opportunity cost
A student considers the opportunity cost of choosing between studying for an exam or going to a concert.
Noun: - The cost of forgoing the next best alternative when making a decision: In economics, "opportunity cost" represents the value of the best alternative that is not chosen. It is the potential benefit that is missed out on when one option is selected over another.
The term is used to analyze and describe the trade-offs inherent in any decision involving scarce resources. It is a fundamental concept in economics and rational decision-making. - It is typically used in singular form ("the opportunity cost"). - It is often quantified or described in comparisons (e.g., "The opportunity cost of X is Y.").
- "To calculate/consider/weigh the opportunity cost": To formally assess or think about the value of the forgone alternative before making a choice.
- Smart investors always calculate the opportunity cost before committing their capital.
- "Implicit/Explicit opportunity cost": "Explicit" costs involve direct monetary payments, while "implicit" costs represent the value of resources used without a direct cash outlay (like an owner's time).
- The explicit opportunity cost was the tuition fee, while the implicit cost was her lost salary from not working.
- Opportunity (noun): A set of circumstances that makes it possible to do something. This is the root word from which the compound term "opportunity cost" is built.
- Cost (noun): An amount that has to be paid or spent to buy or obtain something. In economics, "cost" often encompasses more than just monetary price.
- Trade-off: A balance achieved between two desirable but incompatible features; a compromise. While similar, a "trade-off" describes the situation of exchange, whereas "opportunity cost" specifies the value of what is given up.
- Economic cost: A broader term that includes opportunity costs along with other costs.
As a compound noun, "opportunity cost" functions as a single conceptual unit. Related analytical phrases include: - "Sunk cost": A cost that has already been incurred and cannot be recovered, which should not factor into future decisions, unlike opportunity cost which is forward-looking. - "Cost-benefit analysis": A process that often incorporates opportunity cost to evaluate decisions by comparing their total expected costs to total expected benefits.
A student considers the opportunity cost of choosing between studying for an exam or going to a concert.
- cost in terms of foregoing alternatives