Scarcity is what forces you to make trade-offs. Suppose you have an economy that produces and consumes 2 products, A and B. In a world without scarcity, you have enough resources (land, machinery, raw materials, manpower) to produce as many of each product as you need/want. However, in a world with scarcity, you have a limited amount of production resources. You can produce, let's say, 10 A products or 10 B products, or a combination of both products with less than 10 products each. For every additional A product you produce (up to the max of 10), you have to produce less B products. This is a trade-off.
<span>Propaganda campaigns encouraged people to grow their own food.</span>
Hello so for the first question it would be that the people who made the trains where wanting people to see how amazing they were having these new railway trains and they had a little girl saying “I feel so jolly here” to empathize how great they were
<span>iron rich rocks show the location of the magnetic poles at the time of their formation</span>
It benefits companies by letting geologists find out where oil would likely be by studying surface rock formations, magnetic fields and even slight variations in gravity. One of the most important innovations in oil exploration was 3-D seismic imaging. The companies end up making tones of money off the research that they find