Y12W29VC Opportunity cost, and why economists think differently

You spend a free Saturday afternoon watching three episodes of a show. How much did it cost? Most people say nothing — it was free time, and the show was free or already paid for. An economist would give a different answer: the afternoon cost whatever else you could have done with it. This week's article examines opportunity cost, one of the most distinctive ideas in economic thinking, and what looks different once you've absorbed it.

Core Vocabulary

opportunity

/ˌɑːpərˈtuːnəti/|op·por·tu·ni·ty

noun

a chance or option

Word Breakdown: opportun- (fitting, Latin opportunus) + -ity (quality of)

Word family: opportune (v./n.)

Synonyms: chance, option, possibility

Collocations: economic opportunity, opportunity cost

In the articleThis is called opportunity cost, and it's one of the most distinctive concepts in economic thinking.

forgone

/fɔːrˈɡoʊn/|for·gone

adjective

passed up, not taken

Word Breakdown: for- (away) + gone

Word family: forego (v./n.)

Synonyms: relinquished, surrendered, abandoned

Collocations: forgone alternative, foregone conclusion

In the articleOpportunity cost is the value of the best forgone alternative — the thing you gave up by making this choice.

allocation

/ˌæləˈkeɪʃən/|al·lo·ca·tion

noun

the assignment of limited resources

Word Breakdown: alloc- (to assign) + -ation (act of)

Word family: allocate (v./n.)

Synonyms: distribution, assignment, apportionment

Collocations: resource allocation, efficient allocation

In the articleOnce you start looking for it in the world, you see it everywhere — in government budgets, business decisions, career choices, and the quiet allocatio

trade-off

/ˈtreɪd ɔːf/|trade-off

noun

an exchange between competing values

Word family: tradeoff (v./n.)

Synonyms: exchange, compromise, balance

Collocations: tradeoff between, value tradeoff

In the articleEvery allocation involves a trade-off, and refusing to see it does not make it disappear.

invisible

/ɪnˈvɪzəbəl/|in·vis·i·ble

adjective

not seen

Word Breakdown: in- (not) + visible

Word family: visibility (n.)

Synonyms: unseen, hidden, imperceptible

Collocations: invisible hand, invisible cost

In the articleThe visible effect (new window, paid glazier) concealed the invisible cost (the preferred thing that now wasn't bought).

ledger

/ˈledʒər/|ledg·er

noun

a record of accounts

Word family: ledgers (v./n.)

Synonyms: record, account, register

Collocations: accounting ledger, ledger entry

In the articleThe afternoon, from a ledger perspective, was cost-free.

alternative

/ɔːlˈtɜːrnətɪv/|al·ter·na·tive

noun

another option

Word Breakdown: alter- (other) + -native (relating to)

Word family: alternate (v./n.)

Synonyms: option, choice, substitute

Collocations: alternative option, alternative approach

In the articleThe cost of the afternoon watching the show isn't the afternoon itself — it's the value of the best alternative use you didn't take.

economist

/ɪˈkɑːnəmɪst/|e·con·o·mist

noun

one who studies economies

Word Breakdown: econ- (household) + -omist (one who studies)

Word family: economy (v./n.)

Synonyms: analyst, expert, scholar

Collocations: leading economist, economic analysis

In the articleAn economist, asked the same question, would give a different answer.

Technical Terms

opportunity cost

/ˌɑːpərˈtuːnəti/|op·por·tu·ni·ty

noun

the value of the best alternative forgone

Synonyms: similar to the value of the best alternative forgone, related concept, the value of the best alternative forgone

Example: Understanding opportunity cost is crucial in this context.

In the articleThis is called opportunity cost, and it's one of the most distinctive concepts in economic thinking.

sunk cost

/sʌŋk kɒst/|sunk cost

noun

already-spent resources that cannot be recovered

Synonyms: similar to already-spent resources that cannot be recovered, related concept, already-spent resources that cannot be recovered

Example: Understanding sunk cost is crucial in this context.

In the articleSunk costs become irrelevant.

marginal thinking

/ˈmɑːdʒɪnəl ˈθɪŋkɪŋ/|mar·gin·al think·ing

noun

evaluating additional units of something rather than totals

Synonyms: similar to evaluating additional units of something rather than totals, related concept, evaluating additional units of something rather than totals

Example: Understanding marginal thinking is crucial in this context.

In the articleThis is called opportunity cost, and it's one of the most distinctive concepts in economic thinking.

comparative advantage

/kəmˈpærətɪv ədˈvɑːntɪdʒ/|com·par·a·tive ad·van·tage

noun

the principle that trade creates value when parties specialise

Synonyms: similar to the principle that trade creates value when parties specialise, related concept, the principle that trade creates value when parties specialise

Example: Understanding comparative advantage is crucial in this context.

In the articleThe political discussion rarely frames things this way — it usually argues the merits of the new project in isolation — but the real question is alway

rational actor model

/ˈræʃənəl ˈæktər ˈmɒdəl/|ra·tion·al ac·tor mod·el

noun

the economic framework assuming purposive, consistent decision-making

Synonyms: similar to the economic framework assuming purposive, consistent decision-making, related concept, the economic framework assuming purposive, consistent decision-making

Example: Understanding rational actor model is crucial in this context.

In the articleIf you'd rather stay home, that's the rational choice.

Figurative Phrases

on the ledger

in the accounts — idiom; not always literal

Etymology/Type: Metonymy; the ledger is the accounting record - applied figuratively to any costs, benefits, or consequences that "count" in economic or moral reckoning.

Synonyms: in the calculation, counted as a cost, factored into the balance

Example: She reminded herself that every hour spent on social media had to go on the ledger against time for revision.

In the articleWorking on a project you've been meaning to start.

pay the price

incur the cost — idiom; often non-monetary

Etymology/Type: Metaphor extending "pay" beyond money; although "pay" originally means exchange money, it is applied figuratively to any loss or consequence one must bear.

Synonyms: bear the cost, face the consequences, take the hit

Example: He paid the price for ignoring the practice questions when the exam format turned out to be exactly what they'd practised.

In the articleThe cost of the afternoon watching the show isn't the afternoon itself — it's the value of the best alternative use you gave up.

count the cost

consider all implications — idiom; not literal counting

Etymology/Type: Metaphor treating costs as countable items; "count" equals tally or enumerate - applied to considering all implications and consequences, which need not be monetary.

Synonyms: weigh the trade-offs, consider what you're giving up, assess the full cost

Example: Before agreeing to take on the extra role, she took time to count the cost — she couldn't afford to lose study time this close to exams.

In the articleWhen evaluating decisions you've already made, don't count sunk costs.

bigger fish to fry

more important matters — idiom; no literal fish

Etymology/Type: Idiom from cooking and priorities; in cooking, larger fish require more attention - applied to more important matters or priorities claiming ones attention.

Synonyms: more important things to deal with, higher priorities, more pressing concerns

Example: He decided the minor formatting issue could wait — he had bigger fish to fry with two major assessments due that week.

In the articleOnce you start looking for it in the world, you see it everywhere — in government budgets, business decisions, career choices, and the small allocations of daily time.

at a price

involving a cost — idiom; often non-monetary

Etymology/Type: Metaphor extending "price" beyond money; although "price" originally means monetary cost, it is applied to any cost or consequence attached to obtaining something.

Synonyms: but at a cost, not without sacrifice, though something must be given up

Example: The extra marks were available at a price — she'd need to give up her Friday evening to rewrite the section entirely.

In the articleWhen not prompted, most participants didn't think about alternative uses of the money at all.

time is money

time has economic value — idiom; widely quoted, often attributed to Franklin

Etymology/Type: Explicit metaphor attributed to Benjamin Franklin; two unlike things (time and money) are directly equated, suggesting time has economic value and can be spent or saved.

Synonyms: time has real value, every hour has a cost, time spent is time given up

Example: His father's constant reminder that time is money finally made sense when he calculated how much a single wasted study hour was actually worth.

In the articleThe time was free.

Confusing Words

forgone vs foregone

These near-homophones are easily confused because they sound similar and both can relate to decisions, but they mean different things: forgone means 'given up or passed up,' while foregone means 'already decided or inevitable.'

  • Forgone (past participle of 'forgo') means to deliberately go without something, pass it up, or sacrifice it — to decide not to have or do something, usually something you'd like but are choosing to give up. When you calculate opportunity cost, you're evaluating what good or benefit you've forgone by choosing one path instead of another — the alternative you gave up.
  • Foregone (past participle of 'forego' in the archaic sense of 'go before') most commonly appears in the phrase 'foregone conclusion' — something that's already decided, inevitable, or already done before the supposed action. A foregone conclusion is an outcome that seems predetermined; the decision or result seems to have already been made before the actual event or vote.

Forgone = something you *deliberately gave up or passed on* (chose not to take). Foregone = something *already decided* (in 'foregone conclusion').

allocation vs distribution

These near-synonyms both involve dividing resources, but allocation emphasizes assigning to purposes or uses, while distribution emphasizes spreading across recipients or locations.

  • Allocation is the assignment of resources to specific purposes, uses, or functions — it's about deciding *what something is for*. Budget allocation means deciding how much money goes to each department or program based on their intended purpose. Resource allocation in economics means deciding what resources (labor, capital, land) go to producing which goods.
  • Distribution is the spreading or delivery of something across recipients, locations, or populations — it's about *how things spread out*. Income distribution describes how wealth is spread across society. The distribution of a population shows where people are located. It focuses on the *spread* rather than the *purpose*.

Allocation = *assigning to purposes* ('allocate $1M to research'). Distribution = *spreading across recipients* ('distribute food to families').

alternative vs alternate

These look similar and are related, but they have distinct uses: alternative is a noun or adjective meaning 'an option or choice,' while alternate is an adjective or verb meaning 'occurring by turns' or 'to switch back and forth.'

  • Alternative is an option, choice, or possibility — something you can choose instead of something else. You have an alternative plan, an alternative route, an alternative energy source. As an adjective, it means 'offering a choice or substitute.' In economics, an alternative is something different you could have done instead (opportunity cost examines what alternatives you gave up).
  • Alternate means occurring or appearing in turns, by rotation, or switching back and forth — one after the other in sequence. An alternate day schedule means Monday/Wednesday/Friday or Tuesday/Thursday. To alternate means to switch back and forth between two things: 'Alternate between standing and sitting.' An alternate route is a different path, but 'alternate' also implies moving between options cyclically.

Alternative = *an option to choose from* (noun: 'choose another alternative'). Alternate = *occurring by turns or switching back and forth* (verb: 'alternate between' or adjective: 'every other one').