The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization
The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization
The Production Possibility Model, Trade, and Globalization
— Adam Smith
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Chapter Goals
Economic Systems
The U.S. economy is a market economy, which is an
economic system based on private property and the markets
in which, in principle, individuals decide how, what, and for
whom to produce
• Markets work through a system of rewards and payments
• Individuals are free to do whatever they want as long as
it is legal
• Fluctuations in prices play a central role in coordinating
individuals’ wants in a market economy
Most economists believe the market
is a good way to coordinate economic activity
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INTERNATIONAL INTERNATIONAL
CONNECTION CONNECTION
GOVERNMENT BUSINESS
HOUSEHOLDS
(Consumption) (Production)
FACTOR
MARKET
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History Economics
Hrs of Study Grade Hrs of Study Grade
20 98% 0 40%
18 94% 2 46%
10 78% 10 70% What is the
4 66% 16 88% output?
0 58% 20 100%
What is the
input?
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Econ Grade
100 A PPC demonstrates:
16 hrs for Econ and
4 hrs for History • There is a limit to what you
88
can achieve, given existing
10 hrs for each institutions, resources, and
70 History and Econ technology
• Every choice you make has
PPC an opportunity cost
40
58 66 78 100 History grade
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• Slope is steep at B
• This means there is a high
B
opportunity cost to produce more guns
Guns
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Comparative Advantage
The reason we must give up more and more butter
as we produce more guns is that some resources
are relatively better suited to producing guns, while
others are relatively better suited to producing
butter.
A resource has a comparative advantage if it is
better suited to the production of one good than to
the production of another good
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Efficiency
Productive efficiency is achieving as
Butter
much output as possible from a given
amount of inputs or resources
A
• • Points of efficiency
•D • Unattainable with given
amounts of inputs
•C • Point of inefficiency
•B
Guns
1
B B
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Income $5,000
$4,000
$3,000
$2,000
$1,000
Year
0 500 1000 1500 2020
2,000 Belgium
1,000
1 2 3 4 5 Chocolate (tons)
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1 2 3 4 5 Chocolate (tons)
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Chapter Summary
The production possibility curve illustrates maximum
outputs from a given number of inputs
To get increasing amounts of something, we must give
up ever-increasing quantities of something else
Trade allows people to use their comparative
advantage and shift out society’s PPC
Efficient, inefficient, and unattainable points on the PPC
Through specialization and trade, countries can increase
consumption
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Chapter Summary
Globalization is the increasing integration of economies,
cultures, and institutions across the world
High Income countries can maintain their strong
comparative advantage using new technologies and
innovation, replacing low paying jobs with other high-
paying jobs
Production shifts to countries where it is cheapest to
produce is guided by the law of one price