AP Microeconomics Unit 1 Notes: Making Choices in a World of Limited Resources

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25 Terms

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Scarcity

The condition that resources are limited relative to unlimited wants; you cannot have everything because inputs (time, labor, land, capital, etc.) are finite.

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Tradeoff

The idea that choosing more of one option means choosing less of another due to scarcity.

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Incentive

Anything that motivates a person or firm to act in a certain way (including rewards, penalties, fees, opportunity costs, or social pressure).

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Marginal Analysis

Decision-making that compares the additional (marginal) benefits and additional (marginal) costs of doing a little more or a little less of an activity.

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Marginal Benefit (MB)

The additional benefit gained from one more unit of an action (e.g., one more hour worked or one more unit produced).

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Marginal Cost (MC)

The additional cost incurred from one more unit of an action (including what must be given up to do it).

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Marginal Decision Rule

Do more of an activity if marginal benefit exceeds marginal cost; do less (or stop) if marginal cost exceeds marginal benefit.

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Economic Model

A simplified representation used by economists to focus on key relationships and predict or explain outcomes.

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Ceteris Paribus

“Other things equal”; an assumption used to isolate the effect of one change while holding other relevant factors constant.

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Positive Statement

A factual claim that can be tested in principle (e.g., a higher minimum wage reduces quantity demanded for low-skill labor).

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Normative Statement

A value judgment about what should be (e.g., the minimum wage should be higher).

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Opportunity Cost

The value of the single next best alternative given up when a choice is made; it exists even when there is no money cost.

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Explicit Cost

A direct monetary payment made (what you pay out-of-pocket), which may differ from opportunity cost.

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Production Possibilities Curve (PPC)

A graph showing the maximum combinations of two goods an economy can produce with available resources, current technology, and efficient production.

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Productive Efficiency

Producing at a point on the PPC, meaning output is maximized given resources and technology.

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Inefficiency (Inside the PPC)

A point inside the PPC indicating underutilized resources or misallocation (e.g., unemployment, idle factories).

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Unattainable (Outside the PPC)

A point outside the PPC that cannot be produced with current resources and technology.

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Increasing Opportunity Cost

When the opportunity cost rises as more of one good is produced; typically shown by a bowed-out (concave) PPC because resources are not equally suited to all production.

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Constant Opportunity Cost

When the tradeoff between two goods stays the same; shown by a straight-line PPC, implying resources are equally adaptable between goods.

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PPC Shift

A change in an economy’s productive capacity: outward with growth (more resources/better technology) or inward with loss of resources/capacity.

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Movement Along the PPC

Reallocating resources between two goods while remaining efficient (more of one good means less of the other), without changing productive capacity.

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Absolute Advantage

The ability to produce more of a good with the same resources (or the same output with fewer resources) than another producer.

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Comparative Advantage

The ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer; the basis for specialization and trade.

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Gains from Trade

Increases in total production and/or consumption that occur when parties specialize according to comparative advantage and then trade.

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Terms of Trade

The rate at which one good exchanges for another; for both sides to gain, the trade price must fall between their opportunity costs.

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