24
Ch. 2: The Economic Problem. Topics •Production Possibilities Frontier & Opportunity . Cost •Efficient Allocation of resources •Trade-off between current and future production. •Gains from specialization and trade •Importance of property rights and markets

Ch. 2: The Economic Problem

  • Upload
    odette

  • View
    21

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Ch. 2: The Economic Problem. Topics Production Possibilities Frontier & Opportunity . Cost Efficient Allocation of resources Trade-off between current and future production. Gains from specialization and trade Importance of property rights and markets. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Ch. 2: The Economic Problem.

• Topics

• Production Possibilities Frontier & Opportunity . Cost

• Efficient Allocation of resources

• Trade-off between current and future production.

• Gains from specialization and trade

• Importance of property rights and markets

Page 2: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Production Possibilities and Opportunity Cost

Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF) – boundary between combinations of goods and

services that can be produced and those that cannot.

To illustrate PPF, – Assume economy produces only two goods at a time

and hold the quantities of all other goods and services constant.

– Assume everything else remains the same (ceteris paribus) except the two goods we’re considering.

Page 3: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

PPF and Efficiency

Combinations of goods can be classified as

• Attainable

• Productively efficient

• Productively inefficient

• Unattainable

Coconuts

Fish

Page 4: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

PPF and Opportunity Cost

• Measuring opportunity cost using the PPF.

• Opportunity cost of 1 million pizzas at– C– D

• |Slope of PPF| = opportunity cost of pizza

Page 5: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Production Possibilities and Opportunity Cost

Opportunity cost of 1 million CDs At C At D

|1/PPF slope| = opportunity cost of CDs

Page 6: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Law of IMOC

• The Law of Increasing Marginal Opportunity Cost As the quantity

produced of each good increases, so does its opportunity cost.

Causes concave (bowed away from origin) PPF

Page 7: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Using Resources Efficiently

• This figure illustrates the marginal cost of pizza.

• As pizza production increases, the opportunity cost and the marginal cost of pizza increases.

• The Law of IMOC implies concavity of PPF

Page 8: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Using Resources Efficiently

A graph of marginal opportunity cost is upward sloping because of Law of IMOC.

Page 9: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Using Resources Efficiently

• Marginal Benefit (MB) of a good or service– Reflects a person’s “preferences”– Measures the benefit received from consuming one more unit of

it.– Can be measured by the amount that a person is willing to pay

for an additional unit of a good or service.

• Law of Decreasing MB (Law of Diminishing Marginal Utility) – the more we have of any good or service, the smaller is its

MB and the less we are willing to pay for an additional unit of it.

– MB Curve shows the relationship between the marginal benefit of a good and the quantity of that good consumed.

Page 10: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Using Resources Efficiently

• The Marginal Benefit curve slopes downward to reflect Law of Decreasing Marginal

Benefit .

Page 11: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Using Resources Efficiently

• Two kinds of efficiency– Productive efficiency:

• When we cannot produce more of any one good without giving up some other good

• producing at a point on the PPF.

– Allocative efficiency• When we cannot produce more of any one good

without giving up some other good that we value more highly

• producing at the point on the PPF that we prefer above all other points.

• MB of last unit = MC of last unit

Page 12: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Allocative Efficiency

MB

MC

# of pizzas (in millions)

MB, MC measured in CDs

2.5

If Q<500, why should production increase?

If Q>500, why should production decrease?

Page 13: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Allocative Efficiency

MB

MC

# of pizzas (in millions)

MB, MC measured in CDs

2.5

If MC increases, how would allocatively efficient level change?

If MB increases, how would allocatively efficient level change?

Page 14: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Using Resources Efficiently

• The point of allocative efficiency – point at which marginal

benefit equals marginal cost.

– determined by the quantity at which MB=MC

– Changes as preferences (MB) or costs (MC) change.

Page 15: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Economic Growth• Economic Growth

– expansion of PPF– Increases the standard of living

• Determinants of economic growth: Technological change Capital accumulation

Physical or human

Page 16: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Economic Growth

Consumer goods

Capital Goods

• How will the choice between consumer and capital goods affect future economic growth?

• What kind of government policies can affect location on PPF?

Page 17: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Gains From Trade

• Comparative Advantage– A person has a comparative advantage in

production of a good if that person can produce the good at a lower opportunity cost than anyone else.

• Absolute advantage– A person has an absolute advantage in an

activity if that person can produce more of the good in a given amount of time than anyone else.

Page 18: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Gains From Trade

Coconuts per day

Fish per day

Mary

Bill

9

9

15

10

Who has absolute advantage in

coconutsfish

Who has comparative advantage in

coconutsfish

Page 19: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Gains From Trade

Coconuts per day

Fish per day

Mary

Bill

9

9

15

10

Suppose no trade and on PPF. • If Bill produces 3 fish, he can

produce ____ coconuts.• If Mary produces 6 fish, she

can produce ____ coconuts.• World production is ____ fish

and ___ coconuts.

If specialize and tradeworld production could be ____ fish and ____ coconuts.

What are the gains from trade?

Page 20: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Gains From Trade

What is the “world” PPF for Mary & Bill?

Coconuts per day

Fish per day

Page 21: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Gains From Trade

• Nations can gain from specialization and trade

• Because the gains from trade arise from comparative (not absolute) advantage, people can gain from trade even if they have an absolute advantage in all commodities.

Page 22: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Gains from Trade Revisited

Suppose there is a small island economy with 20 Irish and 10 Germans. Each Irish can catch either 10 fish or gather 40 coconuts in a day. Each German can catch either 6 fish or 30 coconuts in a day.

Page 23: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

Draw PPF Here

Page 24: Ch. 2:  The Economic Problem

The Market Economy

• Trade is organized using two key social institutions: Property rights Markets

• Property Rights– the social arrangements that govern ownership, use,

and disposal of resources, goods or services.

• Markets– any arrangement that enables buyers and sellers to

get information and do business with each other.