Decision-Making with Mutually Exclusive Alternatives
Economic decision-making often requires choosing one option from several mutually exclusive alternatives, meaning that selecting one action prevents the selection of others. When an action is chosen, the opportunity to pursue the next best alternative is forfeited. This forfeited opportunity is the foundation of opportunity cost.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Learn After
Definition of Opportunity Cost
A software developer has a budget of $1,000 and one week to add a new feature to an application. They can choose to build either a new reporting dashboard or an improved user authentication system. Both projects are estimated to take the full week and cost the full $1,000. What is the most fundamental economic consequence of choosing to build the new reporting dashboard?
A city council has allocated a specific budget for a single new public works project. They are deciding between building a new public swimming pool or constructing a new community library. Since choosing one project means they cannot build the other with the current budget, these two projects are examples of complementary goods.
Weekend Time Allocation
Coffee Shop Investment Decision
Match each scenario with the economic relationship that best describes the choices involved.
Career Path Decision
A student has only two hours available for studying on a given evening and can prepare for either their economics exam or their history exam, but not both. Because the choice to study for one exam prevents them from studying for the other, these two activities are considered ____ exclusive.
Opportunity Cost
A small business owner has enough capital to invest in one new project. After research, they have identified three distinct projects: upgrading their computer systems, launching a new marketing campaign, or renovating their storefront. Arrange the following actions into the most logical sequence for making a rational economic decision.
A farmer owns a single plot of land suitable for growing crops. For the upcoming season, the farmer determines that they can either plant a full crop of corn or a full crop of soybeans, but there is not enough space or resources to plant both. Which statement best analyzes the economic relationship between planting corn and planting soybeans in this scenario?
A car manufacturing plant has a single assembly line that can be configured to produce either sedans or SUVs. Reconfiguring the line from one vehicle type to the other is a time-consuming process. Given this setup, why is the decision to produce sedans for the next quarter considered mutually exclusive with the decision to produce SUVs for the same quarter?