Definition of production possibility curves (PPC)
Definition of Production Possibility Curves (PPC)
What is a PPC? A PPC is a graph that shows the maximum possible combinations of two goods that an economy can produce when all resources are used efficiently.
Imagine a pizza oven that can bake pizza or bread. If the oven is running at full capacity, you can decide how many pizzas and how many breads to bake, but you can’t exceed the oven’s limits. The PPC is the line that represents all those possible combinations.
Key Features of a PPC
- Efficiency: Points on the curve mean the economy is using all its resources efficiently.
- Trade‑off: Moving along the curve shows the trade‑off between the two goods.
- Opportunity cost: The slope of the curve represents the opportunity cost of producing one more unit of a good.
- Shape: Typically concave to the origin, reflecting increasing opportunity costs.
Analogy: The Pizza Oven
🍕 Pizza Oven Analogy 🍞
• If the oven can bake 10 pizzas or 20 breads in an hour, the PPC would show points like (10,0), (5,10), (0,20).
• If you decide to bake 7 pizzas, you can only bake 7 breads because the oven is fully used.
• The more pizzas you bake, the fewer breads you can produce – that’s the trade‑off.
Example: Cars and Computers
| Cars (units) | Computers (units) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 100 |
| 20 | 70 |
| 40 | 40 |
| 60 | 10 |
| 80 | 0 |
In this table, each row represents a point on the PPC. The economy can’t produce more than 80 cars or 100 computers if it uses all its resources efficiently.
Exam Tip Box
Tip: When asked to draw a PPC, remember:
- Label the axes with the two goods.
- Mark points that show trade‑offs.
- Show the curve as concave to the origin.
- Explain the opportunity cost by describing the slope.
Use emojis to make your answer memorable, e.g., 📈 for the curve and ⚖️ for trade‑off.
Revision
Log in to practice.