Difference between revisions of "Artificial scarcity"

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(→‎The need for artificial scarcity: incomplete half-sentence removed)
 
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[[Image:Ppfofdigitalinformation.gif|thumb|right|485px|[[Production possibilities frontier]] of showing trade-off.]]
 
[[Image:Ppfofdigitalinformation.gif|thumb|right|485px|[[Production possibilities frontier]] of showing trade-off.]]
  
With nearly all goods, a trade-off that occurs when decisions are decided about production.  The graph shows the economic anomaly that occurs with artificially scarce products.  Because leather boots consumer resources, a trade-off is noticed between running shoes; i.e. in order to produce more boots one has to give up producing running shoes because of limited resources.  This trade-off is illustrated by a move from P1 to P2 in the Production Possibilities graph on the left.
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With nearly all goods, a trade-off that occurs when decisions are decided about production.  The graph shows the economic anomaly that occurs with artificially scarce products.  Because leather boots consume resources, a trade-off is noticed between running shoes; i.e. in order to produce more boots one has to give up producing running shoes because of limited resources.  This trade-off is illustrated by a move from P1 to P2 in the Production Possibilities graph on the left.
  
 
With computer software, no trade-off occurs (at least not one of significant value).  To produce more of a certain piece of digital information, since virtually no resources are used to copy the information there is no trade-off with the production of other things, like shoes and boots. In essence, problems of artificial scarcity usually arise when a good that was once scarce becomes abundant due to extreme increases productivity and technology.[http://www.automation.com/sitepages/pid1698.php]
 
With computer software, no trade-off occurs (at least not one of significant value).  To produce more of a certain piece of digital information, since virtually no resources are used to copy the information there is no trade-off with the production of other things, like shoes and boots. In essence, problems of artificial scarcity usually arise when a good that was once scarce becomes abundant due to extreme increases productivity and technology.[http://www.automation.com/sitepages/pid1698.php]

Revision as of 01:13, 26 March 2007