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Marginal benefit is the gain you receive for doing anything "one more time." If you owned, say, a cake shop, and you could sell an unlimited number of cakes for $15 apiece, then your marginal benefit for each additional cake you produced would be $15. In the real world, though, you'll always reach a limit on how much you can sell at a given price. If your market is saturated, you might have to drop your price to sell another.

If the marginal benefit is greater than marginal cost, a rational choice involves:

Group of answer choices
Less of the activity
No more of the activity
More of the activity
More or less, depending on the benefits of other activities

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