Title: Production Possibility Frontier
1Production Possibility Frontier
2The Production Possibilities Frontier
- Lets introduce the Production Possibilities
Frontier - better known as the PPF.
- The PPF is a basic workhorse in economics.
- Important for understanding some basic issues in
economics.
3The PPF
- Great application is with international trade
theory. - Helps one understand and distinguish between
comparative advantage and absolute advantage. - An important historical figure in all this is
David Ricardo.
4David Ricardo
- Famous 19th century British economist.
- Some consider him the grandfather of
international trade theory. - Very influential in pioneering the theory of
comparative advantage, inter alia. - Very interesting, very bright guy.
- Had a lot of say about the corn laws in England.
5The Production Possibility Frontier - What Is It?
- The description of the best possible combinations
of two goods to produce using all of the
available resources. - Shows the trade-off between more of one good in
terms of the other. - Assumes input endowments given, technology
given, time given and efficient production.
6Opportunity Cost
- The opportunity cost of an activity is the value
of the resources used in that activity when they
are measured by what they would have produced
when used in their next best alternative. - The slope of the Production Possibility Frontier
measures the marginal opportunity cost of
producing one good in terms of the amount of the
other good foregone.
7A Typical PPF Picture
The marginal opportunity cost of guns in terms
of butter is increasing as we move down the
PPF! The PPF is typically bowed-out or linear. It
is not bowed-in
Butter
unattainable
just attainable
inefficient
just attainable
Guns
8Comparative Advantage
- The person with the lower marginal opportunity
cost of an activity has the comparative advantage
at that activity. - This means that the person with the comparative
advantage can produce the activity by giving up
the smallest amount of the alternative activity.
9The Idea of Comparative Advantage and Trade
- Specialization and free trade will benefit all
trading parties, even when some are absolutely
more efficient producers than others. - Need to understand absolute vs. comparative
advantage.
10Absolute vs. Comparative Advantage Applied to
Trade
- Absolute advantage if your country uses fewer
resources to produce a given unit of output than
the other country. - Comparative advantage if your country can
produce the output at a lower marginal cost in
terms of other goods foregone than the other
country. - Every country (or person, or economy) has a
comparative advantage at some activity. - Absolute advantage is not important and may not
always happen. Sometimes people or countries
have the absolute advantage in nothing! Yet
trade possibilities still exist. - Its all about comparative advantage.
11PPFs and Comparative Advantage
- In this example, there are two goods being
produced Corn meal and RAM. - Juanita has an absolute advantage at both she
can produce more of each than Julio. - Juanita has a comparative advantage at producing
RAM compared to Julio she gives up 3.00 kg/day
of corn meal to make an additional 1k of chips. - Julio has a comparative advantage at producing
corn meal compared to Juanita he gives up 0.25 k
chips to make an additional kg of corn meal.
12Production Possibilities
- When we draw the production possibilities for
Juanita and Julio, there is a kink at 8 kg/day
corn meal and 4.00 k chips/day RAM. - The chart shows who specializes in corn meal and
RAM at each production level.
13Adding a Third Producer
- Sergio has no absolute advantage however, he has
a comparative advantage over both Juanita and
Julio in the production of RAM. - He sacrifices 2.00 kg of corn meal to make an
additional 1k of chips.
14Adding a Fourth Producer
- Question What is Marias comparative advantage
with respect to each of the other three producers?
15Comparative Advantage and Specialization
- As more and more producers enter the economy, the
production possibility curve gets more and more
bowed out (concave). - Along any segment, most of the producers are
fully specialized. - Only one producer is producing both goods along
any segment.
16The Supply Curve from the PPF
- At each relative price of RAM in terms of
foregone corn meal, we can determine the market
supply - The table shows how much is supplied and who is
producing.
17The Supply Curve for RAM
Maria
Julio
Juanita
Sergio
- The graph shows the supply curve for RAM based on
the data in the previous table. Each additional
supplier is shown above the segment where that
supplier determines the relative price.
- The supply curve of RAM is rising, reflecting the
increasing opportunity cost (also called marginal
cost) of RAM in terms of foregone corn meal.
18Supply Curve for Corn Meal
- Do the exact same thing...
- But in reverse!
19Supply Curve for Corn Meal Graph
Sergio
Juanita
Julio
Maria
- The supply curve for corn meal is shown above.
- The new producer along each segment is indicated
above.
20International Trade
- All the facts are the same as in the previous
example except that now we are talking about
countries that can trade at an international
price. - The international price is between the relative
prices that prevail in each country when no trade
is permitted. - There are many countries in the market in
addition to the two shown so that a country can
buy or sell as much as it wants or produces at
the international price.
21Country Us Production and Gains from Trade
- Country U has a comparative advantage in RAM
production. - The blue line shows its production possibilities
without trade. Slope 0.33. - The red line shows the possibilities at the
international price of 0.29 k chips per kg corn
(or 3.50 kg corn/ k chips RAM). Slope 0.29. - The gain to trade is the distance between the two
production possibility curves.
22Country Ms Production and Gains from Trade
- Country M has a comparative advantage in corn
meal production. - The blue line shows its production possibilities
without trade. Slope 0.25. - The red line shows the possibilities at the
international price of 0.29 k chips/ kg corn (or
3.50 kg corn/ k chips RAM). Slope 0.29. - The gain to trade is the distance between the two
production possibility curves.
23Question
- If country U chooses to consume 7 kg/day of corn
meal, what is the gain to trade from specializing
in RAM production, measured in k chips/day of
RAM?
24Answer
- The vertical distance between the blue and red
PPFs at a corn meal consumption of 7 kg/day
measures country Us gain to trade in k chips
RAM/day. - The point on the blue PPF is the best country U
can do without trade. - With trade country U can consume more RAM per
day, up to the point on the red PPF.
25Question
- What is country Ms gain if it chooses to consume
1.5 k chips per day, measured in kg/day of corn
meal?
26Answer
- The horizontal distance between the red and blue
PPFs measures country Ms gain to trade at a RAM
consumption of 1.5 k chips/day. - The blue PPF is the best that country M can do
without trade. - Trade allows country M to specialize in the
production of corn meal and still benefit from a
higher consumption of RAM.
27The International Supply Curve for RAM
- The international supply curve for RAM is a
rising function of the opportunity cost of RAM in
terms of foregone corn meal. - Which countries actually produce RAM for the
international market will depend upon where the
demand curve crosses this supply curve.
Demand
28The Sources ofComparative Advantage
- The Heckscher-Ohlin Theorem is a theory that
explains the existence of a countrys comparative
advantage by its factor endowments. - Factor endowments the quantity and quality of
labor, land, and natural resources of a country. - From Sweden in the early 1900s
- According to the H-O theorem, a country has a
comparative advantage in the production of a
product if that country is relatively well
endowed with inputs used intensively in the
production of that product.
29The Sources ofComparative Advantage
- Edward Leamer of UCLAs five biggies
- Natural resources
- Knowledge capital
- Physical capital
- Land
- Skilled and unskilled labor
30Other Explanations forObserved Trade Flows
- Product differentiation and competitive markets
- Acquired comparative advantage
- Natural comparative advantages
- Economies of scale
- Trading Environments
- Openness of Economy
31Note of Caution
- Information on comparative advantage is often
given in many other forms - pay careful attention
to the information you are given. - Two more ways to present the same kind of
information
32Absolute Advantage and Comparative Advantage
- Portugal has the A.A. in both wine and cloth.
- England has the C.A. in cloth.
- Portugal has the C.A. in wine.
- Can you figure out the marginal opportunity cost
for each output in each country?
33From Opportunity Cost to Marginal Cost
- The concept of marginal cost is the most
important concept in the theory of producer
supply behavior. - Marginal cost is the additional cost associated
with increasing production by one unit. - In our production possibility examples, marginal
cost is the value of the activity that is reduced
when the other activity is increased by one unit. - Marginal cost is, therefore, the same thing as
marginal opportunity cost.
34PPF Gymnastics
- The PPF is also useful for many other types of
questions. - Questions about efficiency.
- Questions about equity.
- Questions about tax and transfer policy.
- Questions about composition of output.
- Questions about growth and productivity.
Butter
PPF new
PPF old
Guns