ECON 102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Absolute Advantage, Opportunity Cost, Comparative Advantage

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Chapter 3: interdependence and the gains from trade. It is easy to see that trade would allow them to enjoy greater variety. Suppose, for example, that the potato farmer is able to raise cattle and produce meat, but that he is not very good at it. Suppose that the cattle rancher is able to grow potatoes, but that her land is not very well suited for it. The farmer and the rancher can each benefit by specializing in what he or she does best and then trading with the other. The gains from trade are less obvious, however, when one person is better at producing every good. Production possibilities: a production possibilities frontier shows the various mixes of output that an economy can produce, it illustrates one of the ten principles of economics in chapter 1: people face tradeoffs. Absolute advantage: the comparison among producers of a good according to their productivity.

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