Imagine you have a pizza 🍕 that you want to share with your friends. You only have one pizza, but you have many friends who want slices. You must decide how many slices to give each person. This simple dilemma is a metaphor for the basic economic problem – there are limited resources (the pizza) but unlimited wants (everyone wants a slice). In the real world, resources could be land, labour, capital, or time, and wants could be cars, computers, food, or entertainment.
Economists use three questions to guide how society uses its limited resources. These questions help decide what to produce, how to produce it, and for whom it is produced. Below is a quick table summarising them.
| Question | What It Means |
|---|---|
| What to produce? | Decide which goods and services are most valuable to society. |
| How to produce? | Choose the production method that uses resources efficiently. |
| For whom to produce? | Determine who gets the goods and services. |
Let’s look at a small town that can produce three main products: cars 🚗, smartphones 💻, and fresh fruit 🍎. The town has limited resources: 100 workers, 200 units of capital (machines, factories), and 50 hectares of farmland. The town must decide how to allocate these resources to maximise overall happiness.
\$\$\begin{cases}
2C + 1S + 0.5F \le 100 \\
3C + 1S + 0.2F \le 200 \\
C, S, F \ge 0
\end{cases}\$\$
This mix reflects the town’s priorities: most people want cars, but there’s still a need for technology and healthy food. The decision balances what to produce with the available resources.
Understanding the “what to produce” question helps you think critically about everyday choices: Why does your school offer certain subjects? Why are some products more expensive? These decisions shape the world you live in. By learning to analyse resource allocation, you become a smarter consumer, a better problem‑solver, and a more informed citizen. 🚀