ECON 1000 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Marginal Utility, Allocative Efficiency, Marginal Cost

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15 Oct 2013
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ECON 1000 Full Course Notes
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Across canada, 17 million people produce a vast variety of goods and services valued at billion but the quantities that we can produce are limited by our available resources and technology. If we want to increase our production of one good, we must decrease our production of something else (tradeoff) Boundary between combinations of goods and services that can be produced and those that cannot. To illustrate the ppf, we look at a model economy in which everything remains the same except for the production of the two goods we are considering. When goods and services are produced at the lowest possible cost. This outcome occurs at all the points on the ppf. At points inside the ppf, production is inefficient because we are giving up more than necessary of one good to produce a given quantity of the other good. Production is inefficient inside the ppf because resources are either unused or misallocated or both.

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