Production Possibilities Curve

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Production Possibilities Curve Graphs to show alternative ways to use an economy’s productive resources

description

Production Possibilities Curve. Graphs to show alternative ways to use an economy ’ s productive resources. Production Possibilities. Economists will use graphs to analyze choices and trade-offs people make. Why? Graphs help us understand how one value relates to another value. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Production Possibilities Curve

Page 1: Production Possibilities Curve

Production Possibilities Curve

Graphs to show alternative ways to use an economy’s productive resources

Page 2: Production Possibilities Curve

Production PossibilitiesEconomists will use graphs to analyze

choices and trade-offs people make.Why? Graphs help us understand how one

value relates to another value.Graphs- logical representation of figuresAxes of graphs chart categories and

facts

Page 3: Production Possibilities Curve

Drawing a Production Possibilities Curve1. Must decide which goods or services

to examine- Simple graph-Chart2. Country of CapelandShoes vs Watermelons- figures 1.4Vertical axis: shoes= 15 millionHorizontal axis: watermelons= 21

millionOpportunity cost thinking- smart???

Page 4: Production Possibilities Curve

Another Way-”Production Possibilities Frontier”3rd alternative- figure 1.5” Benefit of this thinking? Diversify!!!!Thinking on “margin”- multiple

possibilities and trade-offsBoth shoes and watermelonsThe line drawn on the line graph is a

“production possibilities frontier”OPTIONS about Capeland’s production

Page 5: Production Possibilities Curve

Efficiency, Growth & CostGraphs (Production possibilities) gives

us a lot of information.Efficiency, growth,opportunity costs of

production of one good or anotherProduction Possibilities Frontier shows

EFFICIENCY- maximizing output and use of resources in production.

Not all economies are efficient

Page 6: Production Possibilities Curve

UnderutilizationGraph 1.5- any point inside of the graph

represents underutilization of resources and production of goods. Fewer overall goods produced in economy.

Production of shoes and watermelon not at full potential

Page 7: Production Possibilities Curve

Growth Production possibilities curve is a snapshot of

of resources at a specific point in time Real world- resources are “fluid” constantly

flowing and changing Quantitiy/Qualitiy of land, labor, resource Growth = shift to right or increae “T” Reasons???? See above LL&R Decrease????????? “G”

Page 8: Production Possibilities Curve

Cost Not necessarily monetary Opportunity Cost- next best alternative COST- one option vs another or sacrifice COST figure 1.5 0 watermelons to 8 million tons = 1 million

shoes (cost) ?? 8/1 2nd step- 14/2?? Incease of only 6- result?

Page 9: Production Possibilities Curve

Law of increasing costs As production switches from from one item to

another , more and more resources are necessary to increase production of 2nd item.

Switching from shoes to watermelons costs something

Shoes to watermelons show increasing costs Expense of tradeoff-watermelon to shoes

Page 10: Production Possibilities Curve

Law of Increasing CostsFigure 1.7 In the example- why does cost

increase?What are resources best suited for?Do resources & technology impact

production choices?Resources, skill of workers, technology