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Understanding the Concept of Production Possibilities Frontiers ª Efficiency means making the largest output with the limited resources available. ª Production possibilities frontier (PPF) is a graph showing the various combinations of output that an economy can produce with its available resources and its given technology. ª The production possibilities frontier shows the opportunity cost of producing goods in an economy. You can more easily understand the concept of a production possibilities frontier (PPF) if you assume that your economy produces only two goods. With a fixed amount of resources and a fixed technology, the PPF answers the question of what is the maximum amount of output that the economy can produce. The maximum amount of production represents the maximum efficiency in the use of the limited resources. In this example, your economy could produce 80 bushels of wheat and zero bushels of rice, or it could produce 100 bushels of rice and zero bushels of wheat. Other combinations on the curve are also possible and efficient. Because of scarcity of resources, combinations outside the frontier, such as point S, are not atttainable. Combinations inside the curve, such as point U, are attainable but are an inefficient use of resources. The PPF shows the opportunity cost of producing an economy’s products. The cost of producing rice is the wheat that you have to give up to produce it. At any point on the PPF, divide the change in wheat production by the change in rice production. In this example, you have to give up 2 bushels of wheat to produce the first 20 bushels of rice. Therefore the opportunity cost is one- tenth bushel of wheat for one bushel of rice. The opportunity cost changes as you move down the PPF. At the other end, the opportunity cost of producing more rice is much higher in terms of wheat given up. Here you have to give up 1.9 bushels of wheat to get an additional bushel of rice. Once again, divide the change in wheat by the change in rice production. This procedure is sometime called dividing the rise (the change along the vertical axis) by the run (the change along the horizontal axis). The slope of the PPF gives you the opportunity cost of producing one good in terms of the other good. It is concave and downward sloping, meaning that the opportunity cost of producing rice is increasing. The reason that the cost is increasing is that not all resources are equally suitable for producing rice and wheat. If you want to produce more rice, you may have to use drier land that would be more suitable for wheat; therefore yields would go down.
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