Principles of Economics Session 5. Topics To Be Covered Categories of Costs Costs in the Short Run...

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Principles of Economics

Session 5

Topics To Be Covered

Categories of CostsCosts in the Short RunCosts in the Long RunEconomies of Scope

The Firm’s Objective

The economic goal of the firm is to maximize profits.

A Firm’s Profit

Profit is the firm’s total revenue minus its total cost.

Profit = Total revenue - Total cost

Costs as Opportunity Costs

A firm’s cost of production includes all the opportunity costs of making its output of

goods and services.

Opportunity Cost

The value of the next best use for an economic good, or the value of the sacrificed alternative.

Explicit and Implicit Costs

A firm’s cost of production include explicit costs and implicit costs.

Explicit costs involve a direct money outlay for factors of production. Implicit costs, also called normal profit, refer to the opportunity cost of using the owner’s own resources.

Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit

Economists measure a firm’s economic profit as total revenue minus all the opportunity costs (explicit and implicit).

Accountants measure the accounting profit as the firm’s total revenue minus only the firm’s explicit costs. In other words, they ignore the implicit costs.

Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit

When total revenue exceeds both explicit and implicit costs, the firm earns economic profit.

Economic profit is smaller than accounting profit.

Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit

RevenueTotalopportunitycosts

How an EconomistViews a Firm

Explicitcosts

Economicprofit

Implicitcosts

Explicitcosts

Accountingprofit

How an AccountantViews a Firm

Revenue

Total Cost of Production

Total cost of production may be divided into fixed costs and variable costs.

Fixed and Variable Costs

Fixed costs are those costs that do not vary with the quantity of output produced.

Variable costs are those costs that do change as the firm alters the quantity of output produced.

Family of Total Costs

TC = Total Costs

TFC=Total Fixed Costs

TVC=Total Variable Costs

TVCTFCTC

Fixed CostCost paid by a firm that is in business regardless of the level of output

Sunk CostCost that have been incurred and cannot be recoverede.g. advertising expenditure

Fixed Cost vs. Sunk Cost

Personal Computers: most costs are variablee.g. components, labor

Software: most costs are sunke.g. cost of developing the software

Variable Cost and Sunk Cost

Total CostOutput(Units)

Fixed Cost ($)

Variable Cost ($)

Total Cost ($)

0 50 0 501 50 50 1002 50 78 1283 50 98 1484 50 112 1625 50 130 1806 50 150 2007 50 175 2258 50 204 2549 50 242 292

10 50 300 35011 50 385 435

Total Cost Curves

Output

Cost($ peryear)

100

200

300

400

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

TVC

Variable cost increases with

production and the rate varies with

increasing & decreasing returns.

TC

Total costis the vertical

sum of FC and VC.

TFC50

Fixed cost does notvary with output

Average Costs

The average cost is the cost of each typical unit of product.

Average costs can be determined by dividing the firm’s costs by the quantity of output produced.

Family of Average Costs

ATC=Average Total Costs

AFC=Average Fixed Costs

AVC=Average Variable Costs

AVCAFCATC

Family of Average Costs

Q

TC=

Quantity

cost Total=ATC

Q

TVC=

Quantity

costVariable =AVC

Q

TFC=

Quantity

cost Fixed=AFC

Average CostsOutput(Units)

TFC ($)

TVC ($)

TC($)

AFC($)

AVC($)

ATC($)

0 50 0 50 -- -- --1 50 50 100 50 50 1002 50 78 128 25 39 643 50 98 148 16.7 32.7 49.34 50 112 162 12.5 28 40.55 50 130 180 10 26 366 50 150 200 8.3 25 33.37 50 175 225 7.1 25 32.18 50 204 254 6.3 25.5 31.89 50 242 292 5.6 26.9 32.4

10 50 300 350 5 30 3511 50 385 435 4.5 35 39.5

Average Cost Curves

Output (units/yr.)

Cost($ per

unit)

25

50

75

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

ATC

AVC

AFC

U-Shaped ATC and AVC Curves

The ATC curve is U-shaped. At very low levels of output average total cost

is high because fixed cost is spread over only a few units.

Average total cost declines as output increases. Average total cost starts rising because

average variable cost rises substantially.The AVC curve is also U-shaped for its

relationship with the ATC curve.

Marginal Cost

Marginal Cost (MC) is the cost of expanding output by one unit. Since

fixed cost have no impact on marginal cost, it can be written as:

Q

TC

Q

VCMC

Marginal CostOutput(Units)

TFC ($)

TVC ($)

TC($)

AFC($)

AVC($)

ATC($)

MC($)

0 50 0 50 -- -- -- --1 50 50 100 50 50 100 502 50 78 128 25 39 64 283 50 98 148 16.7 32.7 49.3 204 50 112 162 12.5 28 40.5 145 50 130 180 10 26 36 186 50 150 200 8.3 25 33.3 207 50 175 225 7.1 25 32.1 258 50 204 254 6.3 25.5 31.8 299 50 242 292 5.6 26.9 32.4 38

10 50 300 350 5 30 35 58

11 50 385 435 4.5 35 39.5 85

Marginal Cost Curve

Output (units/yr.)

Cost($ per

unit)

25

50

75

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

MC

Cost Curves for a Firm

Output (units/yr.)

Cost($ per

unit)

25

50

75

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

MC

ATC

AVC

AFC

From TC to AC and MC

P

Q

100

200

300

400

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

TFC

TVC

A

TC

25

50

75

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

MC

ATC

AVC

AFC

B

A'

B'

AFC= slope of line from origin to a point on TFCAVC = slope of line from origin to a point on TVCATC = slope of line from origin to a point on TCMC = slope of tangent to a point on TC or TVC

P

Q

Properties of Cost Curves

AFC falls continuously When MC < AVC or

MC < ATC, AVC and ATC decrease

When MC > AVC or MC > ATC, AVC and ATC increase

Output (units/yr.)

Cost($ per

unit)

25

50

75

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

MC

ATC

AVC

AFC

Properties of Cost Curves

MC crosses AVC and ATC at the minimums of AVC and ATC, respectively.

Minimum AVC occurs at a lower output than minimum ATC

Output (units/yr.)

Cost($ per

unit)

25

50

75

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

MC

ATC

AVC

AFC

Costs in the Long Run

For many firms, the division of total costs between fixed and variable costs depends on the time horizon being considered.

In the short run some costs are fixed. In the long run fixed costs become variable

costs.

Costs in the Long Run

Because many costs are fixed in the short run but variable in the long run, a firm’s long-run cost curves differ from its short-run cost curves.

If LMC < LAC, LAC will fall

If LMC > LAC, LAC will rise

LMC = LAC at the minimum of LAC

Long-Run Average and Marginal Cost

Long-Run Average and Marginal Cost

Output

Cost($ per unitof output

LAC

LMC

A

Average Total Cost in the Short and Long Runs

Quantity ofCars per Day

0

AverageTotalCost

ATC in shortrun with

small factory

ATC in shortrun with

medium factory

ATC in shortrun with

large factory

ATC in long run

The optimal plant size will depend on the anticipated output.

Firms can change scale to change output in the long-run.

The long-run average cost curve is the envelope of the firm’s short-run average cost curves.

Long-Run Costs andReturns to Scale

Long-Run Cost with Economiesand Diseconomies of Scale

Output

Cost($ per unitof output

SMC1

SAC1

SAC2

SMC2LMC If the output is Q1 a manager

would choose the small plantSAC1 and SAC $8.

$10

Q1

$8B

A

LAC SAC3

SMC3

Economies and Diseconomies of Scale

Economies of scale occur when long-run average total cost declines as output increases.

Diseconomies of scale occur when long-run average total cost rises as output increases.

Constant returns to scale occur when long-run average total cost does not vary as output increases.

Economies and Diseconomies of Scale

Diseconomies

of scale

Quantity ofCars per Day

0

AverageTotalCost

ATC in long run

Economies

of scale

Constant Returnsto scale

Economies of scope exist when the joint output of a single firm is greater than the output that could be achieved by two different firms each producing a single output.

Chicken farm—poultry and eggsAutomobile company—cars and trucksUniversity—Teaching and research

Economies of Scope

Both use similar, relative, and even the same capital and labor.

The firms share management resources.

The production of one good results in the production of another good at little or no extra cost.

Advantages of Economiesof Scope

C(Q1)= cost of producing Q1

C(Q2)=cost of producing Q2

C(Q1Q2)=joint cost of producing both products

)(

)()()C( SC

2,1

2,121

QQC

QQCQCQ

Measuring Degree of Economies of Scope

If SC > 0 — Economies of scope

If SC < 0 — Diseconomies of scope

There is no direct relationship between economies of scope and economies of scale.

A firm may experience economies of scope and diseconomies of scale

A firm may have economies of scale and not have economies of scope

Economies of Scope vs.Economies of Scale

Assignment

Review Chapter 7Answer questions on P130Preview Chapter 8

Thanks

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