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The economics is a . . . that studies the human behaviour as the relation between the purpose and the limited means that have alternatives applications
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The economics is a science that studies the human behaviour as the relation between the purpose and the limited means that have alternatives . . .
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The scarcity implies that there are not enough resources to produce enough to cover all the . . .
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The scarcity concept is applicated to everything . . .
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Human societies have . . . the politics to decide the priorities and the way to satisfy them
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The . . . are: households, firms and public sector
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The firms make the decisions about the production and the . . .
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The . . . takes part in the economy by redistributing the incomes
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The public sector takes part in the economy by offering, at a lower price or for free, goods and services that the society things that it must be able to receive all the . . .
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The more we spend in national security to protect our coasts from the foreign aggressors (. . .), the less we'll spend in personal goods to improve the standard of living in our country (butter)
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The . . . that forces the firms to reduce the pollution raises the cost to produce goods and services
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Higher . . . can create lower company profits, lower salaries, higher prices or all the three things at the same time
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The Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) is the group of productive factors or . . .' combinations that reach the highest production
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The Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) reflects the highest good and services' amounts that a society can produce in a fixed . . . and with ones production's factors and ones given technological knowledge
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A country with a rate of unemployment above . . .%, will always itself find in inefficient productive structure, because there is unused available labor
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The unattainable productive structure is located . . . the Possibilities Production
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The Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) is decreasing because in order to produce . . . of one good it is necessary to produce less of another
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The Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) is displaceable, this is, the unattainable points can be . . .
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The barter or exchange is to buy or to . . . by using a product or service instead of money as a exchange money
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The first sedentary communities of human beings knew . . . and shepherding, they lived longer than their nomadic ancestors and they enjoyed better security
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Bartering began with the need to exchange what is owned for what is . . .
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In spite of everything, bartering didn't disappear with the arrival of the . . .
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Civilitations have adopted several goods as money (gold, silver, other metals or minerals, wheat, bars of . . . in China, etc.)
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The states started to issue notes and . . . that gave right to the bearer to exchange them for gold or silver from the country's reserves
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Between . . . and the 1st World War the Gold Standard was mainly adopted
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Between World Wars countries tried to return to the . . ., but the economic situation and the crisis of 1929 ended the ability for an individual to convert notes to gold
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By . . . the USA's expansive fiscal politics was motivated mainly by the military expenditure in Vietnam
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In December of 1971, the president of the United States, . . ., suspended on his own the dollar conversion to gold and devalued the dollar by 10%
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The monetary authorities and the Central Banks take part in the exchange market to . . . the short-term speculative fluctuations
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In capitalism capital dominates over . . . as a element of production and creator of wealth
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In capitalism the distribution, production and prices of goods and services are usually determinated by some type of . . .
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The founding fathers of capitalism are John Locke, Juan de Mariana, . . . and Benjamin Franklin
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. . . holds that the State can increase the effective demand by avoiding the cyclical crisis
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In the centralice planning economy the market didn't send . . . because this didn't exist (false market)
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The centralice planning economy appeared after the . . . War
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The centralice planning economy got worse with . . . and his followers, when the Soviet Union was born, with the so-called one-country politics
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Although at the beginning the . . . economy was more productive than the capitalism, soon the firms stopped being productives and the State became continuously in debt to maintain the full employment
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Nowdays Russia and the East countries go toward a . . . Economy
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A production process . . . inputs into outputs (goods or services) with physical, technological, human and other types of resources
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Classic economists use the three factors that . . . defined
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. . . is rewarded by interest
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Today land is considered, a component of capital or a component of a wider natural factor (natural resources or . . .)
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To the concept of physical capital or . . . capital is added the concept of human capital or intellectual capital, even social capital, as a way of explaining the improvement of the productivity that isn't due to the other factors
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The new factors of production are: natural capital, physical capital, material labour and intangible capital (. . ., organization, non-physical but computable assests, intangible labour, knowledge economy)
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Training can be considered a form of investment, because it increases the abilities of the . . . and the production
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The division of labour, generally speaking, deals about specialization and . . . of the labour forces in tasks and roles, with the objective of improving efficiency.
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The types of division of labour are: industrial division, . . . division and collateral division
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One of the advantages of division of labour is to . . . mistakes, because the tasks that each worker executes are easier
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The . . . is the ratio of a system's outputs and inputs
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The types of productivity are: factor productivity and . . .
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The relationships between . . . nations and their colonies aren't unilateral
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The power countries need the colonies to obtain raw material and as . . . to sell their goods and/or to export their capitals
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The Grundy's Four P's are: product, price, . . . or place and advertising or promotion.
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The fims from the primary sector are mainly . . .
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The minning belongs to the . . . sector
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The firm classification according to the legal status is: firms that belong to . . . and firms that belong at a group of persons
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The firm classification according to the size is: Microenterprise, . . ., Medium-sized enterprise and Great enterprise
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The firm classification according to who is the owner is: . . . company, public sector company, mixed company and self-management company
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In a . . . company, the owners are the workers
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A . . . firm is the most important firm and it is imitated by the others
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. . . costs are used to make reports about the degree of use of productive structure
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In . . . Theory variable costs are not linear, at the beginning they are more increasing but after that they are less increasing
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Profit is total income minus total production and distribution . . .
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In Andalusia, the primary sector produces . . .% of the total
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In the last decades, in Andalusia, traditional farming has decreased and farming of wheat, rise, beetroot, . . . and sunflower has increased
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The fish farm of Riofrio, in Granada, exports 40% of its caviar production, and it competes in international markets with . . . and Iranian caviar
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The Andalusian agriculture is . . .% of the national agriculture
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Andalusia has . . .% of strontium
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The three main countries that buy Andalusian products are Germany, France and Italy with . . .% of the total exports
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What would be the added value in the first stage of the production if the wood is sold at 5 €, the wholesale chair at 20 € and the retail chair at 40 €?
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What would be the added value in the second stage of the production if the wood is sold at 5 €, the wholesale chair at 20 € and the retail chair at 40 €?
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What would be the added value in the third stage of the production if the wood is sold at 5 €, the wholesale chair at 20 € and the retail chair at 40 €?
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What would be the marginal product for three workers, if the total products, according to the number of workers are: 1-18,000, 2-34,800, 3-49,800? Two decimal numbers, by rounding (when it be necessary)
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What would be the marginal product for three workers, if the average products, according to the number of workers are: 1-15,050, 2-13,300, 3-10,500? Two decimal numbers, by rounding (when it be necessary)
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What would be the total product for three workers, if the average products, according to the number of workers are: 1-37,100, 2-33,600, 3-21,000? Two decimal numbers, by rounding (when it be necessary)
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What would be the total product for three workers, if the marginal products, according to the number of workers are: 1-63,600, 2-57,600, 3-36,000? Two decimal numbers, by rounding (when it be necessary)
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What would be the average product for three workers, if the marginal products, according to the number of workers are: 1-306,000, 2-296,000, 3-260,000? Two decimal numbers, by rounding (when it be necessary)
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What would be the average product for three workers, if the total products, according to the number of workers are: 1-260,100, 2-421,600, 3-544,000? Two decimal numbers, by rounding (when it be necessary)