ECON 1120 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Alcohol By Volume, Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage

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Capital - things that are made and then used in the making of other things. Factors of production (abv. factors) - the base resources of society, eg. land, labor, and capital. Production - the changing of scarce resources into capital. Theory of comparative advantage - specialization and free trade will be to the benefit of all, even though some will absolutely be better producers than others. Absolute advantage - when one party can produce the same as another using less resources (including time). Comparative advantage - when one party can produce a good at a lower opportunity cost (eg. bill can cut 4 logs or gather 8 bushels of food. Colleen can cut 10 logs or gather 8 bushels of food. Although she has an absolute advantage on logs, bill has the comparative advantage - to gather 8 bushels, he would only give up 4 logs to colleen"s 8). Consumer goods - goods produced for present consumption.

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