Cost Analysis and Estimation
Cost Analysis and Estimation
Replacement Cost
Historical cost is the actual cash outlay. Current cost is the present cost of previously acquired items. Cost of replacing productive capacity using current technology.
Opportunity Cost
Incremental Cost
Incremental cost is the change in cost tied to a managerial decision. Incremental cost can involve multiple units of output.
Sunk Cost
Irreversible expenses incurred previously. Sunk costs are irrelevant to present decisions.
MC ATC
3.
AVC
AFC
Q MC intersects lowest point of AVC and lowest point of ATC. When MC < AVC, AVC declines When MC > AVC, AVC rises
2.
AVC
AP & AVC are inversely related. (ex: one input) AVC = WL /Q = W/ (Q/L) = W/ APL
prod. functions
AP
MPL
cost
AVC MC
cost functions Q
All inputs are variable (can adjust) in the long run. LAC is long run average cost
SMC2
SAC2 LMC
The optimal plant size for a given output Q2 is plant size 2. (A SR concept.) However, the optimal plant size occurs at Q3, which is the lowest cost point overall. (A LR concept.)
LAC
Q2
Q3
C < 1 means falling AC, increasing returns. C = 1 means constant AC constant returns. C > 1 means rising AC, decreasing returns.
LAC
CRS region
DRS
MES Max ES Displays constant returns to scale The minimum efficient scale (MES) is the smallest scale at which minimum per unit costs are attained.
Diseconomies of scale. These include transportation costs, imperfections in the labor market, and problems of coordination and control by management. The maximum efficient scale (Max ES) is the largest scale before which unit costs begin to rise. Modern business management offers techniques to avoid diseconomies of scale through profit centers, transfer pricing, and tying incentives to
Economies of Scope
Scope economies are cost advantages that stem from producing multiple outputs. Big scope economies explain the popularity of multi-product firms. Without scope economies, firms specialize.
Scope economics often shape competitive strategy for new products.
Cost-volume-profit Analysis
Cost-volume-profit Charts
Cost-volume-profit analysis shows effects of varying scale. Breakeven analysis shows zero profit points of cost coverage.