ECO101H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Comparative Advantage, Absolute Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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ECO101H1 Full Course Notes
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ECO101H1 Full Course Notes
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Jane has absolute advantage in producing both goods. Answer: both statements are false, even though jane is way efficient in producing both goods than. John: both john and jane can both benefit from trade, country a can benefit from trade with country b. Opportunity costs of john and jane [example 2] John"s ppf is unchanged, so his opportunity costs are unchanged. Jane is twice as productive in the production of both goods as in example 1 in (class 3) , so her opportunity costs are also unchanged (slope is unchanged since it"s twice as efficient, it"s just ppf pushing outward) John has a comparative advantage in the production of cloth, while jane has a comparative. Before trade, john and jane divide their time equally between the production of cloth and corn. After trade, john specialises completely in the production of cloth, while jane now allocates 75% of her time to the production of corn.

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