Summary
Revision
Glossary
  1. Benefit: The gain or advantage received from making a particular economic decision.
  2. Capital: The man-made resources used to produce goods and services, such as machinery, tools, computers, and buildings.
  3. Consumers: Individuals or households that buy and use goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants.
  4. Costs: The sacrifices made when choosing a particular option, which may include money spent, time used, or resources consumed.
  5. Economic Problem: The problem of allocating scarce resources to satisfy unlimited human wants.
  6. Economic Sustainability: The ability of an economy to maintain stable economic growth and use resources efficiently over time.
  7. Economy: A system in which consumers, producers, and government interact to produce, distribute, and consume goods and services.
  8. Enterprise: The ability to organise the other factors of production and take risks in order to start and run a business.
  9. Entrepreneur: A person who organises the factors of production and takes risks to start or manage a business.
  10. Environmental Sustainability: The protection and conservation of natural resources and ecosystems so that they remain available for future generations.
  11. Factors of Production: The resources used to produce goods and services, including land, labour, capital, and enterprise.
  12. Government: The public authority that provides services, collects taxes, sets laws and regulations, and helps manage the economy.
  13. Interdependence: The situation where different economic groups depend on each other through production, spending, taxation, and services.
  14. Labour: The human effort used in production, including both physical and mental work as well as workers’ skills and knowledge.
  15. Land: All natural resources used in production, including soil, water, forests, minerals, oil, and other resources from nature.
  16. Opportunity Cost: The value of the next best alternative that is forgone when a decision is made.
  17. Producers: Businesses or organisations that combine resources to produce goods and services for consumers.
  18. Profit: The difference between the total revenue a business receives from sales and its total costs of production.
  19. Resources: The inputs used to produce goods and services, including the factors of production.
  20. Scarcity: The situation where limited resources are not sufficient to satisfy unlimited human wants.
  21. Social Sustainability: The ability to support the well-being and quality of life of individuals and communities over time.
  22. Sustainability: The principle of meeting present needs without preventing future generations from meeting their own needs.
  23. Unlimited Wants: The idea that human desires for goods and services are continually growing and cannot be fully satisfied.