Elias learned the greatest lesson of economics: , and it is the choices we make to balance those limits that create a thriving world.
Elias realized that while his flour was infinite, were not. He began to charge a small fee again—not for the flour, but for the wood to heat the oven and the time he spent kneading. The woodcutter returned to the forest, the farmer planted new seeds, and the village came back to life.
If you have a specific from your economics textbook,I can explain the theory or help you find the solution.