Alright. So let's compare that to a general increase in the availability of resources or technology, something like that. So before, we had industry-specific growth, like pizza ovens got better, right? So, pizza production improved. This is just a general increase, so maybe you know there's been a lot of immigration, our population has grown so there's more labor available, more resources, or I don't know, we go to Iraq and win a war and now we have all their oil so our productivity goes up. Anything like that, even a new computer that helps every industry. So let's kind of look at this on the graph. Where in the previous example one side was moving, here we're going to have both sides moving out. Okay.
So let's see, an example. Let's pretend this was our original curve something like that, right, and now we've had this general increase in our economy, and in green I'm going to draw our new curve. So what you're going to see is that both goods have seen a production increase. Let me draw that a little better. Right? So, everything's gone up. You see both of the sides have shifted out now. There's a shift out on both sides, right? And both of the sides here and here are further up. So, we can increase our production on both sides; it's just a general increase. And in these videos, right, we've been shifting stuff outward. Outward. It's very rare that you would ever shift anything inward. I've barely ever seen it, but like, you know, maybe if, I don't know, a meteor hits the Earth and all our resources are gone, or it'd have to be some kind of crazy apocalyptic catastrophe like that, and you'll see the curves shift inward, but generally, right, we get more productive, and we're going to shift outward like we've seen in these examples. Cool. Let's move on to the next.