Chapter 2: Opportunity costs
Scarcity
Economics is the study of how individuals and economies
deal with the fundamental problem of scarcity.
As a result of scarcity, individuals and societies must make
choices among competing alternatives.
Opportunity Cost
The opportunity cost of any alternative is defined as the
cost of not selecting the "next-best" alternative.
What Does Opportunity Cost Mean?
•
1. The cost of an alternative that must be
forgone in order to pursue a certain action.
• Put another way, the benefits you could have
received by taking an alternative action.
What Does Opportunity Cost Mean?
• 2. The difference in return between a chosen investment and one
that is necessarily passed up.
• Say you invest in a stock and it returns a paltry 2% over the year.
• In placing your money in the stock, you gave up the opportunity of
another investment - say, a risk-free government bond yielding 6%.
In this situation, your opportunity costs are 4% (6% - 2%).
Investopedia explains Opportunity Cost
•
1. The opportunity cost of going to college is the money you would have
earned if you worked instead.
• On the one hand, you lose four years of salary while getting your degree;
on the other hand, you hope to earn more during your career, thanks to
your education, to offset the lost wages.
Investopedia explains Opportunity Cost
Here's another example: if a gardener decides to grow
carrots, his or her opportunity cost is the alternative crop
that might have been grown instead
(potatoes, tomatoes, pumpkins, etc.).
Investopedia explains Opportunity Cost
• In both cases, a choice between two options
must be made. It would be an easy decision if
you knew the end outcome; however, the risk
that you could achieve greater "benefits" (be
they monetary or otherwise) with another
option is the opportunity cost.
Opportunity cost (Further Explanations)
• is the cost of any activity measured in terms of the value of
the best alternative that is not chosen (i.e., that is foregone).
• It is the sacrifice related to the second best choice available
to someone who has picked among several mutually exclusive
choices.
Opportunity cost
• Opportunity cost is a key concept in
economics, and has been described as
expressing "the basic relationship between
scarcity and choice".
Opportunity cost
• The notion of opportunity cost plays a crucial
part in ensuring that scarce resources are used
efficiently.
• Thus, opportunity costs are not restricted to
monetary or financial costs
• the real cost of output forgone, lost
time, pleasure or any other benefit that
provides utility should also be considered
opportunity costs
Marginal analysis
• Marginal benefit = additional benefit
resulting from a one-unit increase in the
level of an activity
• Marginal cost = additional cost associated
with one-unit increase in the level of an
activity
Net benefit
• Individuals are not expected to maximize benefit; nor
are they expected to minimize costs.
• Individuals are assumed to attempt to maximize the
level of net benefit (total benefit minus total cost)
from any activity in which they are engaged.
Production possibilities curve
• Assumptions:
– A fixed quantity and quality of available resources
– A fixed level of technology
– Efficient production (i.e., no unemployment and
no underemployment)
Law of diminishing returns
• Law of diminishing returns: output will
ultimately increase by progressively smaller
amounts when the use of a variable input
increases while other inputs are held constant.
Reasons for law of increasing cost
Law of diminishing returns
Specialized resources (heterogeneous
labor, land, capital, etc.)
Specialized resources in farming
• Some land, labor, and capital is better suited for
wheat production and some is better suited for corn
production
Specialization and trade
Adam Smith – economic growth is caused by increased
specialization and division of labor.
Gains from specialization and division of labor
• specialization in areas that match the skills and talents of
workers
• “learning by doing” – increase in productivity from task
repetition
• less time lost while switching from task to task
Absolute and comparative advantage
• Absolute advantage – an individual (or country) is
more productive than other individuals (or
countries).
• Comparative advantage – an individual (or country)
may produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than
can other individuals (or countries).
Free trade?
• If each country specializes in the production of
those goods in which it possesses a
comparative advantage and trades with other
countries, global output and consumption in
increased.

Economics Chap2

  • 1.
    Chapter 2: Opportunitycosts Scarcity Economics is the study of how individuals and economies deal with the fundamental problem of scarcity. As a result of scarcity, individuals and societies must make choices among competing alternatives. Opportunity Cost The opportunity cost of any alternative is defined as the cost of not selecting the "next-best" alternative.
  • 2.
    What Does OpportunityCost Mean? • 1. The cost of an alternative that must be forgone in order to pursue a certain action. • Put another way, the benefits you could have received by taking an alternative action.
  • 3.
    What Does OpportunityCost Mean? • 2. The difference in return between a chosen investment and one that is necessarily passed up. • Say you invest in a stock and it returns a paltry 2% over the year. • In placing your money in the stock, you gave up the opportunity of another investment - say, a risk-free government bond yielding 6%. In this situation, your opportunity costs are 4% (6% - 2%).
  • 4.
    Investopedia explains OpportunityCost • 1. The opportunity cost of going to college is the money you would have earned if you worked instead. • On the one hand, you lose four years of salary while getting your degree; on the other hand, you hope to earn more during your career, thanks to your education, to offset the lost wages. Investopedia explains Opportunity Cost Here's another example: if a gardener decides to grow carrots, his or her opportunity cost is the alternative crop that might have been grown instead (potatoes, tomatoes, pumpkins, etc.).
  • 5.
    Investopedia explains OpportunityCost • In both cases, a choice between two options must be made. It would be an easy decision if you knew the end outcome; however, the risk that you could achieve greater "benefits" (be they monetary or otherwise) with another option is the opportunity cost.
  • 6.
    Opportunity cost (FurtherExplanations) • is the cost of any activity measured in terms of the value of the best alternative that is not chosen (i.e., that is foregone). • It is the sacrifice related to the second best choice available to someone who has picked among several mutually exclusive choices. Opportunity cost • Opportunity cost is a key concept in economics, and has been described as expressing "the basic relationship between scarcity and choice".
  • 7.
    Opportunity cost • Thenotion of opportunity cost plays a crucial part in ensuring that scarce resources are used efficiently. • Thus, opportunity costs are not restricted to monetary or financial costs • the real cost of output forgone, lost time, pleasure or any other benefit that provides utility should also be considered opportunity costs
  • 8.
    Marginal analysis • Marginalbenefit = additional benefit resulting from a one-unit increase in the level of an activity • Marginal cost = additional cost associated with one-unit increase in the level of an activity
  • 9.
    Net benefit • Individualsare not expected to maximize benefit; nor are they expected to minimize costs. • Individuals are assumed to attempt to maximize the level of net benefit (total benefit minus total cost) from any activity in which they are engaged.
  • 10.
    Production possibilities curve •Assumptions: – A fixed quantity and quality of available resources – A fixed level of technology – Efficient production (i.e., no unemployment and no underemployment)
  • 11.
    Law of diminishingreturns • Law of diminishing returns: output will ultimately increase by progressively smaller amounts when the use of a variable input increases while other inputs are held constant. Reasons for law of increasing cost Law of diminishing returns Specialized resources (heterogeneous labor, land, capital, etc.)
  • 12.
    Specialized resources infarming • Some land, labor, and capital is better suited for wheat production and some is better suited for corn production Specialization and trade Adam Smith – economic growth is caused by increased specialization and division of labor.
  • 13.
    Gains from specializationand division of labor • specialization in areas that match the skills and talents of workers • “learning by doing” – increase in productivity from task repetition • less time lost while switching from task to task
  • 14.
    Absolute and comparativeadvantage • Absolute advantage – an individual (or country) is more productive than other individuals (or countries). • Comparative advantage – an individual (or country) may produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than can other individuals (or countries).
  • 15.
    Free trade? • Ifeach country specializes in the production of those goods in which it possesses a comparative advantage and trades with other countries, global output and consumption in increased.