ECON 1050 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Marginal Cost, Marginal Utility, Opportunity Cost

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The production possibilities frontier (ppf) is the boundary between those combinations of goods and services that can be produced and those that cannot. To illustrate the ppf, we focus on two goods at a time and hold the quantities of all goods and services constant. That is, we look at a model economy in which everything remains the same (ceteris paribus) except the two goods we"re considering. The figure below shows the ppf for two goods: cola and pizzas. Any point on the frontier such as e and any point inside the ppf such as z are attainable. We achieve production efficiency if we cannot produce more of one good without producing. Any point inside the frontier, such as z, is inefficient. At such a point, it is possible to produce more of one good without producing less of the other. At z, resources are either unemployed or misallocated. Every choice along the ppf involves a tradeoff.

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