ECON1102 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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The production possibility frontier is a curve showing the maximum attainable combinations of two products that may be produced with available resources. It is used to illustrate the trade-offs that arise from scarcity. Points inside the frontier are inefficient and points outside the frontier are unattainable. The opportunity cost of any activity is the highest-valued alternative that must be given up engaging in that activity. Because of increasing marginal opportunity costs, production possibility frontiers are usually bowed out or concave, rather than straight lines. This illustrates the important economic concept that the more resources that are already devoted to any activity, the smaller the payoff from devoting additional resources to that activity. Fundamentally, markets are about trade, which is the act of buying or selling. An individual, firm or country has a comparative advantage in producing a good or service if it can produce the good or service at the lowest opportunity cost.

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