ECON101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Absolute Advantage, Opportunity Cost, Comparative Advantage

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Chapter 2 trade-offs, comparative advantage, and the market system. Households, firms and governments continually face decisions about how best to use their scarce resources. Scarcity a situation in which unlimited wants exceed the limited resources available to fulfill those wants. A production possibilities frontier (ppf) is a curve showing the max attainable combinations of two goods that can be produced with available resources and technology. To produce more sedans, tesla must reduce the number of suvs: points on the ppf are attainable for tesla, points below the curve are inefficient, points above the curve are unattainable with current resources. To produce 20 more suvs, tesla must produce 20 less sedans: the 20 fewer sedans are the opportunity cost of producing 20 more suvs. Opportunity cost the highest-valued alternative that must be given up to engage in an activity. Thus, far we assumed that opportunity costs are constant. Some resources are better suited to one task than another.

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