ECON 1050 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Marginal Utility, Allocative Efficiency, Marginal Cost

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Combination of goods and services that can be produced and those that cannot. Producing goods and services at the lowest possible cost. Decrease in one good/ increase in other good increasing opportunity cost. Opportunity cost increases as production of one good increases. Opportunity cost of producing one more unit of a good. Benefit received from consuming one more unit of a good. Lowest possible cost and in quantities that provide greatest possible benefits measure and compare costs and benefits. Technological change development of new goods and better ways of producing goods and services. Capital accumulation growth of capital resources (including human capital) Comparative advantage can perform an activity at a lower opportunity cost. Absolute advantage being more productive than others. Centralized coordination (centrally planned socialism) an economic system in which the government owns all the land and capital, directs workers to jobs, and decides what, how and for whom to produce.

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