Deck 2: True False

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An economic model can accurately explain how the economy is organized because it is designed to include,to the extent possible,all features of the real world.
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Economic models omit many details to allow us to see what is truly important.
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Historical episodes allow economists to illustrate and evaluate current economic theories.
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Good assumptions simplify a problem without substantially affecting the answer.
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Economic models are most often composed of diagrams and equations.
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Economic models can help us understand reality only when they include all details of the economy.
Question
Economists devise theories,collect data,and then analyze these data in an attempt to verify or refute their theories.
Question
Economists usually have to make do with whatever data the world happens to give them.
Question
For economists,conducting experiments is often difficult and sometimes impossible.
Question
All scientific models,including economic models,simplify reality in order to improve our understanding of it.
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Economists use one standard set of assumptions to answer all economic questions.
Question
Since economists cannot use natural experiments offered by history,they must use carefully constructed laboratory experiments instead.
Question
Economists try to address their subject with a scientist's objectivity.
Question
Economists often find it worthwhile to make assumptions that do not necessarily describe the real world.
Question
It is difficult for economists to make observations and develop theories,but it is easy for economists to run experiments to generate data to test their theories.
Question
Assumptions can simplify the complex world and make it easier to understand.
Question
The scientific method can be applied to the study of economics.
Question
The scientific method is the dispassionate development and testing of theories about how the world works.
Question
Historical episodes are not valuable to economists.
Question
While the scientific method is applicable to studying natural sciences,it is not applicable to studying a nation's economy.
Question
A circular-flow diagram is a visual model of the economy.
Question
In the markets for goods and services in the circular-flow diagram,households are buyers and firms are sellers.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 45 doghouses and 30 dishwashers.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 45 doghouses and 30 dishwashers.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,factors of production are the goods and services produced by firms.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,one loop represents the flow of goods,services,and factors of production,and the other loop represents the corresponding flow of dollars.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,the two types of markets in which households and firms interact are the markets for goods and services and the markets for factors of production.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 75 doghouses.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 75 doghouses.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,one loop represents the flow of goods and services,and the other loop represents the flow of factors of production.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,payments for labor,land,and capital flow from firms to households through the markets for the factors of production.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.If this economy uses all its resources in the dishwasher industry,it produces 35 dishwashers and no doghouses.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.If this economy uses all its resources in the dishwasher industry,it produces 35 dishwashers and no doghouses.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,firms produce goods and services using the factors of production.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,households and firms are the decision makers.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,factors of production include land,labor,and capital.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,firms own the factors of production and use them to produce goods and services.
Question
The circular flow model is not used anymore because it fails to perfectly replicate real world situations.
Question
In the markets for the factors of production in the circular-flow diagram,households are buyers and firms are sellers.
Question
In the circular-flow diagram,firms consume all the goods and services that they produce.
Question
The production possibilities frontier is a graph that shows the various combinations of outputs that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 30 doghouses and 20 dishwashers.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 30 doghouses and 20 dishwashers.
Question
The circular-flow diagram explains,in general terms,how the economy is organized and how participants in the economy interact with one another.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of an additional doghouse increases as more doghouses are produced.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of an additional doghouse increases as more doghouses are produced.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 35 dishwashers and zero doghouses.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 35 dishwashers and zero doghouses.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent efficient outcomes for this economy.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent efficient outcomes for this economy.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.When this economy produces 30 doghouses and 25 dishwashers there is full employment.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.When this economy produces 30 doghouses and 25 dishwashers there is full employment.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Given the technology available for manufacturing doghouses and dishwashers,this economy does not have enough of the factors of production to support the level of output represented by point C.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.Given the technology available for manufacturing doghouses and dishwashers,this economy does not have enough of the factors of production to support the level of output represented by point C.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent feasible outcomes for this economy.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent feasible outcomes for this economy.
Question
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.It is possible for this economy to produce 1000 shoes.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-17.It is possible for this economy to produce 1000 shoes.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point A is zero.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point A is zero.
Question
Points inside the production possibilities frontier represent inefficient levels of production.
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Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Unemployment could cause this economy to produce at point B.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.Unemployment could cause this economy to produce at point B.
Question
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of producing an additional pair of shoes increases as more shoes are produced.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of producing an additional pair of shoes increases as more shoes are produced.
Question
Points inside the production possibilities frontier represent feasible levels of production.
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Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Points B and C represent infeasible outcomes for this economy.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.Points B and C represent infeasible outcomes for this economy.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point D is 10 dishwashers.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point D is 10 dishwashers.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point D is 15 doghouses.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point D is 15 doghouses.
Question
With the resources it has,an economy can produce at any point on or outside the production possibilities frontier,but it cannot produce at points inside the frontier.
Question
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point B is zero.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point B is zero.
Question
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-17.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.
Question
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 4000 shoes and zero t-shirts.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-17.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 4000 shoes and zero t-shirts.
Question
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.<div style=padding-top: 35px>
Refer to Figure 2-14.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.
Question
An outcome is said to be efficient if an economy is conserving the largest possible quantity of its scarce resources while still meeting the basic needs of society.
Question
Points outside the production possibilities frontier represent infeasible levels of production.
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An outcome is said to be efficient if an economy is getting all it can from the scarce resources it has available.
Question
The trade-off between the production of one good and the production of another good can change over time because of technological advances.
Question
A production possibilities frontier will be bowed outward if some of the economy's resources are better suited to producing one good than another.
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A production point is said to be efficient if there is no way for the economy to produce more of one good without producing less of another.
Question
The opportunity cost of something is what you give up to get it.
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Unemployment causes production levels to be inefficient.
Question
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of the first good in terms of the second good increases as more of the second good is produced.
Question
A technological advance in the production of the first good increases the opportunity cost of the first good in terms of the second good.
Question
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other is constant.
Question
The production possibilities frontier shows the opportunity cost of one good as measured in terms of the other good.
Question
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of the second good in terms of the first good increases as more of the second good is produced.
Question
A production possibilities frontier has a bowed shape if the opportunity cost is constant at all levels of output.
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While the production possibilities frontier is a useful model,it cannot be used to illustrate economic growth.
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If a major union goes on strike,then the country would be operating inside its production possibilities frontier.
Question
If an economy can produce more of one good without giving up any of another good,then the economy's current production point is inefficient.
Question
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other depends on how much of each good is being produced.
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Economists believe that production possibilities frontiers rarely have a bowed shape.
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Points on the production possibilities frontier represent efficient levels of production.
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Deck 2: True False
1
An economic model can accurately explain how the economy is organized because it is designed to include,to the extent possible,all features of the real world.
False
2
Economic models omit many details to allow us to see what is truly important.
True
3
Historical episodes allow economists to illustrate and evaluate current economic theories.
True
4
Good assumptions simplify a problem without substantially affecting the answer.
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5
Economic models are most often composed of diagrams and equations.
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6
Economic models can help us understand reality only when they include all details of the economy.
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7
Economists devise theories,collect data,and then analyze these data in an attempt to verify or refute their theories.
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8
Economists usually have to make do with whatever data the world happens to give them.
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9
For economists,conducting experiments is often difficult and sometimes impossible.
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10
All scientific models,including economic models,simplify reality in order to improve our understanding of it.
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11
Economists use one standard set of assumptions to answer all economic questions.
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12
Since economists cannot use natural experiments offered by history,they must use carefully constructed laboratory experiments instead.
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13
Economists try to address their subject with a scientist's objectivity.
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14
Economists often find it worthwhile to make assumptions that do not necessarily describe the real world.
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15
It is difficult for economists to make observations and develop theories,but it is easy for economists to run experiments to generate data to test their theories.
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16
Assumptions can simplify the complex world and make it easier to understand.
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17
The scientific method can be applied to the study of economics.
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18
The scientific method is the dispassionate development and testing of theories about how the world works.
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19
Historical episodes are not valuable to economists.
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20
While the scientific method is applicable to studying natural sciences,it is not applicable to studying a nation's economy.
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21
A circular-flow diagram is a visual model of the economy.
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22
In the markets for goods and services in the circular-flow diagram,households are buyers and firms are sellers.
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23
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 45 doghouses and 30 dishwashers.
Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 45 doghouses and 30 dishwashers.
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24
In the circular-flow diagram,factors of production are the goods and services produced by firms.
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25
In the circular-flow diagram,one loop represents the flow of goods,services,and factors of production,and the other loop represents the corresponding flow of dollars.
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26
In the circular-flow diagram,the two types of markets in which households and firms interact are the markets for goods and services and the markets for factors of production.
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27
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 75 doghouses.
Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 75 doghouses.
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28
In the circular-flow diagram,one loop represents the flow of goods and services,and the other loop represents the flow of factors of production.
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29
In the circular-flow diagram,payments for labor,land,and capital flow from firms to households through the markets for the factors of production.
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30
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.If this economy uses all its resources in the dishwasher industry,it produces 35 dishwashers and no doghouses.
Refer to Figure 2-14.If this economy uses all its resources in the dishwasher industry,it produces 35 dishwashers and no doghouses.
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31
In the circular-flow diagram,firms produce goods and services using the factors of production.
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32
In the circular-flow diagram,households and firms are the decision makers.
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33
In the circular-flow diagram,factors of production include land,labor,and capital.
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34
In the circular-flow diagram,firms own the factors of production and use them to produce goods and services.
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35
The circular flow model is not used anymore because it fails to perfectly replicate real world situations.
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36
In the markets for the factors of production in the circular-flow diagram,households are buyers and firms are sellers.
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37
In the circular-flow diagram,firms consume all the goods and services that they produce.
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38
The production possibilities frontier is a graph that shows the various combinations of outputs that the economy can possibly produce given the available factors of production and the available production technology.
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39
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 30 doghouses and 20 dishwashers.
Refer to Figure 2-14.It is possible for this economy to produce 30 doghouses and 20 dishwashers.
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40
The circular-flow diagram explains,in general terms,how the economy is organized and how participants in the economy interact with one another.
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41
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of an additional doghouse increases as more doghouses are produced.
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of an additional doghouse increases as more doghouses are produced.
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42
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 35 dishwashers and zero doghouses.
Refer to Figure 2-14.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 35 dishwashers and zero doghouses.
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43
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent efficient outcomes for this economy.
Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent efficient outcomes for this economy.
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44
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.When this economy produces 30 doghouses and 25 dishwashers there is full employment.
Refer to Figure 2-14.When this economy produces 30 doghouses and 25 dishwashers there is full employment.
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45
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Given the technology available for manufacturing doghouses and dishwashers,this economy does not have enough of the factors of production to support the level of output represented by point C.
Refer to Figure 2-14.Given the technology available for manufacturing doghouses and dishwashers,this economy does not have enough of the factors of production to support the level of output represented by point C.
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46
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent feasible outcomes for this economy.
Refer to Figure 2-14.Points A,B,and D represent feasible outcomes for this economy.
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47
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.It is possible for this economy to produce 1000 shoes.
Refer to Figure 2-17.It is possible for this economy to produce 1000 shoes.
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48
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point A is zero.
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point A is zero.
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49
Points inside the production possibilities frontier represent inefficient levels of production.
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50
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Unemployment could cause this economy to produce at point B.
Refer to Figure 2-14.Unemployment could cause this economy to produce at point B.
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51
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of producing an additional pair of shoes increases as more shoes are produced.
Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of producing an additional pair of shoes increases as more shoes are produced.
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52
Points inside the production possibilities frontier represent feasible levels of production.
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53
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Points B and C represent infeasible outcomes for this economy.
Refer to Figure 2-14.Points B and C represent infeasible outcomes for this economy.
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54
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point D is 10 dishwashers.
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point D is 10 dishwashers.
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55
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point D is 15 doghouses.
Refer to Figure 2-14.The opportunity cost of moving from point B to point D is 15 doghouses.
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56
With the resources it has,an economy can produce at any point on or outside the production possibilities frontier,but it cannot produce at points inside the frontier.
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57
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point B is zero.
Refer to Figure 2-17.The opportunity cost of moving from point A to point B is zero.
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58
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.
Refer to Figure 2-17.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.
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59
Figure 2-17​ Figure 2-17​   Refer to Figure 2-17.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 4000 shoes and zero t-shirts.
Refer to Figure 2-17.This economy fully employs its resources when it produces 4000 shoes and zero t-shirts.
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60
Figure 2-14 Figure 2-14   Refer to Figure 2-14.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.
Refer to Figure 2-14.Point B represents an inefficient outcome for this economy.
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61
An outcome is said to be efficient if an economy is conserving the largest possible quantity of its scarce resources while still meeting the basic needs of society.
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62
Points outside the production possibilities frontier represent infeasible levels of production.
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63
An outcome is said to be efficient if an economy is getting all it can from the scarce resources it has available.
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64
The trade-off between the production of one good and the production of another good can change over time because of technological advances.
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65
A production possibilities frontier will be bowed outward if some of the economy's resources are better suited to producing one good than another.
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66
A production point is said to be efficient if there is no way for the economy to produce more of one good without producing less of another.
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67
The opportunity cost of something is what you give up to get it.
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68
Unemployment causes production levels to be inefficient.
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69
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of the first good in terms of the second good increases as more of the second good is produced.
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70
A technological advance in the production of the first good increases the opportunity cost of the first good in terms of the second good.
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71
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other is constant.
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72
The production possibilities frontier shows the opportunity cost of one good as measured in terms of the other good.
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73
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of the second good in terms of the first good increases as more of the second good is produced.
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74
A production possibilities frontier has a bowed shape if the opportunity cost is constant at all levels of output.
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75
While the production possibilities frontier is a useful model,it cannot be used to illustrate economic growth.
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76
If a major union goes on strike,then the country would be operating inside its production possibilities frontier.
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77
If an economy can produce more of one good without giving up any of another good,then the economy's current production point is inefficient.
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78
When a production possibilities frontier is bowed outward,the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other depends on how much of each good is being produced.
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79
Economists believe that production possibilities frontiers rarely have a bowed shape.
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80
Points on the production possibilities frontier represent efficient levels of production.
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