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  2. Opportunity cost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opportunity_cost

    The purpose of calculating economic profits (and thus, opportunity costs) is to aid in better business decision-making through the inclusion of opportunity costs. In this way, a business can evaluate whether its decision and the allocation of its resources is cost-effective or not and whether resources should be reallocated.

  3. What is Opportunity Cost? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-04-01-financial-literacy...

    Opportunity cost is also often defined, more specifically, as the highest-value opportunity forgone. So let's say you could have become a brain surgeon, earning $250,000 per year, instead of a ...

  4. Production–possibility frontier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Production–possibility...

    The marginal opportunity costs of guns in terms of butter is simply the reciprocal of the marginal opportunity cost of butter in terms of guns. If, for example, the (absolute) slope at point BB in the diagram is equal to 2, to produce one more packet of butter, the production of 2 guns must be sacrificed.

  5. Implicit cost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implicit_cost

    In economics, an implicit cost, also called an imputed cost, implied cost, or notional cost, is the opportunity cost equal to what a firm must give up in order to use a factor of production for which it already owns and thus does not pay rent. It is the opposite of an explicit cost, which is borne directly. [1]

  6. What Is Opportunity Cost? How To Use It To Boost Side Gig ...

    www.aol.com/finance/opportunity-cost-boost-side...

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  7. How do you calculate cost basis on investments? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/calculate-cost-basis...

    Methods to calculate cost basis. The cost basis for stocks and mutual funds is generally the price you paid when you purchased the asset, plus any other trading costs. However, there are several ...

  8. Economic cost - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_cost

    [1] [2] Economic cost is used mainly by economists as means to compare the prudence of one course of action with that of another. The comparison includes the gains and losses precluded by taking a course of action as well as those of the course taken itself. Economic cost differs from accounting cost because it includes opportunity cost.

  9. Social discount rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_discount_rate

    The proper discount rate should represent the opportunity cost of what else the firm could accomplish with those same funds. [2] If that means that the money could be instead used to invest in the private sector that would yield 5% and that is the next best alternative for using that money then 5% would be the social discount rate