ECON 200 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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The ppf illustrates the key trade-o s faced by one economy. If there is no trade between economies, then what a country produces is what it consumes. Using the understanding of ppfs, the analysis can be extended to understand how countries decide what to produce. Suppose that an american worker can produce 50 shirts or 200 bushels of wheat per day. Chinese worker can produce only 25 shirts or 50 bushels of wheat. The u. s. has an absolute advantage in shirt production since a u. s. worker can produce more shirts than a chinese worker. The u. s. has an absolute advantage in wheat production since a u. s. worker can produce more wheat than a chinese worker. Absolute advantage does not aid in understanding how countries decide which goods to produce. Absolute advantage is presented by the intercept of ppf and shows productivity. No country has a comparative advantage in everything, and each country has a comparative advantage in producing something.

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