15
Presentation 3- Cost of Production

Presentation 3- Cost of Production. Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc. Cash payments

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Presentation 3- Cost of Production

Page 2: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.

Cash payments for the use of resources owned by others ($$ value)

Page 3: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Opportunity cost of using self-owned, self-employed resources

Amount of $$ that self-employed resources could have earned in their best alternative use

Ex- using a building rather than renting it…the amount of rent you could have made

Page 4: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

The value or worth the resources used to produce a good would have in its best alternative use

Ex- steel in a building could be used for cars Ex- for an assembly line worker making

computers, the contribution he could have produced for another good

Page 5: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

The payments a firm must make, or the incomes it must provide, to attract the resources away from alternative production opportunities.

These payments can be explicit or implicit.

Page 6: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

The minimum payment you must receive for performing entrepreneurial functions for a firm rather than for yourself

Included in implicit costs

Page 7: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Profit = Total Revenue- Explicit Costs

Page 8: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Profit = Total Revenue – Economic Costs (Implicit and Explicit Costs)

Page 9: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

You have been earning $22,000/yr. You decide to open your own T-Shirt company. You invest $20,000 of savings that have earning you $1000/year in interest. Your firm will be in a small store that you own and have been renting out for $5000/year. You also hire a clerk for $18000/year. Calculate Accounting and economic profit

Page 10: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Total Sales Revenue………………..120,000 Cost of t-shirts…………40000 Clerk’s salary…………...18000 Utilities…………………...5000TOTAL COSTS (Explicit)………………………(63,000)ACCOUNTING PROFIT…………………………$57,000

Page 11: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

$57,000 accounting profit looks good but doesn’t include implicit costs and overstates the economic success of the company.

Page 12: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

By providing your own financial capital, building and labor you incur implicit costs (forgone income):

Accounting Profit………………………57000 Forgone interest……………………….1000 Forgone rent…………………………...5000 Forgone wages………………………..22000 Forgone entrepreneurial income….5000TOTAL Implicit Costs…………………………….(33000)Economic Profit……………………………………$24000

Page 13: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

ECONOMIC Profit = TR-ECONOMIC COSTS= 120000 – 63000-33000

= $24000

Page 14: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Gomez runs a small pottery firm. He hires one helper at $12,000 per year, pays annual rent of $5,000 for his shop, and spends $20,000 per year on materials. He has $40,000 of his own funds invested in equipment (pottery wheels, kilns, and so forth) that could earn him $4,000 per year if alternatively invested. He has been offered $15,000 per year to work as a potter for a competitor. He estimates his entrepreneurial talents are worth $3,000 per year. Total annual revenue from pottery sales is $72,000. Calculate accounting profits and economic profits for Gomez’s pottery.

Page 15: Presentation 3- Cost of Production.  Cash expenditures a firm makes to those who supply labor services, materials, fuel, transportation etc.  Cash payments

Explicit costs: $37,000 (= $12,000 for the helper + $5,000 of rent + $20,000 of materials). Implicit costs: $22,000 (= $4,000 of forgone interest + $15,000 of forgone salary + $3,000 of entrepreneurship).

Accounting profit = $35,000 (= $72,000 of revenue - $37,000 of explicit costs); Economic profit = $13,000 (= $72,000 - $37,000 of explicit costs - $22,000 of implicit costs).