Macroeconomics: GDP, Employment, and Economic Indicators

Macroeconomics: This study deals with the overall functioning of the economy of a territory, region, or country through economic indicators that measure production and prices.

Production => GDP Employment Rates. Microeconomics studies the behavior of prices and products. If prices increase, people can’t buy as many things with the same amount of money. This can cause companies to reduce production and potentially lay off workers, leading to lower employment.

Production => GDP. GDP is the monetary

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Funding Sources & Financial Statements: A Business Guide

Business Funding Sources

There are many sources of finance that a business can leverage to gain the required funding for expansion and other activities. These are broken up into three different categories:

Short Term Finance

  • Bank Overdraft: Overdrawing on an account, incurring interest charges based on the duration of the overdraft.
  • Short Term Loan: Borrowing a sum of money from a bank for a set period, with interest payable on top of the original sum.
  • Bill of Exchange: Similar to an IOU; suppliers can
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Understanding Lorenz Curve, Monopsony, Perfect Competition, and Labor Market Dynamics

Lorenz Curve and Income Inequality

The Lorenz curve is used to measure income distribution inequality within a country and compare it to other countries. It relates the percentage of the total population to their share of total income, starting with the poorest. To construct the curve, individuals or families are ranked by income level, from poorest to richest.

Income is grouped into segments, and each group’s income is expressed as a percentage of GDP. For example, the poorest 10% of the population

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Tertiary Economic Activities: Services, Trade, Transport

The Tertiary Sector

The tertiary sector comprises activities not dedicated to producing goods, but rather providing services.

Classification of Services

By Management

  • Public Services: Managed by the state, municipalities, autonomous communities, etc. Examples include education and health services.
  • Private Services: Offered by private companies.

By Function

  • Social Services: Satisfy specific societal needs.
  • Administrative Services: Handle various governmental or organizational functions.
  • Financial Services:
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Factor Markets, Labor Unions, and International Trade

Factor Markets

Factor Price Searcher

A firm that faces an upward-sloping supply curve for resources or factors is a factor price searcher.

Marginal Revenue Product (MRP)

MRP is calculated as Marginal Revenue (MR) multiplied by Marginal Physical Product (MPP). MRP = MR x MPP

Marginal Factor Cost (MFC)

MFC is the additional cost generated by employing an additional factor unit.

Factor Demand

A firm’s factor demand curve is its marginal revenue product (MRP) curve. The MRP curve slopes downward for a product

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Understanding the 2008 Financial Crisis: A Detailed Analysis

The 2008 Financial Crisis: A Detailed Analysis

2001-2006: Phase of Liquidity Degradation in Subprime Lending. The credit crisis begins to expand due to central bank stimuli aimed at paying back banks and securitizing their loans. Investment banks shift away from short-term debts that are renewed daily.

Therefore, interest rates fall dramatically, reducing the WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital), and projects with very low ROA (Return on Assets) become profitable. Families begin to demand housing,

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