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CWU ECON 101 - Production and Costs

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Production and CostsThe How Question?Economic versus Accounting CostsPowerPoint PresentationFigure 1 Economic versus AccountantsSlide 6Slide 7Different Measures of CostCost FormulasMarginal and Average Costs RevisitedThe Cost CurvesFigure 5 Thirsty Thelma’s Average-Cost and Marginal-Cost CurvesSlide 13Slide 14Excel Cost CurvesLong-run Cost CurvesFigure 7 Average Total Cost in the Short and Long RunSummaryProduction and CostsThe How Question?•From the circular flow diagram, resource markets determine input or resource prices.•Profit-maximizing firms select the production technology, given the input prices, to select the combination of input that minimize the cost of producing any given output level.•This helps answer the second condition for economic efficiency.•Economic efficiency – maximum satisfaction from scarce resources: The two conditions are:–Produce the combination of goods and services that consumers most highly value–Produce the combination of goods and services at least possible cost.Economic versus Accounting Costs•Understanding costs will help to understand efficiency as well as behavior.•Economic costs are theoretical constructs which are intended to aid in rational decision-making.•Accounting costs are legal constructs intended to provide uniformity in measurement.•Profit = Total Revenue – Total Costs•Total Net Benefits = Total Benefits minus Total Costs•Costs as Opportunity Costs–Explicit Costs–Implicit Costs•Opportunity cost of entrepreneur’s invested capital•Opportunity cost of entrepreneur’s time•Economic versus Accounting Profit•Normal Profits: the accounting profits that just covers implicit or opportunity costsFigure 1 Economic versus AccountantsCopyright © 2004 South-WesternRevenueTotalopportunitycostsHow an EconomistViews a FirmHow an AccountantViews a FirmRevenueEconomicprofitImplicitcostsExplicitcostsExplicitcostsAccountingprofitProduction and Costs•Intuitively, costs of production depend on two things:–Production technology–Input Price•Technology is the state of knowledge about how to combine inputs to produce output.•Production Function describes the relationship between inputs and outputs–Q = F ( K, L , NR, E)•Short-run versus Long-run–SR - at least one input is fixed – limits to adjustment – diminishing returns–LR – all inputs are variable – complete flexibility – returns to scale•Remember the widget example!•Applying more labor resulting in a diminishing marginal product of labor and increasing marginal costs.•Let’s see this at work again in a more detailed way.Different Measures of Cost•Total Cost (TC) = FC+VC–Fixed Cost (FC) – are costs that do not vary with output. FC only are present in the short-run are the result of fixed factors.–Variable Cost (VC) – are costs that vary with output. VC result from different levels of fixed factors. All costs are VC in the long-run.•Marginal Cost (MC) = change in TC/ change in Q and measures the cost of producing another unit. (general formula)•Average Cost (AC) = TC/Q and measures the cost of a typical unit of output.Cost Formulas•TC = FC +VC•Dividing both sides of the total cost formula by Q, we get the average cost formula:–TC/Q = FC/Q + VC/Q–ATC = AFC +AVC–Average Total Cost = Average Fixed Cost + Average Variable CostMarginal and Average Costs Revisited•As Q increases if–MC<AC AC is falling–MC>AC AC is rising–So, when MC=AC AC is at its minimum•The above also applies to MC and AVC•The height exampleThe Cost Curves•Short-run Cost Curves – at least one fixed factor, so fixed costs exist. Economist like to use the example of the factory or plant size being fixed and labor being the variable input.–Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns implies that the MC will eventually increase.–Increasing MC results in U-shaped ATC curves.–If MC initially falls and then begins to rise, both the ATC and AVC curves will be U-shaped.–Since capital is often assumed to be fixed, the short-run cost curves describe costs associated with the utilization of existing plant capacity.Figure 5 Thirsty Thelma’s Average-Cost and Marginal-Cost CurvesCopyright © 2004 South-WesternCosts$3.503.253.002.752.502.252.001.751.501.251.000.750.500.25Quantityof Output(glasses of lemonade per hour)0 1 432 765 98 10MCATCAVCAFCFixed Variable Total MarginalQuantity Cost Costs Costs Costs 0 3.00$ 1 3.00$ 0.30$ 3.30$ 0.30$ 2 3.00$ 0.80$ 3.80$ 0.50$ 3 3.00$ 1.50$ 4.50$ 0.70$ 4 3.00$ 2.40$ 5.40$ 0.90$ 5 3.00$ 3.50$ 6.50$ 1.10$ 6 3.00$ 4.80$ 7.80$ 1.30$ 7 3.00$ 6.30$ 9.30$ 1.50$ 8 3.00$ 8.00$ 11.00$ 1.70$ 9 3.00$ 9.90$ 12.90$ 1.90$ 10 3.00$ 12.0$ 15.00$ 2.10$Quantity AFC AVC ATC MC 0 1 3.00$ 0.30$ 3.30$ 0.30$ 2 1.50$ 0.40$ 1.90$ 0.50$ 3 1.00$ 0.50$ 1.50$ 0.70$ 4 0.75$ 0.60$ 1.35$ 0.90$ 5 0.60$ 0.70$ 1.30$ 1.10$ 6 0.50$ 0.80$ 1.30$ 1.30$ 7 0.43$ 0.90$ 1.33$ 1.50$ 8 0.38$ 1.00$ 1.38$ 1.70$ 9 0.33$ 1.10$ 1.43$ 1.90$ 10 0.30$ 1.20$ 1.50$ 2.10$Excel Cost Curves•Changes in input prices or productivity change the cost curves–Change in fixed costs do not affect MC–Increases in prices or or decreases in productivity of variable inputs cause VC, TC, AVC, ATC, and MC to increase–Decreases in prices or increases in productivity of variable inputs causes VC, TC, AVC, ATC, and MC to decreaseLong-run Cost Curves•Long-run cost curves – all factors are variable, so there are no fixed costs and all costs are variable. –Economies and diseconomies of scale•benefits to a larger scale of operations – specialization, purchasing volume, efficient use of capital, design and development costs•costs of a larger scale of operation – coordination problems–LR cost curves are U-shaped if a production process is characterized by first by economies of scale, and then diseconomies of scale.–Since capital can be varied, the long-run cost curves describe the costs with changing the scale of operations (reducing or increasing plant size).Figure 7 Average Total Cost in the Short and Long RunCopyright © 2004 South-WesternQuantity ofCars per Day0AverageTotalCost1,200$12,0001,00010,000EconomiesofscaleATC in shortrun withsmall factoryATC in shortrun withmedium factoryATC in shortrun withlarge factoryATC in long runDiseconomiesofscaleConstantreturns toscaleSummary•Short-run – at least one


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