ECO 1104 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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ECO 1104 Full Course Notes
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ECO 1104 Full Course Notes
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Pe(cid:272)ialize i(cid:374) the thi(cid:374)gs that (cid:455)ou are (cid:271)est a(cid:374)d the(cid:374), trade for the thi(cid:374)gs that (cid:455)ou"re (cid:374)ot good at. Compare your opportunity cost with the opportunity costs of your potential trading partners. How do i calculate my opportunity cost? (cid:862)what (cid:455)ou ha(cid:448)e to gi(cid:448)e up to get a u(cid:374)it of so(cid:373)ethi(cid:374)g(cid:863) The data or facts about how much of each g/s you could produce per period or with a unit of resources are known as your production possibilities. The trade allows you to consume at a point beyond your. This (cid:373)akes (cid:455)ou (cid:271)etter off a(cid:374)d it"s (cid:455)our gai(cid:374) fro(cid:373) trade. One does not gain at the expense of others. Absolute advantage: whoever can produce more of a product in a particular period or with a unit of resources has an absolute advantage in the production of that product. We could say that they have the highest productivity. Comparative advantage: co(cid:373)pare ea(cid:272)h perso(cid:374)"s opportu(cid:374)it(cid:455) (cid:272)ost i(cid:374) produ(cid:272)i(cid:374)g a parti(cid:272)ular product.

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