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Econ 160 Week 3 The Economic System of Competition Gains from Specialization & Trade
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Review: Definitions Good Good : is anything that an individual wants to have more of, at zero price. Resource: Anything that can be used to produce goods. Scarcity: A good is scarce if the amount desired at zero price is more than the amount available at zero price. (Scarce good = Economic Good)
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Review:Assumptions Humankind has unlimited wants Our resources are limited ScarcityScarcity : Individually, and as a Society, we do not have enough resources to produce all the things we want.
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Review:Implications of Scarcity ChoiceChoice: people must choose which goods to acquire. Economic CostEconomic Cost: The Cost of any action, is the personal value of the next highest valued alternative given-up.
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Costs: Economic vs. Accounting Accounting Cost: The explicit expenditure for a given activity. Economic CostEconomic Cost: The Cost of any action, is the personal value of the next highest valued alternative given-up. Economic Cost includes Explicit & Implicit Sunk Cost: Past expenditures that no longer represent an alternative (Not a part of Economic Cost)
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Review:Implications of Scarcity ChoiceChoice: people must choose which goods to acquire. Economic CostEconomic Cost: The Cost of any action, is the personal value of the next highest valued alternative given-up. CompetitionCompetition: We are in a state of competition for the use of resources
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Forms of Competition in Society Violence,Violence, or Threat of Violence Social/PoliticalSocial/Political : competition on the basis of some limited behavior or characteristic Economic/MarketEconomic/Market: competition based on offering the highest value in exchange.
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Scarcity Society Choices What to produce? Goal find the mixture of outputs that maximizes society’s value. How to produce? Goal: find the optimal mix of inputs to maximize technical output. For whom to produce? Who will get to consume the goods produced.
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The Economic/Market Form of Competition
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Product Markets FIRMSHOUSEHOLD Resource Markets $'s$'s Revenue $'s Income $'s Goods & Services Goods & Services Resources Inputs Circular Flow Diagram of the Exchange Economy
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Interdependence & the Gains from Trade (Chapter 3)
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Gains from Specialization &Trade Production Possibilities Resource FishCoconuts Crusoe: 8or 8 Friday:10or 20
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Opportunity Cost in Production Crusoe: 8 F = 8 C 1 F = 1C and 1C = 1F Friday: 10 F = 20 C 1 F = 2C and 1C = ½ F Thus Crusoe has a comparative advantage in the production of fish ( 1F = 1C) and Friday has a comparative advantage in the production of Coconuts ( 1C = ½ F)
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Separate Production Possibilities Crusoe Friday Fish Coco 8 8 10 20
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Pre-Specialization Production ResourceFishCoconuts Crusoe: 4 and 4 Friday: 5 and 10 Total Output: 9 and 14
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Output with Specialization Resource FishCoconuts Crusoe: 8 and 0 Friday: 1 and 18 Total Output: 9 and 18
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Results of Specialization No increase in Resources No increase in effort Increased output by 4 coconuts Increased output will be shared by the two people or countries so as to make both better off
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Apply Reasoning to more than two Resources Analyze production decisions using several resources with different relative abilities How to organize production to maximize output The graphical technique
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Graph: Production Possibilities Function Assumptions: 1. Fixed resources: 10 acres in rows. 2. Fixed technology: current knowledge of how to produce. 3. Resources vary in relative productive ability.
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Resources and Potential Outputs Row12 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 Corn10 Wheat10121416182022242628
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Resources and Opportunity Cost Row12 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 Corn10 Wheat10121416182022242628 Cost of 1 corn 1.01.21.41.61.82.02.22.42.62.8 Cost of 1 wheat 1.0.83.71.63.56.50.45.42.38.36
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Graph Mechanics The curve divides the space: interior points possible; Points beyond impossible SlopeSlope: Rise/ Run: The slope reflects the relationship: Negative, more corn means less wheat, more wheat means less corn ShapeShape: The concave shape reflects increasing cost of production for either good.
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Changing assumptions Shifts the Curve An Increase in resources –Shifts the curve outward An increase in technology of Wheat production: Effects on Cost –Lowers cost of producing Wheat –Raises the cost of producing corn
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