1 / 9

Appendix to Lecture 2

Appendix to Lecture 2. Simplest graphing tools in economic analysis Production possibilities frontier Comparative advantage. Simplest graphing tools. Use chalkboard to present: Horizontal axis Vertical axis Point on plane and ordered pair First quadrant

kert
Download Presentation

Appendix to Lecture 2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Appendix to Lecture 2 Simplest graphing tools in economic analysis Production possibilities frontier Comparative advantage

  2. Simplest graphing tools • Use chalkboard to present: Horizontal axis Vertical axis Point on plane and ordered pair First quadrant Line and line segment (e.g., 2x + 3y = 5 depict it on x-y space) Slope and intercept Rectangular hyperbola

  3. Production opportunities of Frank and Robert • Two economic agents • Frank as a farmer; Robert as a rancher • Productivity (fixed rate assumed) measured by time Frank: (need) 60 min to produce 1 ounce (of) meat Frank: 15 min to produce 1 ounce potatoes Robert: 20 min to produce 1 ounce meat Robert: 10 min to produce 1 ounce potatoes Common sense at a glance: who gets the upper hand?

  4. Production opportunities (continued) • Question: What should Frank do? • conversion Frank: 60 min to produce 1 ounce (of) meat Frank: 15 min to produce 1 ounce potatoes Robert: 20 min to produce 1 ounce meat Robert: 10 min to produce 1 ounce potatoes Frank: 4 hours for 4 oz meat Frank: 4 hours for 16 oz potatoesnotice 1:4 Robert: 4 hours for 12 oz meat Robert: 4 hours for 24 oz potatoes notice 1:2 Moral (啟示)?

  5. Production opportunities (continued) Frank: 4 hours for 4 oz meat Frank: 4 hours for 16 oz potatoesnotice 1:4 Robert: 4 hours for 12 oz meat Robert: 4 hours for 24 oz potatoes notice 1:2 Moral (啟示): comparative advantage: Frank on potato; Robert on meat • Unsaid or unsettled issues: time constraint; demand • Depict PPFs on chalkboard (assumption added: 8 hrs) (注意課本之兩軸)

  6. Derive and depict PPFs Frank: 60 min to produce 1 ounce (of) meat Frank: 15 min to produce 1 ounce potatoes (1)(x) + (1/4)(y) = 8 here 1hr per oz of meat (1)(x) + (1/4)(y) < or = 8 Robert: 20 min to produce 1 ounce meat Robert: 10 min to produce 1 ounce potatoes (1/3)(x) + (1/6)(y) = 8 here 1/3hr per oz of meat (1/3)(x) + (1/6)(y) < or = 8

  7. Derive and depict PPFs (續) (1)(x) + (1/4)(y) < or = 8 Frank (4)(x) + (1)(y) < or = 32 Points (8, 0) and (0, 32) Slope = -4 or (0 - 32)/(8 - 0) confirmed (1/3)(x) + (1/6)(y) < or = 8 Robert (2)(x) + (1)(y) < or = 48 Points (24, 0) and (0, 48) Slope = -2 flatter

  8. Derive and depict PPFs (續) (4)(x) + (1)(y) < or = 32 Slope = -4 For Frank, cut one oz meat, increase 4 oz potatoes For Robert, cut one oz meat, increase 2 oz potatoes (0, 32) from Frank; (24, 0) from Robert (extreme) vs. (8, 0) from Frank; (0, 48) from Robert (extreme) How about (4, 16) and (12, 24)? text autarky without trade; production and consumption (insert figure)

  9. Illustrating trade Our story Frank (0, 32) to (5, 17) [import 5 meat; export 15 potatoes] Robert (18, 12) to (13, 27) [export 5 meat; import 15 potatoes] Term of trade 15/5 = 3 Relative price of meat (in terms of potato) Notice slope -3 between -4 and -2! Frank (5, 17) v. (4, 16); Robert (13, 27) v. (12, 24)

More Related