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INDUCED SAVING: Household saving that depends on income or production (especially disposable, national income, or gross national product). An increase in household disposable income triggers an increase in induced saving. Induced saving is graphically depicted as the slope of the saving or propensity-to-save line, and is measured by the marginal propensity to save. The induced relation between income and saving, as well as induced expenditures, form the foundation of the multiplier effect triggered by changes in autonomous expenditures.
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INCENTIVE A cost or benefit that motivates a resource allocation decision or other action by consumers, businesses, or other participants in the economy. Incentives can be monetary or nonmonetary. A few of the more important incentives affecting economic decisions are prices, taxes, and government regulations.
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BLACK DISMALAPOD [What's This?]
Today, you are likely to spend a great deal of time flipping through mail order catalogs seeking to buy either a green and yellow striped sweater vest or a Boston Red Sox baseball cap. Be on the lookout for celebrities who speak directly to you through your television. Your Complete Scope
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Helping spur the U.S. industrial revolution, Thomas Edison patented nearly 1300 inventions, 300 of which came out of his Menlo Park "invention factory" during a four-year period.
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"Love looks through a telescope; envy, through a microscope. " -- Josh Billings, humorist
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AACP American Assocation of Commercial Publications
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