Learn Before
Scarcity
In economics, a good is considered scarce if it is both valued by people and has an opportunity cost associated with obtaining more of it. This means that to acquire an additional unit of a scarce good, something else of value must be given up.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Market Economy Definition
Scarcity
Marginal Changes
Types and Purposes of Taxes
Market Failure
A student has a non-refundable, pre-paid ticket to a concert tonight that cost $50. A friend offers them a last-minute babysitting job for the same evening that pays $70. The student cannot do both. If the student's only two options are to go to the concert or to babysit, what is the opportunity cost of choosing to go to the concert?
Airline Ticket Pricing Decision
A chemical factory operates near a river, producing a valuable product that is sold nationwide. As a byproduct of its manufacturing process, the factory discharges waste into the river. This significantly reduces the fish population, harming the businesses of local fishing companies that rely on the river. The factory does not compensate the fishing companies for this damage. This uncompensated impact on the fishing companies is a classic example of what economic concept?
A city government has a fixed annual budget and must decide how to allocate its funds. The city council wishes to build a new public library, upgrade the water treatment facility, and repave several major roads. The combined cost of these projects is greater than the total budget available. The necessity of choosing which projects to fund and which to postpone is a direct result of what fundamental economic concept?
Identifying the Business Cycle Phase
Productivity and Standard of Living
An individual places $1,000 in a savings account that yields a 1% annual interest rate. During the same year, the economy experiences an overall price increase of 3% for goods and services. At the end of the year, what has happened to the purchasing power of the individual's savings?
Evaluating a Congestion Charge Policy
A government decides to increase its spending on public infrastructure projects, such as building new roads and bridges. To finance this, the government increases the tax on gasoline. As a result of this decision, the government has fewer funds available to upgrade the national park system. Which of the following core economic concepts is LEAST directly illustrated by this scenario?
Match each economic scenario with the primary economic concept it illustrates.
Mutually Exclusive Alternatives
Opportunity Cost
Comparing Alternatives in Decision-Making (Concert vs. Babysitting)
Decision-Making for a Taxi Driver (Australian Open vs. Work)
Choosing Between a Paid Theatre Concert and a Free Park Concert
Scarcity
Reservation Option
You have a free ticket to a concert tonight which you value at $50. You could, instead, work a shift at your job and earn $70, or you could babysit for a neighbor and earn $40. Assuming these are your only three options and you can only choose one, what is the opportunity cost of attending the concert?
Analyzing a Summer Decision
Evaluate the following statement: A person has three mutually exclusive options for their evening: 1) Go to a concert they value at $50, 2) Work a shift and earn $80, or 3) Read a book they value at $20. If they decide to work the shift, their opportunity cost is $70, representing the sum of the values of the concert ($50) and the book ($20) that they gave up. True or False?
For each economic decision described below, match it with the correct statement of its opportunity cost.
Analyzing the True Cost of a Decision
Explaining Opportunity Cost
A student has three mutually exclusive options for their Saturday afternoon: they can work a 4-hour shift at the campus library for $15 per hour, go to a movie with friends which they value at $40, or take a paid online survey that will earn them a total of $50. If the student chooses to work at the library, the opportunity cost of this decision is $____.
An individual has decided to spend their Saturday afternoon working a part-time job. To correctly identify the opportunity cost of this decision, they must follow a logical process. Arrange the following steps into the correct sequence.
The Baker's Dilemma
Alex is deciding how to spend their Friday night. They can either go to a movie, for which a ticket costs $12 and which they value at $30, or they can work a tutoring session and earn $40. These are Alex's only two options. What is the opportunity cost of choosing to go to the movie?
Economic Profit vs. Accounting Profit
Decision making under scarcity
Shareholder Investment Principle
Economic Cost
Wage as the Opportunity Cost of Free Time
Karim's Work-Leisure Decision in Madrid
Economic Rent
Learn After
Which of the following scenarios provides the clearest example of the core economic problem where finite resources must be allocated to satisfy competing desires?
City Budget Allocation Decision
Evaluating the Definition of Scarcity
True or False: In an economic context, a good is defined as 'scarce' only when its physical quantity is low.
Identifying Economic Scarcity
Match each scenario to the economic reasoning that best explains why the resource in question is, or is not, considered scarce. A resource is scarce if it is both desired and limited, such that acquiring it requires giving something else up.
Arrange the following statements into a logical sequence that illustrates the fundamental economic problem, starting from the basic condition of human desires and ending with the direct consequence of making a decision.
In economics, a resource is considered scarce if it is both desired and limited in availability. The existence of this condition means that choosing to use the resource for one purpose requires forgoing its use for another, creating a(n) ____.
A lone shipwreck survivor on a deserted island discovers a large, clean freshwater spring that provides far more water than they could ever drink. Which of the following statements provides the most accurate economic evaluation of whether the freshwater is a scarce resource for the survivor?
Community Park Land Use Debate
Divergence in Work-Leisure Choices Amidst Rising Living Standards