Chapter 3 1. Opportunity cost can be defined as the value of something you gave up in order to gain‚ or acquire something else (McEachern‚ 2015‚ p. 24). A. With the definition in mind‚ higher levels of education for women would be an increase in opportunity cost. A woman with a higher level of education allows one to make more money in the work place than if she had little to no education. B. Higher Unemployment rates for women would be a decrease in opportunity costs as it would not pay for her
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Work Sheet - IB – I Year Name: Date: Topic: Production Possibilities & Opportunity Cost 1. The slope of the production possibility frontier shows A. the technically efficient combinations of the two goods B. how factor inputs must be changed to keep them fully employed C. the opportunity cost of one good in terms of the other D. how consumers are willing to trade one good for another 2. A. OM B. OH C. YF D. MH 3. Which of the following will not shift a country’s
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ASSIGNMENT No. 1 ECONOMIC ANALYSIS -522- SPRING 2010 Q. 1 DISCUSS IN DETAIL THE TERM ECONOMIC RESOURCES WITH REFERENCE TO SERVICE INDUSTRY. EXPLAIN THE LINK BETWEEN SCARCITY‚ CHOICE AND OPPORTUNITY COST. Ans: ECONOMIC RESOURCES are the assets (things of value) which an economy (or business) may have available to supply and produce goods and services to meet the ever-changing needs and wants of individuals (in the case of a business) and society (in the case of society as a whole.) REA (Resources
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Opportunity cost is a decision between two conceivable choices where you judge the advantages of one decision over the other. Opportunity cost is an immediate implication of scarcity. Individuals need to pick between various options when choosing how to invest their time and money. Choosing to go to college as opposed to entering the workforce‚ you forego whatever you may have earned working a regular job. Many people when considering the budgetary ramifications of heading off to college just consider
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[pic] Scarcity‚ Choice and Opportunity Cost 1. What are resources? Describe two different types of resources. Resources are anything provided by nature or previous generations that can be used directly or indirectly to satisfy human wants. Capital resources include machinery‚ equipment‚ and structures used to produce other goods and services. Human resources include labor‚ skills‚ and knowledge. Products of nature can also be used as resources. Difficulty: E
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OPPORTUNITY COST & THE FREE MARKET Scarcity is one of the most basic and crucial points to understand in microeconomics.1Scarcity means that we cannot have all the needs and wants to satisfy our desires. Scarcity can be applied to almost anything. Due to the scarcity of products we must make a choice of what we want. We must choose whether to do one thing or another by what we value to be most important to us. This‚ therefore‚ leads to us opportunity cost. Usually when one has to make a decision
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Part A 1) The & 4 million offer is “ Relevant ” financial information Because of : important cost will be cost will happen just if the strategy is attempted‚ it can be kept away from by systems for breaking down cost information for basic leadership purposes ( Opportunity Cost ); it is just money costs that is pertinent ‚ opportunity costs along these lines speak to the cost of chances inescapable because of making one course of move ‚ there are as significant as some other expenses
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RECOGNITION OF OPPORTUNITY COST AND RELEVANT COST: A TOOL FOR EFFECTIVE BUSINESS DECISION MAKING BY IWUCHUKWU UCHENNA IWUAKU O9AA08549 ACCOUNTING 300L LECTURER: MRS OBIGBEMI INTRODUCTION The role of opportunity cost and relevant cost cannot be overemphasized in the making effective decision making. They work hand in hand in making sure that the company makes the best economic decision‚ they are both used in making managerial decisions at every level of planning and decision making. To buttress
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1. What dangers do you see from increasing globalisation in a world economy? Globalisation refers to the integration and interdependence of the world economy and can be seen by the fact that communications‚ media and business spans the world‚ not just one given economy or even type of economy. Boyes (2011‚ p.6) reports that there are now close to 40‚000 transnationals companies‚ and increase of 300% on just 25 years ago‚ and that these companies make up approximately 33% of all private-sector
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15‚ 2013 The Cost of the Decisions We Make For every course of action that one takes in life‚ there is a cost associated. This cost may be large or small but one can weigh this cost with the alternative before he or she makes any decision. In the essay‚ “The Price of Crossing Borders” written by Eduardo Porter‚ the concept of understanding that there is a price for everything is conveyed. There is no decision that is made or path that is taken that comes without some sort of cost to us personally
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