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CONSUMPTION VS INVESTMENT
Consumer goods vs Capital goods
Consumer goods - Goods and services that are used by people to
satisfy their needs and wants.
Capital Goods - goods that are used in the production of other
goods, such as factories, offices, roads, machines and equipment.
Country B
At the start of the period, consumers in country A were wealthier than in country B because
consumption of consumer goods was
higher. But at the end, consumers in country B are wealthier. At point F, country B is producing
more of both consumer and capital goods than country A, which produces at point E.
EFFICIENCY
The production possibility frontier shows the maximum amount that can be produced from a
given number of resources. Therefore, for an economy, the boundary shows the level of output
where all resources are fully and efficiently employed.
Efficiency on the boundary is of two types.
1) Productive Efficiency
This is the type of production that takes place at a lowest cost.
Productive Efficiency occurs when a given set of resources are used to produce the
maximum number of goods.
All points on the boundary are productively efficient because they show a combination of
goods produced at the lowest cost for that combination.
2) Allocative Efficiency
Allocational, or allocative, efficiency is a property of an efficient market whereby all goods and
services are optimally distributed among buyers in an economy.
CHOICE
The PPF by itself gives no indication of which combination of goods will be produced in
an economy.
All it shows is the combination of goods which an economy could produce if output
were maximized from a given fixed number of resources.