1 / 16

SCARCITY: The fundamental economic problem

SCARCITY: The fundamental economic problem. Wants are unlimited Resources are limited. FACTORS OF PRODUCTION. Land : All natural resources Labour : Human effort Capital : output of economic activity used in production of more output.

eamon
Télécharger la présentation

SCARCITY: The fundamental economic problem

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SCARCITY: The fundamental economic problem • Wants are unlimited • Resources are limited

  2. FACTORS OF PRODUCTION • Land: All natural resources • Labour: Human effort • Capital: output of economic activity used in production of more output. • Entrepreneurship: Risk taking organization of economic activity

  3. PRODUCTION POSSIBILITY FRONTIER • Illustrates • Scarcity: Some wants are not met • More of one good cannot be produced without reducing the output of another good • Opportunity Cost: The cost of something is what you give up to gain it. • Ratio: Give up/Gain

  4. PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

  5. CALCULATING OPPORTUNITY COSTS • Determine the number of units you gain. • Determine the number of units you give up. • Determine the ratio: give up divided by gain

  6. OPPORTUNITY COSTS • ALL costs are opportunity costs. • The cost of anything is what must be given up to get it. • The cost of more shoes is fewer shirts. • The cost of more shirts is fewer shoes. • The cost of more health care is less education. • The cost of more education is less health care. • The cost of more private goods (cars) is fewer government services

  7. Example • You give up one hour of your time picking blueberries. • You gain 3 pounds of blueberries. • Give up / Gain • 1 hour / 3 lbs. berries • The cost of one pound of blueberries is 1/3 of an hour or 20 minutes. • = .33 hours/lb of berries. • 3. • You are a farmer and decide to grow barley instead of wheat. The same inputs are used to grow each type of grain. • The cost of each ton of barley is one half a ton of wheat. • Give up / Gain • 100 tons wheat / 200 tons barley

  8. Example • You quit a $12,000 a year job working at Sobeys to hitch hike to Cape Breton and live in a Buddhist monastery. The monks take you in at no charge. • Give up / Gain • $12,000 / Year at monastery • The cost of the year at the monastery is $12,000.

  9. Example • You are a farmer and decide to grow barley instead of wheat. • Give up / Gain • 100 tons wheat / 200 tons barley • The cost of each ton of barley is one half a ton of wheat.

  10. MARGINAL COST • The opportunity cost of one more unit of a good • That is, what you must give up to gain one more unit of something • To gain the fourth shoe you must give up five shirts. When shoe production is at 4 units, the marginal cost of a shoe is five shirts.

  11. Marginal Benefit • The marginal benefit of a good or service is the benefit received from consuming one more unit of it. • We measure marginal benefit by the amount that a person is willing to pay for an additional unit of a good or service. 2-13

  12. MARGINAL BENEFIT • Generally, the more we have of any good or service, the smaller its marginal benefit and the less we are willing to pay for an additional unit of it. • We call this general principle the principle of decreasing marginal benefit. • A production possibility curve DOES NOT illustrate Marginal Benefit 2-14

  13. Using Resources Efficiently:production efficiency • When we cannot produce more of any one good without giving up some other good, we have achieved production efficiency, and we are producing at some point on the PPF. 2-15

  14. Using Resources Efficiently:allocative efficiency • When we cannot produce more of any one good without giving up some other good that we value more highly, we have achieved allocative efficiency, and we are producing at the point on the PPF that we prefer above all other points.

More Related