market economy wikipedia - EAS

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  1. Gum Wall - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gum_Wall

    The Gum Wall is a brick wall covered in used chewing gum under Pike Place Market in Downtown Seattle.It is located on Post Alley near Pike Street, south of the market's main entrance off 1st Avenue.Parts of the gum coating alongside the walls are several inches thick, and the coating is 15 feet (4.6 m) high along a 50-foot-long (15 m) section. The Market Theater …

  2. Dimapur - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimapur

    Dimapur (/ d i m ə ˈ p ʊər /) is the largest city in the Indian state of Nagaland.As of 2011, the municipality had a population of 122,834. The city is the main gateway and commercial centre of Nagaland. Located near the border with Assam along the banks of the Dhansiri River.Its main railway station is the second busiest station in Northeast India

  3. The Market for Lemons - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Market_for_Lemons

    The Market for Lemons: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism is a widely-cited 1970 paper by economist George Akerlof which examines how the quality of goods traded in a market can degrade in the presence of information asymmetry between buyers and sellers, leaving only "lemons" behind. In American slang, a lemon is a car that is found to be defective after it has …

  4. Point of sale display - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_of_sale_display

    A point-of-sale display (POS display) is a specialised form of sales promotion that is found near, on, or next to a checkout counter (the "point of sale"). They are intended to draw the customers' attention to products, which may be new products, or on special offer, and are also used to promote special events, e.g. seasonal or holiday-time sales.

  5. Cost curve - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_curve

    In economics, a cost curve is a graph of the costs of production as a function of total quantity produced. In a free market economy, productively efficient firms optimize their production process by minimizing cost consistent with each possible level of production, and the result is a cost curve. Profit-maximizing firms use cost curves to decide output quantities.

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