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1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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Page 1: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

1

Production Costs

Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6th edition©2009 South-Western College Publishing

Page 2: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

2

What is the purpose of this chapter?

The purpose of this chapter is to study production and its relationship to various types of costs

Page 3: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

3

What economic puzzles will I learn to solve?

• Why would an accountant say a firm is making a profit and an economists say it’s losing money?

• What is the difference between the short run and the long run?

• Why have multiscreen movie theatres replaced single screen theatres?

Page 4: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

4

What is a basic assumption in economics?

The motivation for business decisions is profit maximization

Page 5: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

5

To understand profit, what is necessary?

To distinguish between the way economists measure costs and the way accountants measure costs

Page 6: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

6

What are explicit costs?Payments to nonowners of a firm for their resources

Page 7: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

7

What are implicit costs?

The opportunity costs of using resources owned by the firm

Page 8: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

8

What is an example of implicit costs?

When you invest your nest egg in your own enterprise, you give up earning interest on that money

Page 9: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

9

What are total opportunity costs?

Explicit costs + Implicit costs

Page 10: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

10

What iseconomic profit?

Total revenue minus explicit and implicit costs, or total revenue minus total opportunity costs

Page 11: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

11

What is normal profit?

The minimum profit necessary to keep a firm in operation

Page 12: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

12

What about opportunity cost?

A firm that earns normal profits earns total revenue equal to its total opportunity cost

Page 13: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

13

How is accounting profit defined?

Total revenue minus total explicit costs

Page 14: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

14

What conclusion can we make?

Since business decision making is based on economic profit, rather than accounting profit, the word profit in this text always means economic profit

Page 15: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is a fixed input?Any resource for which the quantity cannot change during the period of time under consideration

Page 16: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is avariable input?

Any resource for which the quantity can change during the period of time under consideration

Page 17: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is the short run?A period of time so short that there is at least one fixed input

Page 18: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is a variable input?

Any resource for which the quantity can change during the period of time under consideration

Page 19: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is the long run?A period of time so long that all inputs are variable

Page 20: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is theproduction function?

The relationship between the maximum amounts of outputs a firm can produce and various quantities of inputs

Page 21: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What do technological advances make

possible?More output is possible from a given quantity of inputs

Page 22: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What ismarginal product?

The change in total output produced by adding one unit of a variable input, with all other inputs used held constant

Page 23: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

23

What is the law of diminishing returns?

The principle that beyond some point the marginal product decreases as additional units of a variable resource are added to a fixed factor

Page 24: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What does the law of diminishing

returns assume?Fixed inputs; it is therefore a short-run concept

Page 25: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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40

10

1 2 4

Production Function

30

20

5

50

63

60

To

tal O

utp

ut

Quantity of Labor

Total Output

Page 26: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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8

2

1 2 4

Marginal Product Curve

6

4

5

10

63

12

Mar

gin

al P

rod

uct

Law of Diminishing

Returns

Quantity of Labor

Page 27: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

27

What istotal fixed cost?

Costs that do not vary as output varies and that must be paid even if output is zero

Page 28: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What istotal variable cost?

Costs that are zero when output is zero and vary as output varies

Page 29: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is total cost?

The sum of total fixed cost and total variable cost at each level of output

Page 30: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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TC = TFC + TVC

Page 31: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What isaverage fixed cost?

Total fixed cost divided by the quantity of output produced

Page 32: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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AFC = TFC / Q

Page 33: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is average variable cost?

Total variable cost divided by the quantity of output produced

Page 34: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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AVC = TVC / Q

Page 35: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What isaverage total cost?

Total cost divided by the quantity of output produced

Page 36: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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ATC = AFC + AVC = TC/Q

Page 37: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is marginal cost?The change in total cost when one unit of output is produced

Page 38: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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MC = TC/Q = TVC/Q

Page 39: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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$400

$300

$200

$100

1 2 3 4

$500

$600

$700

$800

5 6 7 8 9

Short-Run Cost Curves

TCTVC

TFC

TFC

Co

st p

er u

nit

Page 40: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

40

$40$30$20

$10

1 2 3 4

$50$60$70

5 6 7 8 9

Short-Run Cost Curves

ATC

AVC

MC

AFC

AFC

Co

st p

er u

nit

Page 41: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

41

What is themarginal-average rule?

When MC < AC, AC fallsWhen MC > AC, AC rises

If MC = AC, AC at minimum

Page 42: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is the relationship between slopes of the MC and

MP curves?The rising portion of the MP curve corresponds to the declining portion of the MC curve, and vice versa

Page 43: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is the relationship between

the minimum and maximum points of the

MR and MP curves?The maximum point of the MP curve corresponds to the minimum point of the MC curve

Page 44: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

44

8

2

1 2 4

Marginal Product Curve

6

4

5

10

63

12

To

tal O

utp

ut

Quantity of Labor

Maximum

Page 45: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

45

$40

$30

$20

$10

1 2 3 4

$50

$60$70

5 6 7 8 9

Short-Run Cost Curves

ATC

AVC

MCC

ost

per

un

itMinimum

Page 46: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What is the long-run average cost curve?The curve that traces the

lowest cost per unit at which a firm can produce any level of output when the firm can build any desired plant size

Page 47: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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$40

$30

$20

$10

2 4 6 8

$50

$60

$70

10 12 14 16 18

Short and Long-run Average Cost Curves

Short-run average total cost curves

Long-run average cost curve

Page 48: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What areeconomies of scale?A situation in which the long-run average cost curve declines as the firm increases output

Page 49: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What are constant returns to scale?

A situation in which the long-run average cost curve does not change as the firm increases output

Page 50: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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What arediseconomies of scale?

A situation in which the long-run average cost curve rises as the firm increases output

Page 51: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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$40

$30

$20

$10

2 4 6 8

$50

$60

$70

10 12 14 16 18

Long-run Average Cost Curve

Constant returns to scale

Economies of scale

Diseconomies of scale

Page 52: 1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing

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END