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Production Possibilities and Opportunity Costs

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... In Crusoe Island, 1 Fish = .4 ... Production Possibilities Factors of Production Absolute and Comparative Advantage Production Possibilities Frontier Robinson ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Production Possibilities and Opportunity Costs


1
Chapter 2
Production Possibilities and Opportunity Costs
2
This chapter discusses principles associated with
Technological Change and Economic Growth
Absolute and Comparative Advantage
Division of Labor and Specialization
The Law of Increasing Costs
Opportunity Costs
Production Possibilities
Factors of Production
3
What are the Factors of Production?
  • Labor
  • Capital
  • Land
  • Entrepreneurship

4
What is Labor?
  • The physical and intellectual effort of people
    engaged in producing goods and services

5
What is Capital?
  • Manufactured goods used to make and/or market
    other goods and services

6
What is Human Capital?
  • The knowledge and skills acquired by labor,
    principally through education and training

7
What is Land?
  • A natural-state resource such as real estate,
    grasses and forests, and metals and minerals

8
Who is an Entrepreneur?
  • A person who alone assumes the risks and
    uncertainties of a business
  • He is also the person
  • who takes the initiative and
  • comes up with the essential idea
  • of the business.

9
What is Production Possibilities?
  • In order to understand what is meant by PPF, we
    would first consider a hypothetical economy.

Production Possibilities Frontier
10
Robinson Crusoes Production Possibilities
11
9
8
7
6
Consumption Goods
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Capital Goods
12
Production Possibilities?
  • The combinations of goods that can be produced
    when resources and technology are used fully
    efficiently

13
9
8
7
Consumption Goods
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Capital Goods
14
Production Possibilities Curve
Unattainable
Consumer Goods
Inefficient
Capital Goods
14
15
What is true along the Production Possibilities
Curve?
  • available resources are used fully
  • most efficient combination of resources

16
What choices are made along the Production
Possibilities curve?
  • To have more of one product, units of the other
    product have to be given up

17
Opportunity Cost
  • The quantity of other goods that must be given up
    to obtain a good

18
Law of Increasing Costs
  • The opportunity cost of producing a good
    increases as more of the good is produced

19
9
8
7
Consumption Goods
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Capital Goods
20
How do we have more of everything?
  • By increasing our resources

21
Increased Resources
Consumer Goods
Capital Goods
21
22
What other ways can we increase our PPF?
  • Innovations - an idea that takes the form of new
    applied technology
  • Technology - an improvement in capital

23
Innovations
Consumer Goods
Capital Goods
23
24
Once Rich it is Easier to Get Richer
Once Poor it is Easy to Stay Poor
Poor Country
Rich Country
9
9
Consumption Goods
8
8
7
7
6
6
5
5
4
4
3
3
2
2
1
1
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Capital Goods
25
The Indestructible Nature of Ideas
9
8
7
Consumption Goods
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Capital Goods
26
Does division of labor increase productivity?
Specialization of labor
The division of labor into specialized activities.
  • Yes. People become more proficient in one
    activity which results in greater output per
    person

27
Adam Smith
One man draws out the wire, another straightens
it, a third cuts it, a fourth points it, a fifth
grinds it at the top for receiving the head to
make the head requires two or three distinct
operations, to put it on is a peculiar business,
...........
The reason for such division of labor, he noted,
is that these 10 people could make as many as
48,000 pins in a day. If they had each worked
separately and independently, they could not have
produced more than 200.
28
Example 1
Production of Fish Shirts per 8-hour Day
29
Absolute Advantage
  • A countrys ability to produce a good using fewer
    resources than the country with which it trades

The Theory of Absolute Advantage states that a
country should completely specialize and produce
the good in which it has absolute advantage.
30
Example 2
Production of Fish Shirts per 8-hour Day
1 S
1 F
4 F
1/4 S
In Crusoe Island, 1 Fish 1 Shirt
1 Shirt 1 Fish
In Yakamaya, 1 Fish 2/8 1/4 Shirt
1 Shirt 4 Fish
International Exchange Rate, 1 Shirt 2 Fish
31
Comparative Advantage
  • A countrys ability to produce a good at a lower
    opportunity cost than the country with which it
    trades

The Theory of Comparative Advantage states that a
country should completely specialize and produce
the good in which it has comparative advantage.
32
What should a country specialize in producing?
  • In those goods and services in which it has a
    comparative advantage

33
Should a country produce that with which it has
an Absolute Advantage?
No!
Not unless it also has a comparative advantage
in those goods and services
34
Why?
  • Because by so doing its opportunity costs may be
    too high

35
Example 3
Production of Fish Shirts per 8-hour Day
.4 S
2.5 F
4 F
.25 S
1 Shirt 2.5 Fish
In Crusoe Island, 1 Fish .4 Shirt
In Yakamaya, 1 Fish 2/8 1/4 Shirt
1 Shirt 4 Fish
International Exchange Rate, 1 Shirt 3 Fish
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