# Economic Opportunity Cost ## Definition The foregone benefits that result from limited market access, including the inability to specialise fully, the necessity of self-sufficiency, and the reduced potential for productivity gains through division of labour. Economic opportunity cost represents the price paid for restricted market extent. ## Source Chapter Book I, Chapter 3 ## Context Smith illustrates economic opportunity cost through examples: the inability to dispose of one day's work per year for a nailer in the highlands, or the necessity for farmers to be their own butchers, bakers, and brewers, showing what is lost when markets are too small to support specialisation. ## Economic Domain General Theory ---