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CHAPTER 13: THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION
13.1 What Are Costs?
Total Revenue, Total Cost, and Profit - Total revenue: the amount a firm receives for the sale of its output - Total cost: the market value of the inputs a firm uses in production - Profit = total revenue - total cost Costs as Opportunity Costs - Costs of production include all the opportunity costs of making its output - Explicit costs: input costs that require an outlay of money by the firm (eg workers’ wages) - Implicit cost: input costs that do not require an outlay of money by the firm (eg the forgone income of hte possibility of working another profession) - Total cost is the sum of explicit and implicit costs The Cost of Capital as an Opportunity Cost - An implicit cost of almost every business is the opportunity cost of the financial capital that has been invested in the business - Eg: paying $300,000 to buy the business, so loses $15,000 yearly that the $300,000 would have made in interest sitting in the bank - Could also include loans Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit - Economic profit: total revenue minus total costs, including both explicit and implicit costs - Usually smaller than accounting profit - Accounting profit: total revenue minus total explicit cost
13.2 Production and Costs
The Production Function - Production function: the relationship between the quantity of inputs used to make a good and the quantity of output of that good - Marginal product: the increase in output that arises from an additional unit of input - Eg: when workers go from 1 to 2, output goes from 50 to 90: the marginal product of the second worker is 40 - Diminishing marginal product: the property whereby the marginal product of an input declines as the quantity of the input increases From the Production Function to the Total-Cost Revenue - Total cost curve: relationship between quantity produced (horizontal axis) and total costs (vertical axis) - Gets steeper as the amount produced rises, but production function gets flatter as production rises 13.3 The Various Measures of Cost Fixed and Variable Costs - Fixed costs: costs that do not vary with the quantity of output produce (eg rent_ - Variable costs: costs that vary with the quantity of output produced - Firm’s total costs = fixed + variable costs Average and Marginal Cost - Average total cost: total cost divided by the quantity of output - Can be expressed as the sum of average fixed cost and average variable cost - Average fixed cost: fixed cost divided by the quantity of the output - Average variable cost: variable cost divided by the quantity of output - Tells us the cost of the typical unit - Marginal cost: the increase in total cost that arises from an extra unit of production - Change in total cost/change in quantity Cost Curves and Their Shapes - Rising Marginal costs (as Q increases) - Reflects the property of diminishing marginal product - U-Shaped Average Total Cost - Average cost is the sum of average fixed cost and average variable cost - Fixed cost always declines as output rises, because fixed cost is getting spread over a larger number of units - Average variable cost usually rises as output increases because of diminishing marginal product - Efficient scale: the quantity of output that minimizes average total cost (bottom of the U) - Relationship between marginal cost and ATC - Whenever marginal cost is less than average total cost, average total cost is falling. Whenever marginal cost is greater than average total cost, average total cost is rising - Think GPA where marginal cost is grade in next class and ATC is GPA - The marginal-cost curves crosses the average-total-cost curve at its minimum - At low levels of output, marginal cost is below average total cost, so average total cost is falling - After the two curves cross, marginal cost rises above average total cost Typical Cost Curves - All firms do not necessarily exhbitit the diminishing marginal product and rising marginal cost at all levels of output - For some firms, marginal product does not start to fall immediately after the first worker is hired - The three properties of cost curves above still hold true
13.4 Costs in the Short Run and in the Long Run
The Relationship between Short-Run and Long-Run Average Total Cost - Many decisions fixed in the short-run but variable in the long run, thus a firm’s long-run cost curves differ from its short-run cost curves - Firms have greater flexibility in the long run, thus firm gets to choose which short-run curve it wants Economies and Diseconomies of Scale - Economics of scale: the property whereby long-run average total cost falls as the quantity of output increases - Often arise because higher production levels allow specialization among workers - Diseconomies of scale: the property whereby long-run average total cost rises as the quantity of output increases - Arise because of coordination problems - Constant returns to scale: the property whereby long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity of output changes - Explains why long-run average-total-cost curves are often U-shaped - Low levels of production, the firm benefits from increases size because it can take advantage of greater specialization - At high levels of production, the benefits of specialization have already been realized, and coordination problems become more severe as the firm grows larger