ECO 1304 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Opportunity Cost, Market Failure, Market Power

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The production possibilities curve represents the potential total output combinations of any two goods for an economy, given the inputs and technology available to the economy. Law of increasing opportunity cost: as more of one item is produced by an economy, the opportunity cost of additional units of that product rises. Efficiency requires society to use its resources to the fullest extent no wasted resources. If the economy is operating within (under) the production possibilities curve, the economy is operating inefficiently. Economic growth results from qualitative or quantitative changes in the factors of production (resources): technology advancements, productivity improvements, new sources of natural resources. Economic growth is represented by an outward shift of the production possibility curve, indicating an increase in the possibility of producing more of all goods. Despite this, scarcity inevitably remains a fact of life. The production possibilities model is an effective way to illustrate the economic concepts of scarcity, choice, opportunity costs, efficiency, and economic growth.

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