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Economics

Across
The beginning of a depression which never went all the way.
A slip of paper issued by the US government, used as money, back by a legal tender law.
Today, paper money. Originally an IOU from a bank, usually for gold or silver
The way governments get money. To take money away from someone.
A law which provides for the punishment of anyone who refuses to accept the legal tender money.
A hyperinflation. Prices rising rapidly, every few hours.
Prices rising 10% or more per year
The money a person gets for his work.
Making phony or fake money
Reducing the value of a coin by reducing the amount of precious metal in it.
A factory which makes coins or other money.
The boom/bust cycle. Prosperity followed by recession followed by prosperity and so on.
What a person wants in trade for what he has.
There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch
Legal tender money
Down
A disk of base metal which can be used as a substitute for a coin
The most easily traded thing in a society.
A non-precious metal like copper or nickel.
An increase in the amount of money in circulation
The notches on the edge of a coin.
The correction period following an inflation. includes business failures and unemployment.
Says that when the supply of something goes up, the price per unit of that thing goes down. When supply goes down price goes up.
A legal medium of payment.
A fact of life which deals with production and distribution of wealth. Cannot change it and it applies all over the world.
A wafer or disk of precious metal.
Law of economics that says bad money drives good money out of circulation.
A government program for giving away money or goods. Usually to poor people.
The mint-mark of a coin.
A government program for giving away tax money to rich people or large corporations