In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Why You Can't Have It All
Economics starts with a simple truth: we can't have everything we want because our resources are limited. This forces us to make choices, and every choice has a hidden cost — the best thing we gave up.
Imagine you have £10 at a food market. You want both a gourmet burger (£10) and a fancy smoothie (£10), but can only afford one. Choosing the burger means giving up the smoothie. That forgone smoothie is the opportunity cost of your burger — the value of what you didn't choose.
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Scarcity forces choice — not all wants can be satisfied.
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Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative forgone.
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What to produce? How? For whom? — the basic economic questions.
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The PPC puts it together: points on the curve show scarcity and opportunity cost; an outward shift shows growth.
Explore the concept
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Scarcity forces choice
Scarcity forces choice — not all wants can be satisfied.
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
The fundamental economic problem: scarcity
Scarcity is the starting point for all economic analysis. It is the conflict between human wants, which are effectively infinite, and the resources available to satisfy them, which are finite. Note that scarcity is not the same as poverty: it affects everyone, from the poorest individual to the wealthiest nation, because no one can have an infinite amount of everything.
The limited resources are the factors of production, grouped into four categories: Land (all natural resources), Labour (human effort in production), Capital (man-made aids to production such as machinery and factories), and Entrepreneurship (organising the other three factors and bearing the risk of production).
Scarcity exists because wants are unlimited but resources are finite.
Scarcity is universal — it affects all societies and individuals, not only the poor.
The scarce resources are the four factors of production: Land, Labour, Capital and Entrepreneurship.
From scarcity to choice and opportunity cost
Because of scarcity we cannot satisfy all our wants, so we must choose. When you buy a textbook you may be choosing not to buy a video game; when a government funds a hospital it may be choosing not to upgrade a motorway. Every choice involves a trade-off.
This leads to one of the most important concepts in economics: opportunity cost — the value of the next best alternative forgone. It is not only about money; it can be time, enjoyment or any benefit given up. The phrase 'next best' is essential: only the single most valuable alternative sacrificed counts, not the sum of everything passed up.
The three basic economic questions
Scarcity forces every society, whatever its political structure, to answer three fundamental questions about how it uses resources. How a society answers them defines its economic system (market, planned, or mixed).
What to produce? Which goods and services, and in what quantities — more consumer goods or more capital goods? More healthcare or more defence?
How to produce? Which methods and combinations of resources — labour-intensive or capital-intensive? What is most efficient?
For whom to produce? How output is distributed — by income, by need, or by some other criterion?
Modelling it all: the production possibilities curve
The production possibilities curve (PPC) shows the maximum combinations of two goods an economy can produce when resources are used fully and efficiently and technology is fixed. It is the single most useful diagram for making scarcity visible, and examiners reward students who can both draw it and read meaning from every part of it.
On the curve — production is efficient; the only way to get more of one good is to give up some of the other. That trade-off IS the opportunity cost.
Inside the curve — resources are unemployed or misused, so the economy produces less than it could.
Beyond the curve — currently unattainable with existing resources and technology.
The curve is usually bowed outwards because resources are not equally productive in both uses — reallocating ever-less-suitable resources raises opportunity cost (the law of increasing opportunity cost).
An outward shift of the whole curve represents economic growth — more or better resources, or improved technology.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Confusing scarcity with poverty — scarcity affects every economy, rich or poor. Poverty is about low income; scarcity is about limited resources relative to unlimited wants.
Adding up all forgone alternatives — opportunity cost is only the SINGLE next best alternative, never the sum of everything given up.
Saying opportunity cost = the money spent — it is the value of the next best real alternative, which can differ from the cash outlay.
Confusing a movement ALONG the PPC with a SHIFT of the whole curve — moving along shows opportunity cost; the curve shifting outwards shows economic growth. Mixing these up costs marks.
Treating an inside point like a point on the curve — from inside the PPC, gaining more of one good can have zero opportunity cost, because idle resources are being brought into use.
Key concepts in this lesson
The 2022 course is built around nine key concepts. This lesson establishes three: scarcity (why economics exists), choice (its immediate consequence), and efficiency (introduced through points on versus inside the PPC). Keep these in view — an internal-assessment criterion specifically rewards linking a key concept to real-world material, and these three recur throughout the course. This lesson is identical at SL and HL; HL extension content begins in Unit 2.
Where this leads
Scarcity and opportunity cost are not just an opening topic — they are the logic behind demand, supply, market failure and every policy debate to come. When a later chapter asks whether a government should subsidise renewable energy, the real question is the same one you met here: is this the best use of scarce resources, given what must be given up?
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A student has 4 hours of free time on a Saturday afternoon. They can either study for their economics exam, which they believe will improve their grade from a 5 to a 6, or work a shift at a local café earning £12 per hour. What is the opportunity cost of choosing to study for the 4 hours?
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Identify the alternatives: (a) study or (b) work.
A government has £500 million for a new national project and has narrowed the options to two: a new high-speed rail link or 50 new schools. It chooses the rail link. What is the opportunity cost of this decision?
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Alternatives: (a) rail link or (b) 50 new schools.
A small economy produces either wheat or machines. The table shows five efficient combinations (all points on its PPC):
| Combination | Wheat (tonnes) | Machines (units) |
|---|---|---|
| A | 100 | 0 |
| --- | --- | --- |
| B | 90 | 10 |
| C | 70 | 20 |
| D | 40 | 30 |
| E | 0 | 40 |
(a) State the opportunity cost of moving from combination B to combination C. (b) Calculate the opportunity cost of the FIRST 10 machines (A→B) and of the LAST 10 machines (D→E). What do your answers reveal about the shape of the PPC? (c) The economy currently produces 60 tonnes of wheat and 15 machines. Is this point on, inside or beyond the PPC? Justify your answer.
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(a) From B (90 wheat, 10 machines) to C (70 wheat, 20 machines): gain 10 machines, give up 20 tonnes of wheat. The opportunity cost of those 10 extra machines is 20 tonnes of wheat.
Paper 1, part (a): Explain, using a production possibilities curve (PPC) diagram, the concepts of scarcity, choice and opportunity cost. [10 marks]
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Model answer: Scarcity is the central economic problem: resources (land, labour, capital and entrepreneurship) are finite while wants are unlimited, so not all wants can be satisfied. A production possibilities curve (PPC) shows the maximum combinations of two goods — say consumer goods and capital goods — an economy can produce when all resources are used fully and efficiently with fixed technology.
How it all connects
The big idea sits in the middle — tap a linked idea to explore the link.
Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
Try to recall each definition before you reveal it.
Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
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Scarcity
The fundamental economic problem where unlimited human wants exceed the finite resources available to satisfy them. It affects everyone, rich or poor, and is not the same as poverty.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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Scarcity exists because wants are unlimited but resources are finite.
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Scarcity is universal — it affects all societies and individuals, not only the poor.
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The scarce resources are the four factors of production: Land, Labour, Capital and Entrepreneurship.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use a PPC to explain scarcity, choice and opportunity cost
Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use a PPC to explain scarcity, choice and opportunity cost
Extra simulations & links
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Frequently asked
Checkpoint
One marked question is worth ten re-reads — close the loop before you move on.
Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Get a Paper 1 (a) answer marked: use a PPC to explain scarcity, choice and opportunity cost on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.