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Chapter 2
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What you give up to do something else. What you do not do when you choose to do something else. The economic value of your next-best alternative May be non-financial Chapter 22
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Direct Costs $ that leaves your pocket Tuition Books Gas Opportunity Costs $ that doesn’t go into your pocket Wages Quality time TV Chapter 23
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The different combinations of final goods and services that could be produced in a given period of time with all available resources and technology. Each point on the production possibilities curve depicts an alternative mix of output. Chapter 24
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Production possibilities illustrates two essential principles. Scarce resources Opportunity Costs Chapter 25
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AwakeAsleep Chapter 26
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Awake 24 20 16 12 8 4 4 8 12 16 20 24 Asleep Chapter 27
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CornWheat 500 400 320 260 190 130 70 20 0 30 70 120 180 260 360 700 1000 Chapter 28
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Wheat 1000 500 Corn Chapter 29
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Goods $10T $12T Services Chapter 210 $4T $10T
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10 Acres You can grow tomatoes or watermelon Chapter 211
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Tomatoes 10 5 5 10 Watermelon Chapter 212 B A C
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A. On the curve - efficient B. Inside – inefficient not using all available resources C. Outside the curve - impossible Chapter 213
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An outward shift in the Production Possibilities curve you can & do produce more than before. Chapter 214
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The ability to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than someone else. Chapter 215
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The ability to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than everyone else. Chapter 216
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Sink RepairsTax Filing Ashley2 hrs. 8 Barry8 1 Chapter 217
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Sink repairs 4 3 2 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. Tax Filings Chapter 218 Ashley Barry
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Ashley has the comparative advantage for sink repairs. Ashley only has to give up doing ¼ of a return in order to fix a sink, where Barry would have to give up doing 8. Barry has the comparative advantage in filing taxes. Barry only has to give up 1 / 8 of a sink repair to do a tax return. Ashley has to give up taking 4 sink repair jobs to do her taxes. Chapter 219
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Ashley has the comparative advantage for sink repairs. Barry has the comparative advantage in filing taxes. Ashley charges $100 to fix a sink Barry charges $200 to do a tax return Chapter 220
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For Ashley to do her own taxes, she would give up the opportunity to fix 4 sinks. She would give up $400 of sink jobs to keep from paying $200 to Barry Barry would have to give up 8 tax jobs to take the time to fix his sink. He would give up $1,600 of tax jobs to avoid paying Ashley $100 Chapter 221
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Ashley should let Barry file her taxes Barry should call Ashley for all his plumbing needs Even if it isn’t about the money instead of spending 8 hours doing her taxes, Ashley could spend 2 hours repairing a sink to make more- than-enough money to pay Barry, then take the rest of the day off! Chapter 222
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Cathy can do a tax return in 30 minutes, and a sink repair in 15 minutes. She is faster than both people, for both jobs. Chapter 223
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For sinks: Ashley has the comparative advantage over Cathy. Cathy has the comparative advantage over Barry. For Taxes: Barry has the comparative advantage over Cathy. Cathy has the comparative advantage over Ashley. Chapter 224
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Although faster at both jobs, Cathy does not have an absolute advantage in either job! Cathy has to give up 2 sinks to do a tax return. Barry only has to give up 1 / 8 of a sink Cathy has to give up ½ of a tax return to fix a sink, but Ashley only has to give up ¼ of a tax return. Chapter 225
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If Ashley, Barry, & Cathy were the only 3 people in town: Ashley has the absolute advantage in sinks Nobody gives up less than her Barry has the absolute advantage in taxes Nobody gives up less than him Chapter 226
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Cathy can do Both faster than everybody. She can make more money than either. This is a good thing, even if it isn’t “absolute advantage” Which should she do for a living? 16 taxes @ $200 = $3,200/day 32 sinks @ $100 = $3,200/day Which makes her happier? Chapter 227
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Some people find themselves washed ashore on a pacific island… Chapter 228
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10 Acres Can only grow coconuts & bananas Can only get 1 tree per acre Chapter 229
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Coconuts 10 5 5 10 Bananas Chapter 230
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10 Acres Can only grow coconuts & bananas They need 1 acre for each coconut tree, or 2 acres for each banana tree they plant Chapter 231
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Coconuts 10 5 5 10 Bananas Chapter 232 4 3
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Our Friends: Plant: 5 bananas & 5 coconuts Eat: 5 bananas & 5 coconuts The Neighbors Plant: 3 bananas & 4 coconuts Eat: 3 bananas & 4 coconuts Chapter 233
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Our Friends: Plant: 10 bananas Eat: 5 bananas & 5 coconuts Or: 6 bananas & 6 coconuts, or 6 bananas & 5 coconuts… The Neighbors Plant: 10 coconuts Eat: 5 bananas & 5 coconuts Or: 4 bananas & 4 coconuts, or 4 bananas & 5 coconuts… ▪ Depends on how they negotiate Chapter 234
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Before Trade: 8 bananas & 9 coconuts After Specialization & Trade: 10 bananas & 10 coconuts Using the same 20 total acres! Chapter 235
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Lower Prices More of each product More choice Easier work situation World peace More Efficient Better for the environment Chapter 236
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Loss of jobs Possible loss of money if not fair Dependency on someone else Threat to national security? Chapter 237
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