Glossary Terms:

Focus on Economic Data: Consumer Price Index and Inflation, March 18, 2010

Glossary terms from:
http://www.econedlink.org/e903


Business

Any activity or organization that produces or exchanges goods or services for a profit.

Check

A written order to a financial institution directing the financial institution to pay a stated amount of money, as instructed, from the customer's account.

Consumer Price Index (CPI)

A price index that measures the cost of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services and compares the cost of this basket in one time period with its cost in some base period. Changes in the CPI are used to measure inflation.

Consumers

People who use goods and services to satisfy their personal needs and not for resale or in the production of other goods and services.

Credit

The opportunity to borrow money or to receive goods or services in return for a promise to pay later.

Deflation

A sustained decrease in the average price level of all the goods and services produced in the economy.

Federal Reserve

The central bank of the United States. Its main function is controlling the money supply through monetary policy. The Federal Reserve System divides the country into 12 districts, each with its own Federal Reserve bank. Each district bank is directed by its nine-person board of directors. The Board of Governors, which is made up of seven members appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate to 14-year terms, directs the nation's monetary policy and the overall activities of the Federal Reserve. The Federal Open Market Committee is the official policy-making body; it is made up of the members of the Board of Governors and five of the district bank presidents.

Goods

Tangible objects that satisfy economic wants.

Households

Individuals and family units that buy goods and services (as consumers) and sell or rent productive resources (as resource owners).

Housing

Accommodation in houses, apartments, etc.

Inflation

A rise in the general or average price level of all the goods and services produced in an economy. Can be caused by pressure from the demand side of the market (demand-pull inflation) or pressure from the supply side of the market (cost-push inflation).

Insurance

A practice or arrangement whereby a company provides a guarantee of compensation for specified forms of loss, damage, injury or death. People obtain such guarantees by buying insurance policies, for which they pay premiums. The process allows for the spreading out of risk over a pool of insurance policyholders, with the expectation that only a few policholders will actually experience losses for which claims must be made. Types of insurance include automobile, health, renter's, homeowner's, disability and life.

Interest

Money paid regularly, at a particular rate, for the use of borrowed money.

Labor

The quantity and quality of human effort available to produce goods and services.

Markets

Places, institutions or technological arrangements where or by means of which goods or services are exchanged. Also, the set of all sale and purchase transactions that affect the price of some good or service.

Price

The amount of money that people pay when they buy a good or service; the amount they receive when they sell a good or service.

Price Level

The weighted average of the prices of all goods and services in an economy; used to calculate inflation.

Producers

People and firms that use resources to make goods and services.

Product

A good or service that can be used to satisfy a want.

Production

A process of manufacturing, growing, designing, or otherwise using productive resources to create goods or services used to to satisfy a want.

Recession

A decline in the rate of national economic activity, usually measured by a decline in real GDP for at least two consecutive quarters (i.e., six months).

Services

Activities performed by people, firms or government agencies to satisfy economic wants.

Unemployment

The number of people without jobs who are actively seeking work.

Utility

An abstract measure of the satisfaction consumers derive from consuming goods and services.

Wage

Payments for labor services that are directly tied to time worked, or to the number of units of output produced.

Workers

People employed to do work, producing goods and services.