ECON 2010 Lecture 6: Production Possibilities Curve

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1 Oct 2015
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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ECON 2010 Full Course Notes
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In the product market, households are buyers and firms are sellers. These are where households sell the use of their inputs (capital, land, labor and entrepreneurship) to firms. In the factor markets, households are the sellers and firms are the buyers. Wages, rents, interest and profit ( wrip with a silent w, like wrangler are the payments for labor, land, capital and entrepreneurship. Firms want to pay less for inputs and sell the output for more. This is how firms establish a profit. Policy can"t increase income without raising the output. The economic concepts of scarcity, choice and trade-offs can be illustrated by the use of a production possibilities curve, which represents the potential total output combinations of any two goods for an economy. The production possibility frontier can always be shifted in or out if factors change. When a point on the production possibilities curve lies within the frontier line, the point is considered inefficient.

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