ECON 2301 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Productive Efficiency, Allocative Efficiency, Marginal Utility

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Scarcity: unlimited wants exceeding limited resources available. Implies that every choice has an opportunity cost: trade-offs must always be made. Productive efficiency: goods or services made at the lowest possible costs. Allocative efficiency: every good or service is made up to the point where marginal benefit = marginal cost (consumer preference) Efficiency: goods are distributed in a way that maximizes benefits to society. E(cid:395)uity: goods a(cid:396)e dist(cid:396)ibuted in a way that"s fai(cid:396) A firm operating in a market economy has a strong incentive to be both productively and allocatively efficient: productive efficiency will enable the firm to minimize production costs, allocative efficiency will ensure the firm receives ample revenue. Firms earn a profit if it is efficient in both ways. In a market system, income distribution determines who gets goods and services. Normative analysis: analyzing the way things ought to be. Positive analysis: analyzing the way things are at the current time. All points inside the curve represent inefficiency.

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