What purpose does production possibility frontier serve (PPF)?What is the point or what does it show?
The main point of production possibility frontiers is to illustrate the concept of opportunity cost.
Economically speaking, every decision has an opportunity cost. Whenever one chooses to use resources for one thing, those resources cannot be used for something else. If the US economy chooses to make x number of tanks, the materials that went into those tanks cannot be made into cars.
A ppf illustrates that concept. It shows that as an economy produces more of one thing, it has to produce less of something else (assuming that it is producing at 100% of its capacity).
Additionally, ppfs are used to illustrate the ideas of efficiency and inefficiency (by points on or within the line, respectively). They also help us understand that economic growth involves being able to make more of one of the goods without having to sacrifice some of the other.
Explain the economic importance of the production possibility frontier (PPF).
The production possibility frontier, usually abbreviated PPF, is used to
describe the production capacity of a country, or in some cases an individual
business.
Usually we draw it in two dimensions for convenience, though in reality it
should have many dimensions, one for each product that could be produced.
Along the PPF, production capacity is fully utilized; it is not possible with
current resources and technology to produce any more. We can move along the PPF
in each direction, producing more of one good and less of another good.
We can also move inside the PPF, producing less of both goods; but
this would mean wasting our productive capacity, because we are capable of
producing more than we are actually producing.
The one thing we cannot do is move outside the PPF, producing more of
both goods; outside the PPF is a level of production we simply can't achieve.
We'd like to if we could, but right now we can't.
The PPF is extremely important in describing a range of economic
phenomena.
The PPF can be used to explain the concept of opportunity cost: Rather
than measuring costs in dollars which are rather arbitrary (and change with
inflation), we can measure the cost of producing one good in terms of
not producing other goods. As you move along the PPF to produce more X
at the expense of less Y, the opportunity cost of X in terms of Y is the slope
dY/dX.
The PPF is often applied to international trade: Because different countries
have PPFs of different shapes, they can trade with one another to produce more
efficiently than either country could do alone, thus effectively expanding
their consumption beyond their individual PPF. (Put another way, the combined
PPF of both countries is larger than the PPF of each country alone.)
The PPF can also be used to describe inefficiency in production, unemployment,
and the business cycle. During a recession, the economy is producing below
potential GDP because people are unemployed. This means that we are below the
PPF and could have more economic output if we employed everyone and produced at
full capacity.
Finally, the PPF can also describe changes in technology and overall economic
growth. If technology makes production of one good more efficient, the PPF will
expand in the direction of that good. If there is growth in the economy as a
whole, the entire PPF will expand outward.
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