ECON 1116 Chapter Notes - Chapter 3: International Trade, Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage

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People provide you with goods and services because they get something in return. 3. 1 a parable for the modern economy: best to specialize in something, trade benefits both, production possibilities, without trade, production consumption possibilities, specialization and trade. 3. 2 comparative advantage: the driving force of specialization: must consider comparative advantage, absolute advantage. Absolute advantage 0 the producer that requires the smaller quantity of inputs to produce a good: opportunity cost and comparative advantage. Opportunity cost the opportunity cost of one item is what we give up to get that item: the opportunity cost measures the trade off between the two goods that each producer faces. 3. 3 applications of comparative advantage: should tom brady mow his own lawn, must consider the opportunity costs of each person. Tom brady has absolute advantage in bowing lawn but would lose k: should the us trade with other countries. Imports goods produced abroad and sold domestically.

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