1 Limits, Alternatives, and Choices BUT LIMITED OR SCARCE RESOURCES! SOCIETY HAS UNLIMITED WANTS...

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Presentation transcript:

1 Limits, Alternatives, and Choices

BUT LIMITED OR SCARCE RESOURCES! SOCIETY HAS UNLIMITED WANTS...

Individual’s Economizing Problem Limited Income Unlimited Wants Tradeoffs Choice

DVDs $20 Books $ $120 Budget Income = $120 P dvd = $20 = 6 Income = $120 P b = $10 = 12 Attainable Unattainable Quantity of Books Quantity of DVDs

Society’s Economizing Problem Scarce Resources Resource: –Land –Labor –Capital –Entrepreneurial Ability Factors of Production

LAND SCARCE RESOURCES ECONOMIC RESOURCES

LAND CAPITAL SCARCE RESOURCES ECONOMIC RESOURCES

SCARCE RESOURCES ECONOMIC RESOURCES Notes... FINANCIAL CAPITAL REAL CAPITAL

LAND CAPITAL LABOR SCARCE RESOURCES ECONOMIC RESOURCES

LAND CAPITAL LABOR ENTREPRENEUR SCARCE RESOURCES ECONOMIC RESOURCES Factors of Production

RESOURCE PAYMENTS RENT INTEREST WAGES PROFIT LAND CAPITAL LABOR ENTREPRENEUR

Production Possibilities Model 1- Full Employment 2- Fixed Resources 3- Fixed Technology 4- Two Goods

A Consumer Good PIZZA PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Robots And a Capital Good

Using all resources, to get some pizza, we must give up some robots! We can only produce 10,000 Robots or 400,000 Pizzas PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA01234 (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA01234 (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA01234 (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA01234 (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA01234 (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

PIZZA01234 (in hundred thousands) ROBOTS (in thousands) Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

A full-employment, full-production economy must sacrifice some of product X to obtain more of product Y. PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Q Q Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) A B C D E W Attainable but Inefficient Unattainable Attainable & Efficient PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Z

Q Q Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) A B C D E W Attainable but Inefficient Unattainable Attainable & Efficient LAW OF INCREASING OPPORTUNITY COSTS The amount of other products that must be sacrificed to obtain 1 unit of a specific product is called the opportunity cost of that good.

Q Q Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) A B C D E W Attainable but Inefficient Unattainable Attainable & Efficient PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES A graph of the production possibilities curve will be CONCAVE Economic resources are not completely adapt- able to other uses.

Q Q Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) U Unemployment & Underemployment Shown by Point U More of either or both is possible PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES

Q Q Robots (thousands) Pizzas (hundred thousands) U Unemployment & Underemployment Shown by Point U More of either or both is possible PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES Notes... Economic Growth 1 – Increase in resource supplies 2 – Better resource quality 3 – Technological advances

Economic Growth –Increasing Resource Supplies –Increasing Resource Quality –Technological Advances

Pizzas Industrial Robots Attainable Unattainable A B C D E Economic Growth Now Attainable A’ B’ C’ D’ E’ Production Possibilities Curve

Pizzas Industrial Robots Under or Unemployment Unattainable A’ B’ C’ D’ E’ Production Possibilities Curve U

Key Terms economics opportunity cost microeconomics positive economicspositive economics normative economicsnormative economics economizing problemeconomizing problem budget line factors of productionfactors of production consumer goods capital goods production possibilities curveproduction possibilities curve law of increasing opportunity costslaw of increasing opportunity costs economic growth economic resources land labor capital Entreprene- urial ability