Multiple Choice

The graph below depicts a feasible frontier and a set of indifference curves for two parties. The initial, inefficient allocation is at Point N. The curves passing through Point N represent the reservation indifference curves for each party. Which of the labeled points represents an allocation that would make at least one party better off without making the other worse off, compared to the initial allocation at Point N?

(Imagine a standard two-person allocation graph. The vertical axis is 'Party A's Goods' and the horizontal axis is 'Party B's Goods'. A downward-sloping curve represents the feasible frontier. Point N is located inside the frontier. Two indifference curves, one for each party, intersect at Point N, creating a lens-shaped area between them and bounded by the feasible frontier. Point P is inside this lens. Point Q is on the feasible frontier but outside the lens, making Party A better off but Party B worse off. Point R is outside the feasible frontier entirely. Point S is inside the frontier but outside the lens, making both parties worse off than at Point N.)

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Updated 2025-08-26

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