ECON101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Absolute Advantage, Opportunity Cost, Comparative Advantage

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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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ECON101 Full Course Notes
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Everyday you rely on many people from around the world to provide you with goods and services that you enjoy. Such interdependence is possible because people trade with one another. These people are not acting out of generosity or concern for your welfare. Nor some government agency directing them to make what you want and give it to you. Instead, people provide you and other consumers with the goods and services they produce because they get something in return. Imagine that there are two goods in the world meat and potatoes. There are two people in the world a cattle rancher and a potatoes farmer each of whom would like to eat both meat and potatoes. In one scenario, the rancher and the farmer could choose to have nothing to do with each other. But after several months of eating beef roasted, boiled, broiled and grilled, the rancher might decide that self-sufficiency is not all its cracked up to be.

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