Understanding Scarcity, Choice & Opportunity Cost
Introduction to Microeconomics
Understand what PPC represents in economics
Scarcity, choice, opportunity cost & trade-offs
Points on, inside & outside the curve
What causes the PPC to change?
Resources are limited, but human wants are unlimited
We must choose how to allocate our limited resources
Every choice has a cost — what we give up
The 4 Factors of Production
A graphical representation showing all the different combinations of two goods that can be produced with given resources and technology, assuming all resources are fully and efficiently utilized.
Efficient & Full Employment
All resources are fully utilized. To produce more of one good, we must sacrifice some of the other.
Inefficient or Underutilization
Resources are not fully employed. Could produce more of both goods without sacrifice.
Unattainable with Current Resources
Cannot be achieved with existing resources and technology. Requires economic growth.
The value of the next best alternative foregone when making a choice
To gain 20 more X: Must sacrifice 20 Y
Opportunity Cost of 20X = 20Y
Opportunity Cost of 1X = 1Y
Increasing Opportunity Cost
Resources are not equally suitable for both goods
Constant Opportunity Cost
Resources are equally suitable for both goods
Decreasing Opportunity Cost
Specialized resources become more productive
The rate at which one good must be sacrificed to produce one additional unit of another good
As we produce more X, we give up increasingly larger amounts of Y
If growth favors only one good, the PPC rotates outward on that axis only
A classic economic example: How should a country allocate resources between military goods (guns) and civilian goods (butter)?
During wartime: More guns, less butter
During peace: More butter, fewer guns
India must decide how to allocate land and labor between agricultural production and industrial manufacturing.
Green Revolution: PPC shifted outward for food grains
IT Boom: PPC shifted outward for services
A student has 24 hours. How to divide time between studying and leisure?
Before exams: More study, less leisure
Vacations: More leisure, less study
Shows maximum production combinations of two goods with given resources
Represent efficient, full employment of resources
Indicate inefficiency or underemployment
Are unattainable with current resources
What we sacrifice to produce more of another good
Caused by changes in resources or technology
"Because resources are scarce, every choice involves a trade-off. The PPC helps us visualize these trade-offs and make better economic decisions."
Questions & Discussion