Allocative efficiency is the concept in economics where manufacturers and service providers only produce those goods and services which are in high demand and the most desirable to the consumer.
society can achieve either productive efficiency or allocative efficiency, but not both simultaneously
no difference
allocative efficancy productive efficancy
Allocative and productive efficiencies are theoretical concepts in economics. Allocative efficiency is achieved in an economy when the distribution or apportionment of resources produces the greatest utility for consumers through its combination of products. For example, and for the sake of simplicity, envision an economy with two products: pizza and robots. In an allocatively-efficient economy, businesses are producing the right amount of each product to make consumers happy. Productive efficiency, on the other hand, is when an economy is using all of its resources efficiently, producing the greatest output for the smallest input. Productive efficiency, on a production possibility frontier, occurs on any points along the curve.
Both allocative and productive efficiency
society can achieve either productive efficiency or allocative efficiency, but not both simultaneously
no difference
allocative efficancy productive efficancy
Allocative and productive efficiencies are theoretical concepts in economics. Allocative efficiency is achieved in an economy when the distribution or apportionment of resources produces the greatest utility for consumers through its combination of products. For example, and for the sake of simplicity, envision an economy with two products: pizza and robots. In an allocatively-efficient economy, businesses are producing the right amount of each product to make consumers happy. Productive efficiency, on the other hand, is when an economy is using all of its resources efficiently, producing the greatest output for the smallest input. Productive efficiency, on a production possibility frontier, occurs on any points along the curve.
Both allocative and productive efficiency
Allocative efficiency is an output level where the price equals the marginal cost of production. This is because the price that consumers are willing to pay is equivalent to the marginal utility that they get. Therefore the optimal distribution is achieved when the marginal utility of the good equals the marginal cost.
It is the particular mix of goods and service most highly valued by society (minimum-cost production assumed).
When there is allocative and productive efficiency, there is an efficient market equilibrium, allocative efficiency is when the products that are most wanted are produced, this is achieved when price equals marginal cost, productive efficiency is achieved when the firm is producing on the lowest point on the lowest average cost curve, this is also called the point of technical efficiency, both allocative and productive efficiency lead to an optimum allocation of resources and economic efficiency is achieved, though, this is thought to exist only in a perfectly competitive market and is lacking in other markets because monopolies and oligopolies usually have their prices above marginal cost and that is not an efficient allocation of resources and because other markets may lack the incentive to produce at the lowest cost
Jan K. Bueckner has written: 'Public intermediate inputs, property value, and allocative efficiency'
True
produces ideal results in terms of low-cost production and allocative efficiency, and can be used as a basis of comparison.
processing efficiency