AREC 202 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Absolute Advantage, Demand Curve, Economic Equilibrium

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A producer who is more productive in producing good is said to have an absolute advantage in producing that good. A producer who has a lower opportunity cost of producing a good is said to have a comparative advantage in producing that good. Everyone always has a comparative advantage in something. A model that represents the transactions in an economy by flows around a circle. Flows of money to pay for these things in the opposite direction. Starts with firms then go to markets for goods and services which then go to the households, then goes to the factor markets and then goes back to firms and repeats. The money goes the opposite way, the household pays which then goes to the factor markets, then to the firms and then to the markets for goods and services. Branch of economics analysis that describes the ways people and firms behave and the economy actually works.

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