Hint | Answer |
an increase in the nations capacity to provide goods and services to people. | |
the improvement of human living standards through economic growth. | |
a goal to use political and economic systems to encourage environmentally beneficial and more sustainable forms of economic development and to discourage environmentally harmful a | |
attempt to boost economic growth by increasing the flow of matter and energy resources extracted from the environment though their economic systems to produce goods and services. | |
an estimate of resource's future economic value compared to its present value. | |
includes resources and services produced by the earth's natural processes, which support all economies and all life. | |
includes people's physical and mental talents that provide labor, organizational and management skills, and innovation | |
refers to items such as machinery, equipment, and factories made from natural resources with the help of human resources | |
| Hint | Answer |
a social institution through which good and services are produced | |
a widely used tool for making economic decisions about how to control pollution and manage resources | |
the annual market value of all goods and services produced by all firms and organizations, foreign and domestic, operating within a country. | |
GDP plus the estimated value of beneficial transactions that meet the basic needs, but in which no money changes hands, minus the estimated harmful environmental, health and social | |
a deceptive practice that some businesses use to spin environmental harmful products and services as green, clean, or environmentally beneficial. | |
recycling and reusing most matter outputs instead of duping them into the environment. | |
the GDP divided by a country's total population at midyear | |
by controlling human population growth, greatly reducing poverty, using and washing less matter and energy resource, and reusing, recycling, or composting most matter resources | |
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