Introduction
This is the introduction to the Microeconomics book (Class 12), covering scarcity, the three central economic problems (what, how, and for whom to produce), the Production Possibility Frontier, opportunity cost, and how economies are organised — through central planning, markets, or a mix of both. It is distinct from the Macroeconomics introduction, which focuses on economy-wide aggregates.
- 1Every individual and society faces scarcity of resources relative to needs, making choice unavoidable.
- 2The three central economic problems are: what to produce and in what quantities, how to produce it, and for whom the goods are produced.
- 3The Production Possibility Frontier (PPF) shows all combinations of two goods an economy can produce when all resources are fully and efficiently utilised.
- 4A point strictly below the PPF indicates that all or some resources are underemployed or used wastefully.
- 5Opportunity cost is the amount of one good forgone to obtain an additional unit of another; it is also called economic cost.

