HOUSING
An opportunity cost where money does not change hands does not count as a cost. An example of this is the owner's opportunity cost for an alternate employment, since money does not change hands.
Opportunity cost is what you give up in order to get something else. Paying money is the opportunity cost for ice cream for example.
An opportunity cost means that, in order to do one thing, you must give up something else (those something else's are the opportunity costs). An example of an opportunity cost would be the large amount of money that would need to be invested in order for a company to make itself more environmentally-friendly (like installing solar panels).
The opportunity cost would be the slope of the PPF. So the opportunity cost of the good on the x axis is in terms of the good on the y axis. This is why we would say a PPF demonstrates increasing marginal opportunity cost when it is curved outward
HOUSING
An opportunity cost where money does not change hands does not count as a cost. An example of this is the owner's opportunity cost for an alternate employment, since money does not change hands.
Opportunity cost is what you give up in order to get something else. Paying money is the opportunity cost for ice cream for example.
An opportunity cost means that, in order to do one thing, you must give up something else (those something else's are the opportunity costs). An example of an opportunity cost would be the large amount of money that would need to be invested in order for a company to make itself more environmentally-friendly (like installing solar panels).
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The opportunity cost would be the slope of the PPF. So the opportunity cost of the good on the x axis is in terms of the good on the y axis. This is why we would say a PPF demonstrates increasing marginal opportunity cost when it is curved outward
There are many ways in which you can show increasing opportunity cost on a graph. You could show it in comparison to satisfaction for example.
opportunity cost
Opportunity cost is the cost that an opportunity presents. The opportunity benefit is the benefit of the opportunity that is being presented.
Opportunity cost can also deal with time. For example, shopping at Wal-mart versus shopping at sears, Khols, and giant eagle will lower your opportunity cost. At Wal-mart you'll be able to find many of the items you'd typically be looking for when shopping (whether they are better or not is up to you). My point is that from this example, your opportunity cost is lower shopping at W-mart because you are saving time. In my opinion, opportunity cost means "time is money."
The opportunity cost of a certain good is the cost of the next best good that you are forgoing. It is NOT a sum of all the other possibilities. It is just the cost of the next best alternative. For example: The opportunity cost of going to college is the money that you could have earned in a job. Say you spend $80,000 to go to college for four years, but if you had gotten a job right out of high school, you could have made $15,000 a year. The opportunity cost of attending college is the $60,000 you would have earned if you had gotten the job right out of high school.
Since opportunity cost is defined as the cost of any activity measured in terms of the best alternative activity which is forgone, in this case, the opportunity cost can be a field for students to play around or a land where a library can be built. Another example, would be the opportunity cost of coming to school. This answer will be the time enjoyed going to the cinema or time spent with your partner. Hence, the opportunity cost of coming to school will be the cost of not going to cinema and spending time with your partner. Opportunity cost is defined, as the answer above says, as the difference between a course of action and another course of action. What the above answer misses is that opportunity cost is usually measured as the difference between the chosen action and the BEST alternative, not any other alternative. For instance, if you're choosing between 5 stocks, chose stock 1 and all 5 stocks go up, but stock 3 rises the most, you measure your opportunity cost against ONLY stock 3. So the opportunity cost in this case would be the BEST alternative. Unfortunately, there is no numerical way to measure the utility a university would get from various non-economic buildings like a library or cinema, so it would have to be up to the school board.