When a typhoon damaged the cinnamon crop in the Central Highlands, cinnamon prices tripled. Linh’s pho spice mix cost more. She worried: if she raised the price, would customers leave? She tested a 5,000 VND increase. Sales dropped only 2%. Demand was inelastic —workers needed quick, hot breakfast. She passed most of the cost to consumers.
A year later, Linh opened a second shop near the new metro line (a government infrastructure project financed by ADB loans). She hired four workers. Their wages contributed to Vietnam’s GDP via consumption and investment. When a journalist asked how she succeeded, Linh pulled out her dog-eared copy of Economics: Asia-Pacific Edition and said: "My grandmother taught me pho. This book taught me to see the invisible hand." principles of economics asia-pacific edition
But Linh had just finished a microeconomics unit in her university course using the Asia-Pacific Edition . She saw her grandmother’s cart not as tradition, but as a model of and opportunity cost . When a typhoon damaged the cinnamon crop in