C
Capital 資本
The equipment and structures used to produce goods and services
Capital flight 資本外流
A large and sudden reduction in the demand for assets located in a country
Cartel 卡特爾
A group of firms acting in unison
Catch-up effect 追趕效應(yīng)
The property that countries that start off poor tend to grow more rapidly than countries that start off rich
Central bank 中央銀行
An institution designed to oversee the banking system and regulate the quantity of money in the economy
Ceteris paribus 其它條件相同
A Latin phrase, translated as ’other things being equal,’ used as a reminder that all variables other than the ones being studied are assumed to be constant
Circular-flow diagram 循環(huán)流向圖
A visual model of the economy that shows how dollars flow through markets among households and firms
Classical dichotomy 古典二分法
The theoretical separation of nominal and real variables
Closed economy 封閉經(jīng)濟(jì)
An economy that does not interact with other economies in the world
Coase theorem 科斯定理
The proposition that if private parties can bargain without cost over the allocation of resources, they can solve the problem of externalities on their own
Collective bargaining 集體談判
The process by which unions and firms agree on the terms of employment
Collusion 勾結(jié)
An agreement among firms in a market about quantities to produce or prices to charge
Commodity money 商品貨幣
Money that takes the form of a commodity with intrinsic value
Common resources 共有資源
Goods that are rival but not excludable
Comparable worth 同工同酬
A doctrine according to which jobs deemed comparable should be paid the same wage
Comparative advantage 比較優(yōu)勢(shì)
The comparison among producers of a good according to their opportunity cost
Compensating wage differential 補(bǔ)償性工資差別
A difference in wages that arises to offset the nonmonetary characteristics of different jobs
Competitive market 競爭市場
A market with many buyers and sellers trading identical products so that each buyer and seller is a price taker
Complements 互補(bǔ)品
Two goods for which an increase in the price of one good leads to a decrease in the demand for the other good
Constant returns to scale 規(guī)模收益不變
The property that long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity of output changes
Consumer price index 消費(fèi)物價(jià)指數(shù)
A measure of the overall cost of the goods and services bought by a typical consumer
Consumer surplus 消費(fèi)者剩余
A buyer’s willingness to pay minus the amount the buyer actually pays
Consumption 消費(fèi)
Spending by households on goods and services, with the exception of purchases of new housing
Cost 成本
The value of everything a seller must give up to produce a good
Cost-benefit analysis 成本—收益分析
A study that compares the costs and benefits to society of providing a public good
Crowding-out effect 擠出效應(yīng)The offset in aggregate demand that results when expansionary fiscal policy raises the interest rate and thereby reducesinvestment spending
Currency 通貨
The paper bills and coins in the hands of the public
Cyclical unemployment 周期性失業(yè)
The deviation of unemployment from its natural rate
capital gain 資本增值
the increase in the value of an asset between the time it is purchased and the time it is sold
capital market 資本市場
the market in which savings are made available to investors
categorical assistance 分類幫助
public assistance aimed at a particular category of people, like the elderly or the disabled
causation 因果關(guān)系
relationship that results when an change in one variable is not only correlated with but actually causes the change in another one
central planning 中央計(jì)劃
the system in which central government bureaucrats (as opposed to private entrepreneurs or even local government bureaucrats) determine what will be produced an how it will be produced
centralization 集權(quán)
organizational structure in which decision making is concentrated at the top
centrally planned economy 中央計(jì)劃經(jīng)濟(jì)
an economy in which most decisions about resource allocation are made by the central government
certificate of deposit (CD) 存單
account in which money is deposited for a preset length of time, that must yield a slightly higher return to compensate for the reduced liquidity
circular flow 循環(huán)流程
how funds move through the capital, labor, and product markets between households, firms, the government, and the foreign sector
classical economists 古典經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家
economists prevalent before the Great Depression who believed that the basic competitive model provided a good description of the economy and that if short periods of unemployment did occur, market forces would quickly restore the economy to full employment
classical unemployment 古典失業(yè)
unemployment that results from too-high real wages; it occurs in the supply constrained equilibrium, so that rightwards shifts in aggregate supply reduce the level of unemployment
competitive equilibrium price 競爭性均衡價(jià)格
the price at which the quantity supplied and the quantity demanded are equal to each other
consumer protection legislation 消費(fèi)者保護(hù)法
laws aimed at protecting consumers, for instance by assuring that consumers have more complete information about items they are considering buying
consumer sovereignty 消費(fèi)者權(quán)益
the principle that holds that each individual is the best judge of what makes him better off
consumption function 消費(fèi)函數(shù)
the relationship between disposable income and consumption
contingency clauses 應(yīng)變條款
statements within a contract that make the level of payment or the work to be performed conditional upon various factors
corporate income tax 公司所得稅
a tax based on the income, or profit, received by a corporation
correlation 相關(guān)
relationship that results when a change in one variable is consistently associated with a change in another one
cost-push inflation 成本推動(dòng)型通貨膨脹
inflation whose initial cause is a rise in production costs
Cournot competition 古諾競爭
an oligopoly in which each firm believes that its rivals are committed to a certain level of production and that rivals will reduce their prices as needed to sell that amount
credentials competition 文憑競爭
the trend in which prospective workers acquire higher educational credentials, not so much because of anything they actually learn in the process but to onvince potential employers to hire them by signaling that they will be more productive employees than those with weaker credentials
credit constraint effect 信貸約束效應(yīng)
when prices fall, firms’ revenues also fall, but the money they owe creditors remains unchanged; as a result, firms have fewer funds of their own to invest. Because of credit rationing, firms cannot make up the difference; accordingly, investment decreases
credit rationing 信貸配給
credit is rationed when no lender is willing to make a loan to a borrower or the amount lenders are willing to lend to borrowers is limited, even if the borrower is willing to pay more than other borrowers of comparable risk who are getting loans
cross subsidization 交叉補(bǔ)貼
the practice of charging higher prices to one group of consumers in order to subsidize lower prices for another group
Capital 資本
The equipment and structures used to produce goods and services
Capital flight 資本外流
A large and sudden reduction in the demand for assets located in a country
Cartel 卡特爾
A group of firms acting in unison
Catch-up effect 追趕效應(yīng)
The property that countries that start off poor tend to grow more rapidly than countries that start off rich
Central bank 中央銀行
An institution designed to oversee the banking system and regulate the quantity of money in the economy
Ceteris paribus 其它條件相同
A Latin phrase, translated as ’other things being equal,’ used as a reminder that all variables other than the ones being studied are assumed to be constant
Circular-flow diagram 循環(huán)流向圖
A visual model of the economy that shows how dollars flow through markets among households and firms
Classical dichotomy 古典二分法
The theoretical separation of nominal and real variables
Closed economy 封閉經(jīng)濟(jì)
An economy that does not interact with other economies in the world
Coase theorem 科斯定理
The proposition that if private parties can bargain without cost over the allocation of resources, they can solve the problem of externalities on their own
Collective bargaining 集體談判
The process by which unions and firms agree on the terms of employment
Collusion 勾結(jié)
An agreement among firms in a market about quantities to produce or prices to charge
Commodity money 商品貨幣
Money that takes the form of a commodity with intrinsic value
Common resources 共有資源
Goods that are rival but not excludable
Comparable worth 同工同酬
A doctrine according to which jobs deemed comparable should be paid the same wage
Comparative advantage 比較優(yōu)勢(shì)
The comparison among producers of a good according to their opportunity cost
Compensating wage differential 補(bǔ)償性工資差別
A difference in wages that arises to offset the nonmonetary characteristics of different jobs
Competitive market 競爭市場
A market with many buyers and sellers trading identical products so that each buyer and seller is a price taker
Complements 互補(bǔ)品
Two goods for which an increase in the price of one good leads to a decrease in the demand for the other good
Constant returns to scale 規(guī)模收益不變
The property that long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity of output changes
Consumer price index 消費(fèi)物價(jià)指數(shù)
A measure of the overall cost of the goods and services bought by a typical consumer
Consumer surplus 消費(fèi)者剩余
A buyer’s willingness to pay minus the amount the buyer actually pays
Consumption 消費(fèi)
Spending by households on goods and services, with the exception of purchases of new housing
Cost 成本
The value of everything a seller must give up to produce a good
Cost-benefit analysis 成本—收益分析
A study that compares the costs and benefits to society of providing a public good
Crowding-out effect 擠出效應(yīng)The offset in aggregate demand that results when expansionary fiscal policy raises the interest rate and thereby reducesinvestment spending
Currency 通貨
The paper bills and coins in the hands of the public
Cyclical unemployment 周期性失業(yè)
The deviation of unemployment from its natural rate
capital gain 資本增值
the increase in the value of an asset between the time it is purchased and the time it is sold
capital market 資本市場
the market in which savings are made available to investors
categorical assistance 分類幫助
public assistance aimed at a particular category of people, like the elderly or the disabled
causation 因果關(guān)系
relationship that results when an change in one variable is not only correlated with but actually causes the change in another one
central planning 中央計(jì)劃
the system in which central government bureaucrats (as opposed to private entrepreneurs or even local government bureaucrats) determine what will be produced an how it will be produced
centralization 集權(quán)
organizational structure in which decision making is concentrated at the top
centrally planned economy 中央計(jì)劃經(jīng)濟(jì)
an economy in which most decisions about resource allocation are made by the central government
certificate of deposit (CD) 存單
account in which money is deposited for a preset length of time, that must yield a slightly higher return to compensate for the reduced liquidity
circular flow 循環(huán)流程
how funds move through the capital, labor, and product markets between households, firms, the government, and the foreign sector
classical economists 古典經(jīng)濟(jì)學(xué)家
economists prevalent before the Great Depression who believed that the basic competitive model provided a good description of the economy and that if short periods of unemployment did occur, market forces would quickly restore the economy to full employment
classical unemployment 古典失業(yè)
unemployment that results from too-high real wages; it occurs in the supply constrained equilibrium, so that rightwards shifts in aggregate supply reduce the level of unemployment
competitive equilibrium price 競爭性均衡價(jià)格
the price at which the quantity supplied and the quantity demanded are equal to each other
consumer protection legislation 消費(fèi)者保護(hù)法
laws aimed at protecting consumers, for instance by assuring that consumers have more complete information about items they are considering buying
consumer sovereignty 消費(fèi)者權(quán)益
the principle that holds that each individual is the best judge of what makes him better off
consumption function 消費(fèi)函數(shù)
the relationship between disposable income and consumption
contingency clauses 應(yīng)變條款
statements within a contract that make the level of payment or the work to be performed conditional upon various factors
corporate income tax 公司所得稅
a tax based on the income, or profit, received by a corporation
correlation 相關(guān)
relationship that results when a change in one variable is consistently associated with a change in another one
cost-push inflation 成本推動(dòng)型通貨膨脹
inflation whose initial cause is a rise in production costs
Cournot competition 古諾競爭
an oligopoly in which each firm believes that its rivals are committed to a certain level of production and that rivals will reduce their prices as needed to sell that amount
credentials competition 文憑競爭
the trend in which prospective workers acquire higher educational credentials, not so much because of anything they actually learn in the process but to onvince potential employers to hire them by signaling that they will be more productive employees than those with weaker credentials
credit constraint effect 信貸約束效應(yīng)
when prices fall, firms’ revenues also fall, but the money they owe creditors remains unchanged; as a result, firms have fewer funds of their own to invest. Because of credit rationing, firms cannot make up the difference; accordingly, investment decreases
credit rationing 信貸配給
credit is rationed when no lender is willing to make a loan to a borrower or the amount lenders are willing to lend to borrowers is limited, even if the borrower is willing to pay more than other borrowers of comparable risk who are getting loans
cross subsidization 交叉補(bǔ)貼
the practice of charging higher prices to one group of consumers in order to subsidize lower prices for another group