ECON 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Opportunity Cost, Physical Capital, Comparative Advantage

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22 Dec 2020
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An economy is efficient in production if as a whole it could not produce more of any one good without producing less of something else. Efficiency for the economy as a whole requires efficiency in production and efficiency in allocation. Opportunity cost: the true cost of any good isn"t the money it costs to buy, but what must be given up in order to get that good. Constant slope of ppf implies that the economy faces a constant opportunity cost. If not a constant slope, it can illustrate a different assumption like. The more of a product is made, the more costly it is to produce another type of product ppf is curved rather than straight. As more of a good is produced, its opportunity cost typically rises because well-suited inputs are used up and less adaptable inputs must be used instead. Economic growth: the growing ability of the economy to produce goods and services.

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