ECON 2010 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Opportunity Cost, Comparative Advantage

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2 Sep 2015
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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Production possibilities frontier: a simplified version of the tradeoffs an economy faces in the production of goods. An increase in the price of burritos will cause an increase in consumer demand for music downloads is an example of positive economics: ppfs & opportunity costs. Opportunity costs is what you give up in order to gain something else. The slope of a line tells the opportunity costs. A graph with a steeper slope has a higher opportunity cost. As technology increases the ppf moves out on a graph: technology may increase in one sector but not in another, this changes the slope of the graph, i. e. the opportunity costs. Realistically, the ppf is bowed (curved) per good: the opportunity cost is increasing as more of the good is increased. Countries are naturally better at producing some goods over others. Resources available are aligned at making certain goods.

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