Answer:
B) (200 airplanes, 12,500 cars) <u>YES</u> and (150 airplanes, 15,000 cars) <u>YES</u>
Explanation:
Opportunity costs refer to extra costs or lost income resulting from choosing one activity or investment from another alternative. Opportunity costs are the basis for the comparative advantage trade theories that state that countries will trade those goods that they can produce at a lower opportunity cost than their trade partners.
In this case, if the opportunity cost of producing one airplane is 50 cars, then the production possibilities frontier of the US (regarding cars and planes) must include combinations where the number of airplanes produced is 50 times smaller than the number of cars produced.
a. (200 airplanes, 5,000 cars) <u>NO</u> and (150 airplanes, 4,000 cars) <u>NO</u>
b. (200 airplanes, 12,500 cars) <u>YES</u> and (150 airplanes, 15,000 cars) <u>YES</u>
200 x 50 = 10,000 150 x 50 = 7,500
c. (300 airplanes, 15,000 cars) <u>YES</u> and (200 airplanes, 25,000 cars) <u>NO</u>
d. (300 airplanes, 25,000 cars) <u>NO</u> and (200 airplanes, 40,000 cars) <u>NO</u>