AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 6 An irrigated rice field in Bangladesh.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Theory of the Firm in Perfect Competition Two Critical Decisions; Long Run vs Short Run; Widget Production.
Advertisements

Producer decision Making Frederick University 2013.
Learning Objectives Delineate the nature of a firm’s cost – explicit as well as implicit. Outline how cost is likely to vary with output in the short run.
1 Chapter 6 Practice Quiz Tutorial Production Costs ©2004 South-Western.
Cost and Production Chapters 6 and 7.
Costs, Isocost and Isoquant
Chapter 7Copyright ©2010 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 1 ECON Designed by Amy McGuire, B-books, Ltd. McEachern.
Costs and Cost Minimization
DR. PETROS KOSMAS LECTURER VARNA FREE UNIVERSITY ACADEMIC YEAR LECTURE 5 MICROECONOMICS AND MACROECONOMICS ECO-1067.
THEORY OF PRODUCTION AND COST
Chapter 6 Production and Cost
The Costs of Production   Outline: – –Study how firm’s decisions regarding prices and quantities depend on the market conditions they face – –Firm’s.
Labor Demand in the Long Run. The long run in the long run, all inputs are variable, model used in discussion has 2 inputs: L (labor) and K (capital).
AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 7 An irrigated rice field in Bangladesh.
The Production Process: The Behavior of Profit-Maximizing Firms
Topic on Production and Cost Functions and Their Estimation.
Chapter 3 Labor Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 2: Opportunity costs. Scarcity Economics is the study of how individuals and economies deal with the fundamental problem of scarcity. As a result.
Costs of Production Mr. Bammel. Economic Costs  Businesses have costs for the same reason that consumers do: Scarcity; Essentially the resources that.
Eco 6351 Economics for Managers Chapter 5. Supply Decisions
FIRM BEHAVIOR AND THE ORGANIZATION OF INDUSTRY
Today’s Topic-- Production and Output. Into Outputs Firms Turn Inputs (Factors of Production)
Production & Cost in the Firm ECO 2013 Chapter 7 Created: M. Mari Fall 2007.
The Costs of Production Chp: 8 Lecture: 15 & 16. Economic Costs  Equal to opportunity costs  Explicit + implicit costs  Explicit costs  Monetary payments.
The Costs of Production
8 - 1 Economic Costs Short-Run and Long-Run Short-Run Production Relationships Short-Run Production Costs Short-Run Costs Graphically Productivity and.
Chapter 7 Production Theory
Copyright © 2002 by Thomson Learning, Inc. Chapter 1 Appendix Copyright © 2002 Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under.
Ch 4 THE THEORY OF PRODUCTION
Production Chapter 9. Production Defined as any activity that creates present or future utility The chapter describes the production possibilities available.
Chapter 6 Production. ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 62 Topics to be Discussed The Technology of Production Production with One Variable Input.
1 SM1.21 Managerial Economics Welcome to session 5 Production and Cost Analysis.
The Production Process and Costs
PPA 723: Managerial Economics Study Guide: Production, Cost, and Supply.
Chapter 7 Costs and Cost Minimization. Introduction The last chapter considered how to represent production in economic theory This chapter presents cost.
Modelling the producer: Costs and supply decisions Production function Production technology The supply curve.
Review of the previous lecture The consumer optimizes by choosing the point on his budget constraint that lies on the highest indifference curve. When.
Lecture 8 Producer Theory. Objective of a Firm The main objective of firm is to maximize profit Firms engage in production process But when firm choose.
COSTS OF THE CONSTRUCTION FIRM
Production Theory and Estimation
Cost & Production Theory Firms seek to produce any given quantity of output (Q) at lowest cost. Firms are cost minimizers.
Economic Optimization Chapter 2. Chapter 2 OVERVIEW   Economic Optimization Process   Revenue Relations   Cost Relations   Profit Relations 
Chapter 7 Production and Cost in the Firm © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning.
Microeconomics Pre-sessional September 2015 Sotiris Georganas Economics Department City University London September 2013.
Economics The study of how people allocate their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants The study of how people make choices Resources Things.
1 Chapter 1 Appendix. 2 Indifference Curve Analysis Market Baskets are combinations of various goods. Indifference Curves are curves connecting various.
ECN 201: Principle of Microeconomics Nusrat Jahan Lecture 6 Producer Theory.
Production functions and the shape of cost curves The production function determines the shape of a firm’s cost curves. Diminishing marginal return to.
Chapter 6 PRODUCTION. CHAPTER 6 OUTLINE 6.1The Technology of Production 6.2Production with One Variable Input (Labor) 6.3Production with Two Variable.
Businesses and the Costs of Production Theory of the Firm I.
Chapter 13: Costs of Production. The Supply and Demand In Economy, Supply and Demand Basically runs all market activity. In Economy, Supply and Demand.
Chapter 6 Production, Cost, and Profit © 2001 South-Western College Publishing.
The Costs of Production.  Supply and demand are the two words that economists use most often.  Supply and demand are the forces that make market economies.
Fixed and Variable Costs
Chapter 6 Production.
Chapter 6 Production and Cost
Production & Costs in the Short-run
FIRM BEHAVIOR AND THE ORGANIZATION OF INDUSTRY
Chapter 6 Production and Cost
ECN 201: Principles of Microeconomics
Production and cost.
Review of the previous lecture
Principals of Economics Law Class
Economics Chapter 5: Supply.
7 The Production Process: The Behavior of Profit-Maximizing Firms
© 2007 Thomson South-Western
Chapter 9 Costs.
AP Microeconomics Review Unit 3 (part 1)
Chapter 4: The Costs of Production
7 The Production Process: The Behavior of Profit-Maximizing Firms
Presentation transcript:

AGEC/FNR 406 LECTURE 6 An irrigated rice field in Bangladesh

Theory of supply Lecture Goals: 1.Review the “supply side” of economic theory 2. Identify some important exceptions to the theory as they apply to the course

Production: the supply side We now examine the production side of supply and demand. Supply is an indicator of economic cost. Demand describes the consumer side of the supply and demand equation. Demand is an indicator of value or benefit.

Production function Inputs may be: 1. Variable: dependent on the level of output 2. Fixed: required at a constant level regardless of the level of output A production function describes the maximum quantity of output that can be produced using a set of inputs, using a specified technology.

Example: production function with one input Units of input quantity Production exhibits decreasing returns to scale: as more inputs are added, output increases, but at a diminishing rate Q = f (X)

Marginal Product (MP) The incremental change in output arising from the use of one additional unit of variable input: MP =  Q/  X Marginal value product (MVP) = price*MP

Cost Costs may include: 1. Private costs to individuals or firms 2. Social costs to present or future society Costs are typically measured in monetary terms, and reflect relative resource scarcity. Cost is a measure of the present and future sacrifice of resources associated with alternative actions.

Types of Costs Implicit Costs: opportunity costs of time and resources devoted to production Explicit Costs:direct ($) cost of labor, raw materials, etc. used in production. Costs, like inputs, can be either fixed (constant over short run) or variable (dependent on quantity produced).

Opportunity Cost Opportunity cost is a measure of foregone opportunity. The opportunity cost of using a resource to produce a good is defined as the value of the next best alternative that must be sacrificed. Example: spotted owl protection vs. ??? protection

Total Cost Total Cost (TC) = Cost of all inputs (fixed and variable) used to produce something, expressed as a function of the amounts (levels) of inputs and their unit costs (prices). TC = p X *X + p Y *Y

Marginal Cost Marginal cost (MC) is the incremental increase in total cost (in the short run) that results from a one-unit increase in output (Q). MC =  TC/  Q Marginal cost is an incremental measure of resource scarcity.

Marginal Factor Cost The incremental increase in total cost (in the short run) that results from a one-unit increase in the use of a variable input (X). MFC=  TC/  X

Efficient use of inputs From a firm’s perspective, an efficient use of inputs is one in which the additional revenue gained from using one more unit of an input is exactly equal to the additional cost of using that unit of input, that is, where: MVP = MFC This is a requirement for private efficiency!

Firms minimize costs Raw materials Labor Two part process: 1. The isocost line represents all combinations of inputs leading to the same cost of production. L* M* 2. The isoquant defines the efficient combination of inputs that produces a given level of output. Tangency corresponds to a single point on the supply curve.

Points to ponder 1: The mix of inputs used in production (labor, capital, raw materials) reflects tradeoffs that firms observe in the costs of using inputs. Costs are determined by the technology of production and relative prices of resources. If natural resources are relatively “cheap” and if pollution is not a recognized cost of production, then firms will make profligate use of resources and will not take steps to clean up pollution.

Points to ponder 2: Firms seek to use inputs that keep costs low. If policies make the use of some resources more expensive, or if “free disposal” becomes costly, then firms will alter their behavior to avoid costs. This has implications for forming environmental policies.