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Absolute v. Comparative Advantage

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Presentation on theme: "Absolute v. Comparative Advantage"— Presentation transcript:

1 Absolute v. Comparative Advantage
Two countries: Bolivia and Canada

2 Goods Two goods: Chairs and Sweaters One resource: hours of labor

3 Absolute advantage: The ability to produce something using fewer resources than other producers use
CANADA BOLIVIA HOURS OF LABOR NEEDED TO PRODUCE 1 1 Sweater 5 hrs 8 hrs 1 Chair 20 hrs 24 hrs Canada has absolute advantage in producing sweaters Canada has absolute advantage in producing chairs

4 Comparative Advantage
The ability to produce something at a lower opportunity cost than other producers face

5 Determining comparative advantage
How much does it cost to produce 1 chair? The cost will be in terms of sweaters that could have been produced in the same amount of time as 1 chair For Bolivia, how many sweaters could have been produced in 24 hours? For Canada, how many sweaters could have been produced in 20 hours?

6 Determining comparative advantage
CANADA BOLIVIA Cost of producing 1 chair in terms of sweaters 1 Chair 4 sweaters 3 sweaters Bolivia has comparative advantage in producing chairs because it would mean having to give up fewer sweaters

7 Determining comparative advantage
How much does it cost to produce 1 sweater? The cost will be in terms of (fraction of) a chair that could have been produced in the same amount of time as 1 sweater

8 Opportunity cost of 1 sweater
CANADA BOLIVIA Cost of producing 1 sweater in terms of chairs 1 Sweater ¼ chair 1/3 chair Canada has comparative advantage in producing sweaters because it would mean having to give up fewer chairs

9 Law of comparative advantage
The individual, firm, region, or country with the lowest opportunity cost of producing a particular good should specialize in producing that good. David Ricardo


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