To
understand why people choose to depend on others for goods and services and how
this choice improves their lives, let’s look at simple economy. Imagine that
their are two goods in the world: meet and potatoes. And there are two people
in the world a cattle rancher and a potato farmer each of whom would like to
eat both meat potatoes.
The gains
from trade are most obvious if the rancher van produce only meat and the farmer
can produce only potatoes. In one scenario, the rancher and the farmer could
choose to have nothing to do with each other. But after several months of
eating beef roasted, boiled, boiled, and grilled, the rancher might decide that
self-sufficiency is not all it,s cracked up to be. The farmer who has been
eating potatoes mashed, fried, baked, and scalloped, would likely agree. It is
easy to see that trade would allow them to enjoy greater variety: Each could
then have a steak with a baked potato or a burger with fries.
Although
this scene illustrates most simply how everyone can benefit from trade, the
gains would be similar if the rancher and the farmer were each capable of
producing the other good, but only at great cost. Suppose, for example, that
the potato farmer is able to raise cattle and produce meat but that he is not
very good at it. Similarly, suppose that the cattle rancher is able to grow
potato but that her land is not very well suited for it. In this case, it is,
easy to see that the farmer and the rancher can each benefit by specializing in
what he or she does best and then trading with the other.
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