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1 Production Possibilities, Opportunity Cost and Economic Growth ©2006 South-Western College Publishing
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2 What are the three fundamental economic questions? What to produce? How to produce? For whom to produce?
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3 What are two key concepts in this chapter? Opportunity costs Marginal analysis
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People face tradeoffs. “There is no such thing as a free lunch!”
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People face tradeoffs. To get one thing, we usually have to give up another thing. u Guns v. butter u Food v. clothing u Leisure time v. work u Efficiency v. equity Making decisions requires trading off one goal against another.
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Decisions require comparing costs and benefits of alternatives. uWhether to go to college or to work? uWhether to study or go out on a date? uWhether to go to class or sleep in?
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7 What is opportunity cost? The best alternative sacrificed for a chosen alternative
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8 What opportunity cost am I experiencing now?
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9 Can opportunity cost be something other than money? Yes, that most desired activity that you are presently giving up is considered an opportunity cost
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10 Scarcity Choice Opportunity Cost
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11 What is marginal analysis? An examination of the effects of additions to or subtractions from a current situation
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Rational people think at the margin. Marginal changes are small, incremental adjustments to an existing plan of action. People make decisions by comparing costs and benefits at the margin.
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13 What is an example of marginal analysis? When your benefit of studying these slides exceeds the opportunity cost, you will spend time studying these slides
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Our Second Model The Production Possibilities Frontier The production possibilities frontier is a graph showing the various combinations of output that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and technology.
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15 What is technology? The body of knowledge and skills applied to how goods are produced
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16 What assumptions underlie the productions possibilities model? Fixed resources Fully employed resources Technology unchanged
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17 What is the conclusion of the production possibilities curve? Scarcity limits an economy to points on or below its production possibilities curve
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18 What is the law of increasing opportunity costs? The principle that the opportunity cost increases as production of one output expands
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19 What is economic growth? The ability of an economy to produce greater levels of output, an outward shift of its production possibilities curve
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20 What makes possible economic growth? Research and development of new technologies Increase production in excess of worn out capital
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21 Technological advance Economic growth
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22 Critical Thinking What happens when a country does not invest in new technology?
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23 What happens when a country does not invest in new technology? Everything else being equal, the country will not grow
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24 What is investment? The accumulation of capital, such as factories, machines, and inventories, that is used to produce goods and services
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25 What is the opportunity cost of investment? The consumer goods that could have been purchased with the money spent for plants and other capital
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26 What does an increase in investments make possible in the future? Economic growth and more goods and services
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27 What conclusion can we make about investments? A nation can accelerate growth by increasing production of capital goods in excess of the capital being worn out
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