ECO 1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost, Absolute Advantage

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21 Sep 2016
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Chapter 2- trade-offs, comparative advantage, and the market system. A production possibility frontier (ppf) is a curve showing the maximum attainable combination of two products that may be produced with available resources and current technology. The ppf is used to illustrate the trade-offs that arise from scarcity. Any point inside the ppf are inefficient while any point outside the frontier are unattainable. Points that are on the ppf are the most efficient. The opportunity cost mentioned in chapter one is the highest-valued alternative that must be given up to engage in that activity. Because of increasing marginal opportunity costs, production possibilities frontiers are usually bowed out instead of straight lines. (what we give up to do something else, reflected in slope) This shows the important economic concept that the more resources already devoted to an activity, the smaller the payoff to devoting additional resources to that activity.

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