Www.mrwyka.weebly.com When you are absent, when you want to review, or if you want to preview the day’s lesson, you can find the class presentations at.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Economic Way of Thinking
Advertisements

Analyzing Production Possibilities
Ch 1, Sec. 2 – Opportunity Cost
The Production Possibilities Curve
AAn alternative that we sacrifice when we make a decision  A student skips school to go to ACL. Trade-off is giving up school for the concert GGuns.
Chapter 2 Section 2.  How much can an economy produce with the resources available? What are the economy’s production capabilities?  Simplifying Assumptions.
Daily: What are the costs and benefits of having a part time job?
Section 2.2 Production Possibilities Frontier (40)
Chapter One Vocabulary Terms and Concepts. Economics the study of the choices people make about how to best use scarce resources to satisfy their wants.
Section 1 Scarcity and the Factors of Production
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 1 The Economic Way of Thinking
KEY CONCEPTS  Production possibilities curve (PPC) is one model (graph)  PPC shows the maximum goods or services that can be produced from limited resources.
What is Economics Chapter 1 Section 3 Production Possibilities Curve
© SOUTH-WESTERN  12.1 Students understand common terms & concepts and economics reasoning. Standard Address Objectives  Describe the production.
Lesson Objectives: By the end of this lesson you will be able to: *Interpret a production possibilities curve. *Explain how production possibilities curves.
Do Now Imagine you and two friends are planning a party for the class… Plan who will do what to prepare for the party…
Production Possibilities When faced with SCARCITY of resources, decisions have to be made about how to use those resources Trade-offs Opportunity Costs.
Chapter 3 The Economic Problem. Production Possibilities Curve (Frontier): Maximum amounts of 2 goods that can be produced at full employment of all resources.
Production Possibilities Frontier 1 st Economic Graph.
+ Welcome to Economics Topic 1: Fundamentals of Economics.
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
What is Economics Chapter 1 Section 3 Production Possibilities Curve
Economics: The Economic Way of Thinking
Chapter 1 What is Economics?.
Unit 2: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 1: What is Economics? Section 3
“Production Possibilities Curves”
Chapter 1: What is Economics? Section 3
Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 1: Section 3 Vocabulary
Graphing the Possibilities
[ 1.2 ] Opportunity Cost and Trade-Offs
[ 1.3 ] Production Possibilities Curves
D C B Capital Goods A Consumer Goods
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Warm Up (FINISH and TURN in your project)
Vocabulary Terms Chapter 1.
Econ “Analyzing Production Possibilities”
Opportunity Cost and the Production Possibilities Curve
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 1 Section 3 Production Possibilities Curves

Topic 1: Fundamentals of Economics
Chapter 1: What is Economics? Section 3
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Production Possibilities
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Bell Ringer Login into Google Classroom and answer the questions for pg minutes Google Classroom Code: p7bymom.
The Production Possibilities Frontier
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Production Possibilities Curve
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: PPF.
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 1: What is Economics? Section 3
Chapter 1: What is Economics? Section 3
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts
Chapter 1: What is Economics? Section 3
The Production Possibilities Curve
Presentation transcript:

www.mrwyka.weebly.com When you are absent, when you want to review, or if you want to preview the day’s lesson, you can find the class presentations at www.mrwyka.weebly.com

Production Possibilities Eco 1.3

A busy day Think of one of your busiest days. Could you add more activities? Or is there a point there is no more room for anything else. That is the way it is for economies and businesses. This can be shown with a Production Possibilities Curve.

Graphing the Possibilities Production Possibilities Curve PPC runs between extremes of producing only one item or the other Data is plotted on a graph; lines joining points is PPC shows maximum number of one item relative to other item PPC shows opportunity cost of each choice more of one product means less of the other

Production Possibilities Curve A through F are attainable I represents inefficient use of resources U represents unattainable combinations CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS: LESSON 2.2

Efficient or inefficient Efficiency – Producing the maximum possible output from the available resources Why would there be inefficient economies?

Underutilization Economic resources are not being used to their full potential.

Changes Law of increasing opportunity cost – Each additional increment of one good requires the economy to give up successively larger increments of the other good.

Changing Production Possibilities Example: A Shift in the PPC A country’s supply of resources changes over time Example: U.S. in 1800s grew, gained resources, workers, new technology new resources mean new production possibilities beyond frontier Increased production shown on PPC as shift of curve outward Increase in total output called economic growth

Shifts in PPC graph Changes in resource availability Increases in stock of capital goods Technological change

Economic Growth An expansion in the economy’s production possibilities or ability to produce. This is the goal of the government to have – constant economic growth. Measured by the GDP (Gross Domestic Product)

Ice Cream Anyone? What effect, if any, do you think an increase in ice cream production in Chile will have on the country’s production of capital goods?

Guns vs. Butter Opportunity Costs for a nation If more resources are used to make military products, there are fewer resources for other things such as consumer goods

Guns and Butter Much like the PPC graph, but it focuses on what the government should spend on. Guns replaces capital goods, and butter replaces consumer goods.

History and Guns and Butter President Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society vs. Cold War

Reviewing Key Concepts Explain how each term is illustrated by the production possibilities curve: underutilization efficiency

Links https://youtu.be/O6XL__2CDPU PPC ACDC Leadership http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvnHPeQrk0E&feature=relmfu – graph review (4:30)