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CHAPTER CHECKLIST 1. Use the production possibilities frontier to The Economic Chapter illustrate the economic problem. 2. Calculate opportunity cost. Problem 3 3. Define efficiency and describe an efficient use of resources. 4. Explain how specialization and trade expand production possibilities. Copyright © 2002 Addison Wesley LECTURE TOPICS LECTURE TOPICS 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Production Possibilities Frontier Production Possibilities Production possibilities frontier Opportunity Cost The boundary between the combinations of goods and Using Resources Efficiently services that can be produced and the combinations Specialization and Exchange that cannot be produced, given the available factors of production and the state of technology. The PPFis a valuable tool for illustrating the effects of scarcity and its consequences. 1 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Figure 3.1 shows the The PPF puts three features of production possibilities PPFfor bottled water in sharp focus: and CDs. Attainable and unattainable combinations Each point on the Full employment and unemployment graph represents a Tradeoffs and free lunches column of the table. The line through the points is the PPF. 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Figure 3.2 shows attainable and Attainable and Unattainable Combinations unattainable combinations. Because the PPF shows the limits to production, it We can produce at any point separates attainable combinations from inside the PPF or on the unattainable ones. frontier. Points outside the PPF such as point G are unattainable. The PPFseparates attainable combinations from unattainable ones. 2 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Full Employment and Unemployment Figure 3.3 shows full Full employment occurs when all the available factors of employment and production are being used. unemployment. Unemployment occurs when some factors of 1. When resources are production are not used. fully employed, production occurs at points on the PPFsuch as Dand E. 2. When resources are unemployed, production occurs at a point inside the PPF such as point H. 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES 3.1 PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Figure 3.4 shows tradeoffs and free lunches. Tradeoffs and Free Lunches 1. When production is on the Tradeoff PPF, we face a tradeoff. To A constraint or limit to what is possible that forces an get more of one good we must exchange or a substitution of one thing for something forgo some of the other good else. as we move along the PPF. 2. When production is inside the PPF, there is a free lunch. We can move to the PPF and get more goods without forgoing either good. 3 3.2 OPPORTUNITY COST 3.2 OPPORTUNITY COST Figure 3.5 shows how to calculate the opportunity cost of a bottle of water. The Opportunity Cost of a Bottle of Water The opportunity cost of a bottle of water is the decrease in the quantity of CDs divided by the increase in the number of bottles of water as we move down along the PPFin Figure 3.5. 3.2 OPPORTUNITY COST 3.2 OPPORTUNITY COST Moving from A to B, the first 1 million bottles of Moving from B to C, the next 1 million bottles of water costs 1 CD. water cost 2 CDs. 4
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