ECF1100 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Opportunity Cost, Price Signal, Comparative Advantage

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How to produce: where will production be concentrated? i. e. location of factories, what technology should be used? i. e. manual labour or fully automated assembly lines, how to do what is needed to be done. For whom to produce: (cid:862)who is goi(cid:374)g to get (cid:455)our ti(cid:373)e? (cid:863, highly dependent on income distribution within the economy. Trade off"s have to (cid:271)e (cid:373)ade as a result of li(cid:373)ited resour(cid:272)es prese(cid:374)t a(cid:374)d the de(cid:272)isio(cid:374) made: one goal is traded off against another. It is simply not possible in all cases for both options to be picked i. e. the manufacturer has enough resources to produce 100 cars or 50 planes. They do not have enough to produce 100 cars and 50 planes meaning a choice must be made as to the allocation of resources. (see opportunity cost and ppf) Production possibility frontier (ppf: a curve showing the maximum attainable combinations of two products that may be produced with available resources.

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