ECO105Y1 Chapter Notes - Chapter 1: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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30 Nov 2017
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Voluntary trade: each person feels that what they get is of greater value than what they give up. Absolute advantage: the ability to produce a product or service at a lower absolute cost than another producer. Comparative advantage: the ability to produce a product or service at a lower opportunity cost than another producer. Specializes in producing a product or service with comparative advantage (lower opportunity cost) Graph showing maximum combinations of products or services that can be produced with existing inputs. Specialization according to comparative advantage and trade allows each trader to consume outside her ppf, an impossible combination without trade. Differences in comparative advantage allow mutually beneficial gains from specializing and trading. Input markets: households are sellers and businesses are buyers. Output markets: households are buyers, businesses are sellers. Inputs: are productive resources (labor, natural resources, capital, entrepreneur) used to produce products and services.

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