The Production Possibilities frontier/curve
It shows weather the item you are talking about is increasing or decreasing.
If there are opportunity cost, then yes my friend, they do.
The average cost curve shows the average cost per unit of production for a firm. It is derived from the total cost curve, which represents the total cost of production at different levels of output. The average cost curve is U-shaped, indicating that as production increases, average costs initially decrease due to economies of scale, then increase due to diminishing returns. The relationship between the average cost curve and production costs is that the average cost curve reflects how efficiently a firm is producing goods or services in relation to its total costs.
In economics, the production possibility frontier (the PPF, also called the production possibilities curve (PPC) or the "transformation curve") is a graph that depicts the trade-off between any two items produced. It indicates the opportunity cost of increasing one item's production in terms of the units of the other forgone. ( hope you can build on this) -- BY ASMA In economics, the production possibility frontier (the PPF, also called the production possibilities curve (PPC) or the "transformation curve") is a graph that depicts the trade-off between any two items produced. It indicates the opportunity cost of increasing one item's production in terms of the units of the other forgone. ( hope you can build on this) -- BY ASMA
The Production Possibilities frontier/curve
It shows weather the item you are talking about is increasing or decreasing.
If there are opportunity cost, then yes my friend, they do.
Because when one produces one product, the opportunity cost of the other product increases i.e. the concave represents the increasing opportunity cost with the production of a good.
The average cost curve shows the average cost per unit of production for a firm. It is derived from the total cost curve, which represents the total cost of production at different levels of output. The average cost curve is U-shaped, indicating that as production increases, average costs initially decrease due to economies of scale, then increase due to diminishing returns. The relationship between the average cost curve and production costs is that the average cost curve reflects how efficiently a firm is producing goods or services in relation to its total costs.
In economics, the production possibility frontier (the PPF, also called the production possibilities curve (PPC) or the "transformation curve") is a graph that depicts the trade-off between any two items produced. It indicates the opportunity cost of increasing one item's production in terms of the units of the other forgone. ( hope you can build on this) -- BY ASMA In economics, the production possibility frontier (the PPF, also called the production possibilities curve (PPC) or the "transformation curve") is a graph that depicts the trade-off between any two items produced. It indicates the opportunity cost of increasing one item's production in terms of the units of the other forgone. ( hope you can build on this) -- BY ASMA
Look up Production Possibility Frontier, it is the same thing as a Opportunity Cost Curve.
The Law of Increasing Opportunity Cost that is shown in a Production Possibilities Curve is concave to the origin. This is because it shows the maximum gain of two products used in production.
The learning curve is reverse 'J' shaped. Its shape indicates that the cost of production rises with rise in quantity produced but to an extent. After that point it stops increasing. It happens because the management or the production department learns to control the cost of production from past mistakes or experience or by reffering previous data. so, the learning to control the cost has named this curve as learning curve. when the cost stops rising and it stabilises then the curve becomes a straight line acordingly.....and it forms the shape of reverse 'J'.
Production Possibility Curve this is an image of a ppf/ ppc
The law of increasing opportunity costs states that as production of a product increases, the cost to produce an additional unit of that product increases as well. This law is responsible for the bowed shape of the production possibilities curve. Because not all of our economy's resources are equally well-suited to the production of a single good, the increasing opportunity cost is present.
production possibilities graph