Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) explained (PPC)

Production possibility frontier PPF also called production possibility curve PPC is A graph that shows all the combinations of goods and services that can be produced if all of society’s resources are used efficiently.
All points below and to the left of the curve (production possibility frontier) represent combinations of Beer and Wine that are possible for the society given the resources available and existing technology.
Although an economy may be operating with full employment of its land, labor, and capital resources, it may still be operating inside its ppf (production possibility frontier), at a point such as A. The economy could be using those resources inefficiently.
Periods of unemployment also correspond to points inside the ppf (production possibility frontier), such as point A.
Moving onto the frontier like point B means achieving full employment of resources.

Points above and to the right of the curve, such as point C, represent combinations that cannot be reached.
If an economy were to end up at point A on the graph, it would be producing no consumer goods at all; all resources would be used for the production of capital. If an economy were to end up at point B, it would produce only consumer goods.

The ppf illustrates a number of economic concepts. One of the most important is opportunity cost. The opportunity cost of producing more Beer is fewer Wine.
0:00 PPF Production Possibility Frontier
3:00 Opportunity cost on the PPF
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Y1 2) Production Possibility Curves – PPCs / PPFs

Production Possibility Curves – PPCs / PPFs. Detailed video covering everything you need to know about Production Possibility Curves – PPCs / PPFs

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Understanding the shape of the PPC

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In this video you’ll learn about the shape of the PPC.

Access http://www.physicsandmathstutor.com ‘s free comprehensive notes on the production possibilities curve here: https://pmt.physicsandmathstutor.com/download/Economics/A-level/Notes/CIE/Papers-1-2/1-Basic-Economic-Ideas-and-Resource-Allocation/e)%20Production%20possibility%20curves.pdf?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=Enhance_Tuition

IGCSE Economics (Microeconomics) – Opportunity Costs and Production Possibility Curve (PPC)

The entire syllabus for IGCSE will be covered through this video series and students can prepare using these videos for the forthcoming examination.

Timestamp for the video:
0:00 Introduction
1:08 Opportunity costs
4:39 Production possibility curve (PPC)
8:11 Shape of PPC
9:36 Resource allocation and PPC
11:11 Changes /Shift in PPC

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How to draw a PPF or PPC

In this movie we go over how to draw a PPF (production possibilities frontier) given information on various points from a table. The trick here is to take all of the information from the table and plot it value for value on the graph. This will give you a PPF also sometimes called a PPC (production possibilities curve) that shows all different possible combinations of goods/services that are possible with the given inputs.

More information is available at: http://www.freeeconhelp.com/2011/06/how-to-draw-ppf-production-possibility.html where more information including a description and images are kept.

(Production Possibility Frontier/Curve, PPF, PPC) Why can’t things be free?

Why is the Production Possibility Curve (PPC) or Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) concave? What does increasing opportunity costs mean? When we increase production, why does it seem that we have to sacrifice more and more resources? What are the limitations to this economic model?

In addition, how does this PPC model illustrates the concept of opportunity cost? In what way does it show that resources are limited? Where are the points that show under-utilization of resources, full utilization of resources? Where is productive efficiency achieved? Can there be more than 1 productively efficient point? What is the difference between productive efficiency and allocative efficiency?

Assumptions to this model:
We assume that there are only two types of goods produced in this economy.
We also assume that technology does not change.

This economic model is no doubt an oversimplification of how the real world works. So what are the implications?

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