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Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th , 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2
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Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Economics 111.3 Winter 14

January 13th, 2014Lecture 3

Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2

Page 2: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Sample Graphs from textbook

Page 3: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.
Page 4: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.
Page 5: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.
Page 6: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Ceteris Paribus Assumption• In order to isolate the relationships that exist between

two variables, other things must remain the same.• Endogenous variables: the variables that the the model

in question is studying. They are “inside” a theory or model. The values of endogenous variables are determined in the model

• Exogenous variables: all the other real-world variables that the model in question is not studying. The values of exogenous variables are determined outside the model: the model takes their values & behavior as given.

Page 7: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Graphing a Relationship Among 3 Variables

Page 8: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Presenting Information Visually

Page 9: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF)

Ch. 2 (up to p. 38)

Page 10: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

PPF: Production Possibilites FrontierPPF is a graph that shows the various combinations of output that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology

Quantity Technology (Capital , Land , Labour , ...)

Page 11: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

PPF model assumes:o full employmento productive efficiency (producing goods & services in

the least costly way)o fixed resourceso fixed technologyo two goods

pizzas symbolize consumer goods Cans of cola (better - industrial machines)

symbolize capital goods

𝑸=𝑨𝒇 (𝑲 ,𝑳 ,𝑵 ,𝒆𝒏𝒕𝒓𝒆𝒑𝒓𝒆𝒏𝒆𝒖𝒓𝒔𝒉𝒊𝒑 )

Page 12: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

The Production Possibilities Frontier

The Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF): a graph that shows the combinations of two goods the economy can possibly produce given the available resources and the available technology

Example: Two goods: computers and wheat One resource: labour (measured in hours) Economy has 50,000 labour hours per month

available for production.

Page 13: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Production Possibilities Curve

Shape of the Curve• concave to the originEconomic Rationale• Law of Increasing

Opportunity Cost (resources are not completely adaptable to alternative uses, thus

as we make more pizzas, the number of cans of cola we have to give up (per pizza) increases)

)

)

Page 14: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

How to measure the Opportunity Cost

• Opportunity cost is measured in terms of rate at which a person (or an economy as a whole) will give up the good, measured on the vertical axis to get one additional unit of the good, measured on the horizontal axis, and at the same time remain on the same PPF

Page 15: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

The PPF and Opportunity Cost Recall: The opportunity cost of an item

is what must be given up to obtain that item. Moving along a PPF involves shifting resources

(e.g., labor) from the production of one good to the other.

Society faces a tradeoff: Getting more of one good requires sacrificing some of the other.

The slope of the PPF tells you the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other.

Page 16: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

– In moving from E to F, the quantity of pizzas increases by 1 million.

– The quantity of cola decreases by 5 million cans.

– The opportunity cost of the fifth 1 million pizzas is 5 million cans of cola.

– One of these pizzas costs 5 cans of cola.

Production Possibilities and Opportunity Cost

Page 17: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

– Note that the opportunity cost of a can of cola is the inverse of the opportunity cost of a pizza.

– One pizza costs 5 cans of cola.

– One can of cola costs 1/5 of a pizza.

Production Possibilities and Opportunity Cost

Page 18: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Opportunity Cost and Marginal Cost

Page 19: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.
Page 20: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Allocative EfficiencyAllocative efficiency implies producing goods &

services most wanted by society

• Marginal Benefit is the extra benefit associated with consuming one more unit

• Marginal Cost is the extra opportunity cost of that extra unit

• Decide on allocative efficiency by comparing Marginal (extra) Cost (MC) to Marginal Benefit (MB)

Page 21: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Why the PPF Might Be Bow-Shaped

Mountain Bikes

Bee

r

As the economy shifts resources from beer to mountain bikes:

PPF becomes steeper

opp. cost of mountain bikes increases

Page 22: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

A

Why the PPF Might Be Bow-Shaped

At point A, most workers are producing beer, even those that are better suited to building bikes.

So, do not have to give up much beer to get more bikes. Mountain

Bikes

Bee

r At A, opp. cost of mtn bikes is low.At A, opp. cost of mtn bikes is low.

Page 23: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

B

Why the PPF Might Be Bow-Shaped

At B, most workers are producing bikes. The few left in beer are the best brewers.

Producing more bikes would require shifting some of the best brewers away from beer production, would cause a big drop in beer output. Mountain

Bikes

Bee

r

At B, opp. cost of mtn bikes is high.

At B, opp. cost of mtn bikes is high.

Page 24: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Why the PPF Might Be Bow-Shaped

So, PPF is bow-shaped when different workers have different skills, different opportunity costs of producing one good in terms of the other.

The PPF would also be bow-shaped when there is some other resource, or mix of resources with varying opportunity costs(E.g., different types of land suited for different uses).

Page 25: Economics 111.3 Winter 14 January 13 th, 2014 Lecture 3 Appendix to Ch. 1, Ch. 2.

Microeconomics and Macroeconomics

Microeconomics is the study of how households and firms make decisions and how they interact in markets.

Macroeconomics is the study of economy-wide phenomena, including inflation, unemployment, and economic growth.

These two branches of economics are closely intertwined, yet distinct – they address different questions.