ECO 1302 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Complementary Good, Ceteris Paribus, Marginal Utility

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Firm: an organization that transforms resources (inputs) into products (outputs). Forms are the primary producing units in a market economy. Entrepreneur: a person who organizes, manages, and assumes the risks of a firm, taking a new idea or a new product and turning it into a successful business. Households: the consuming units in an economy. The input/factor market in which households supply work for wages to firms that demand labor. Capital market: the input/factor market in which households supply their savings, for interest or for claims to future profits, to firms that demand finds to buy capital goods. Input and output markets are connected through the behavior of both firms and households. Firms determine the quantities and character of outputs produced and the types and quantities of inputs demanded. Households determine the types and quantities of products demanded and the quantities and types of inputs supplied.

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