ECON 1011 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost, Absolute Advantage

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Self interest (max utility) is the motivation for specialization & trade. Division of labor (how to decide who should produce what) A person has a comparative advantage in production of a good (smith in oranges) if smith can produce oranges at a lower opportunity cost than jones. Slope of smith"s ppf (oranges on x axis) < -slope of jones" ppf. Lens between the two indifference curves opportunity for trade, to get higher utility. Terms of trade = (price oranges) / (price apples) = 1 apple/orange. Cost of producing oranges opportunity cost of oranges for smith = 3/10 apples/orange. Price oranges / price apples > opportunity cost of oranges for smith: price > cost profits. If smith specializes, and jones specializes, they will shift their production and anticipates being able to trade with each other. Smith has absolute advantage in oranges because smith"s productivity at 10 oranges per hour is greater than jones" productivity at 5 oranges per hour.

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