal addition
-
The process of adding together all quantities demanded at each price
level to
find aggregate supply or aggregate demand.
Income Effect
-
Income effect describes the effects of changes in prices on consumption.
According to the income effect, an increase in price causes a buyer
to feel poorer, lowering the quantity demanded, and vice versa. Although the
buyer's actual income hasn't changed, the change in price makes the buyer feel
as if it has.
Indifference Curve
-
Graphical representation of different combinations of goods and
services that give a consumer equal utility or happiness.
Labor market
-
A large group of firms and workers in the same industry: the firms
want to hire workers, the workers want jobs. The interaction between the two
groups determines the market wage and quantity of labor used.
Market
-
A large group of buyers and sellers who are buying and selling
the
same good or service.
Market-clearing Price
-
The price of a good or service at which quantity supplied is
equal to
quantity demanded. Also called the equilibrium price.
Normal Good
-
A normal good is a good for which an increase in income causes an
increase in demand, and vice versa.
Optimization
-
To maximize utility by making the most effective use of available
resources, whether they be money, goods, or other factors.
Seller
-
Someone who sells goods and services to a buyer for money.
Substitution Effect
-
Describes the effects of changes in relative prices on consumption.
According to the substitution effect, an increase in price of one good
causes a buyer to buy more of the other, substituting good, since the first
good has become relatively expensive with respect to the second good, and vice
versa. The buyer substitutes consumption of the second good for consumption of
the first. For more detailed information about the substitution effect, click
here.
Supply
-
Supply refers to the amount of goods and services that sellers
are willing to sell. Typically, supply increases with increases in
price, this trend can be graphically represented with a supply curve.
Supply Curve
-
A supply curve is the graphical representation of the relationship between
quantities of goods and services that sellers are willing to sell and
the price of those goods and services.
Utility
-
An approximate measure for levels of "happiness."
Wage
-
Price per unit of time when the good being sold is some form of labor or
work (instead of a physical product).




