Sunday, January 28, 2018

Unit 1: Basic Economic Concepts - Production Possiblities Graph

January 18, 2018
Production Possibilities Graph

  • Production Possibilities Graphs [PPG, PPC (curve), or PPF (frontier)] 
    • Show alternate ways to use resources
    • Shows the most that society can produce if it uses every available resource to the best of its ability.
  • Key Assumptions: 
    1. Full Employment
      • 80 - 90% factor capacity
      • 4 -5% unemployment rate
    2. Productive Efficiency
    3. Fixed Resources
      1. Land
      2. Labor
      3. Capital
    4. Fixed Technology
    5. No international trade
    6. 2 goods produced
  • Point A: Attainable, but inefficient
  • Point B, C, and D: Attainable and efficient
  • Point X: Unattainable
  • Movements of PPG:
    • Inside of the Curve: 
      • Located on Point A
      • Attainable, but inefficient
      • Unemployment- have resources but no people OR have people but no resources
      • Underemployment
      • Underutilization
      • Recession
    • Along the Curve/ Frontier:
      • Located on Point B (more production of guns than butter), D (equal production of guns and butter), And C (more production of butter than guns)
      • Attainable and efficient
      • Can shift along the curve
    • Shifts of the Curve:
  • Opportunity Cost: Next best alternative that you must give up in order to get something else.
  • Law of Increasing Opportunity Cost: As you produce more of one good, the opportunity costs (the forgone production of another good) will increase.
  • Concave VS. Constant PPG: 
    • Concave PPG:
      • Shows Growth

    • Constant PPG: 
      • Stays the same
  • Productive VS. Allocative Efficiency:
    • Productive Efficiency: Products are being produced in a least costly way.
    • Allocative Efficiency: Products being produced are the ones most desired by society.





1 comment:

  1. One thing to remember is that production can happen inside and on the curve. At point A in the first graph, what is going on in the economy may be: unemployment, underemployment, war, famine, or a recession/depression.

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