ECON1130 Chapter Notes - Chapter 2: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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Chapter two: trade offs, comparative advantage, and the market system. Production possibilities frontier: a curve showing the maximum attainable combinations of two products that may be produced with available resources and current technology. Combinations on the line feasible and uses all resources. Combinations underneath the line feasible but does not use up all the resources. Combinations above the line not feasible. Opportunity cost: the highest valued alternative that must be given up to engage in that activity. Curve is bowed outward increasing marginal opportunity cost: the more resources already devoted to an activity, the smaller the payoff to devoting additional resources to that activity. Total resources available to an economy is fixed at a given time. Outward shifts of the ppf represent economic growth: the ability of the economy. Increase in available resources shifts the ppf outward to increase the production of goods and services. Trade: the act of buying and selling: we can trade indirectly or directly.

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