Anatomy of a PPC
Two-good economy. Maximum producible combinations. The frontier of what's possible.
A production possibility curve (also called a production possibility frontier, PPF) shows all the maximum combinations of TWO goods (or services) an economy can produce when:
- All resources are used.
- Resources are used as efficiently as possible.
- Technology is fixed.
The diagram. Two axes — one good on each. The CURVE represents all efficient combinations.
Why two goods? Because Economics is fundamentally about choice between alternatives. Two is enough to show the trade-off; more would be impossible to draw on paper.
Labelling. Always label axes specifically. 'Capital goods / Consumer goods' is the textbook example, but exam questions might use 'Food / Machinery', 'Health / Education', 'Civilian goods / Military goods'. Match the labels to the question.
Why concave (bowed outward)? Resources are not equally suited to producing both goods. Some workers are better at making cars; some at making food. As you shift more resources toward one good, the resources you ADD are increasingly LESS suited to that task — meaning you give up more of the other good per unit gained. This is increasing opportunity cost.
(Some 0455 exam diagrams use a straight-line PPC for simplicity. That implies constant opportunity cost — a simplification. The realistic shape is concave.)
Cambridge tip. Mark schemes for "draw a PPC" questions require: labelled axes (with specific goods), a concave curve, and at least one labelled point.
- Two-good economy on the axes.
- Curve = max efficient combinations.
- Concave shape = increasing opportunity cost.
- Always label axes with specific goods.