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1. People face trade offs (opportunity costs). 2. The opportunity cost of something is what you give up to get it. 3. Rational people think in the margins (incremental changes). 4. People respond to incentives. 5. Trade can make everyone better off. 6. Marketplaces are usually a good way to organize economic activities. 7. Governments can sometimes improve a marketplace. (think property rights) 8. A country's standard of living is entirely dependent upon it's ability to produce goods and services for exchange in a marketplace. 9. Prices rise when governments print excessive amounts of currency. 10. Society faces a short-term trade off between inflation and unemployment.
Business faculty are not necessarily the highest paid in the academy. Nonetheless, on average and relative to nearly all traditional fields of study, they are highly compensated. The argument for this is usually, "the marketplace." That is, they can command more money because successful business people make more money in the marketplace. Equally important, could be, that people in business do not elect to work in universities and thus must be paid more to come. Where an English professor may dream of teaching about literature to young minds, less often a business person grows up dreaming of teaching business skills to those same young minds. This leads to many more people wanting the English professor position than the business professor position. So, less supply means business professors demand more to come. This latter scenario is at least a rival hypothesis to explain the salary variance. Maybe the true answer is somewhere in between.
The intent of copyright is to encourage creativity by making it financially viable to create for a living, by controlling scarcity in the marketplace. One would hope, therefore, that the consequence of copyright is indeed more creativity. An argument against this is that people were creating art, music, and literature long before copyright ever existed.
One of the tools, among probably many others, is comparing the yields between conventional Treasury securities and TIPS (inflation-protected securities sold by the U.S. Treasury). This can provide a useful measure of the market's expectation of future CPI inflation. Measuring inflation expectations is important because people's expectations about inflation influence their behavior in the marketplace and, in turn, have consequences for future inflation.
election of the new governor #44
an audience
It was where people bought and sold their foodstuffs and goods. It was therefore also a social meeting place, and in Athens there were perfume shops for the men where they gathered to gossip.
The past tense of beat is beat.Luke 23:48. "When all the people who had gathered to witness this sight saw what took place, they beat their breasts and went away."
The plural form is crowds of people.
It is a "collective Noun"
salesmen
Yes, the noun 'crowd' is a common noun, a general word for any a large group of people gathered together; a word for any crowd of any kind.The word 'crowd' is also a verb: crowd, crowds, crowding, crowded.
It is estimated that thousands of people attended the Passover in Jesus' day, as it was a significant religious event for the Jewish people. Jerusalem would have been crowded with pilgrims coming to celebrate the holiday.
Ochlophobia is the fear of crowds.
Yes, not all the time but sometimes to escape the massive crowds that gathered wherever he went, he'd send the double to where the people were and he'd try and make a quick exit somewhere else. He didn't use them for press stuff and concerts though.
people gathered at this place because this is the place that you can read lots of books and you can get knowledge by reading books on the library.