ECON 2000 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: Profit Maximization, Real Wages, Marginal Product

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Households receive income and use it to pay taxes to the government, to consume goods and services, and to save through the financial markets. Firms receive revenue from the sale of goods and services and use it to pay for the factors of production. Both households and firms borrow in financial markets to fund investment. The government receives revenue from taxes and utilizes it to pay for government purchases. Any excess tax revenue is called public saving. Positive public saving is a budget surplus, while negative public saving is a budget deficit. An economy"s gdp is dependent on: its quantity of inputs (the factors of production, its ability to turn inputs into output. The two most important factors of production are capital (the tools that worker"s use) and labour (the time people spend working) K denotes the amount of capital and l denotes the amount of labour.

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