ECON 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 27: Barter, Sunk Costs, Comparative Advantage

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11 Sep 2020
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The ability to make something using fewer resources than other producers use barter. The direct exchange of one product for another without using money comparative advantage. The ability to make something at a lower opportunity cost than division of labor. Breaking down the production of a good into separate tasks economic growth. An increase in the economy"s ability to produce goods and services; reflected by an outward shift of the economy"s production possibilities frontier economic system. The set of mechanisms and institutions that resolve the what, how, and for whom questions efficiency. The condition that exists when there is no way resources can be reallocated to increase the production of one good without decreasing the production of another; getting the most from available resources law of comparative advantage. The individual, firm, region, or country with the lowest opportunity cost of producing a particular good should specialize in that good law of increasing opportunity cost.

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