Chapter 8 Production and Cost

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
10 Production and Cost CHAPTER. 10 Production and Cost CHAPTER.
Advertisements

Chapter 6: Production and Costs
Chapter 7Copyright ©2010 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved 1 ECON Designed by Amy McGuire, B-books, Ltd. McEachern.
1.
10 Output and Costs Notes and teaching tips: 4, 7, 23, 27, 31, and 54.
Chapter 6 Production and Cost
Part 5 The Theory of Production and Cost
Ch. 21: Production and Costs Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.
Production and Cost CHAPTER 12. When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Explain how economists.
9 - 1 Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005 Economic Costs Short-Run and Long-Run Short-Run Production Relationships Short-Run Production Costs Short-Run.
 Economists assume goal of firms is to maximize profit  Profit = Total Revenue – Total Cost  In other words: Amount firm receives for sale of output.
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to Explain how economists measure a firm’s cost.
1 Chapter 7 Production Costs Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
The Costs of Production 1 22 C H A P T E R Costs exist because resources Are scarce Productive Have alternative uses Use of a resource in a specific.
Rittenberg Chapter 8 Production and Cost
Economics Chapter 8 Production and Cost Combined Version
Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist 1 CHAPTER 11 Production and Cost Analysis I Production is not the application of tools to materials, but logic.
The Costs of Production Chapter 8 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Section V Firm Behavior and the Organization of Industry.
Production and Cost Analysis I 12 Production and Cost Analysis I Production is not the application of tools to materials, but logic to work. — Peter Drucker.
Production & Cost in the Firm ECO 2013 Chapter 7 Created: M. Mari Fall 2007.
Businesses and the Costs of Production 10 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Costs of Production Chp: 8 Lecture: 15 & 16. Economic Costs  Equal to opportunity costs  Explicit + implicit costs  Explicit costs  Monetary payments.
By: Christopher Mazzei. Viewpoints The owner of a company wants to keep costs down. An employee of the company wants a high wage or salary. There is always.
The Costs of Production
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005 Economic Costs Short-Run and Long-Run Short-Run Production Relationships Short-Run Production Costs Short-Run.
8 - 1 Economic Costs Short-Run and Long-Run Short-Run Production Relationships Short-Run Production Costs Short-Run Costs Graphically Productivity and.
1 Chapter 7 Production Costs Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
Chapter 7 Production and Cost of the Firm
The Costs of Production
9.1 Chapter 9 – Production & Cost in the Short Run  Our focus has been on the fact that firm’s attempt to maximize profits. However, so far we have only.
Production Cost and Cost Firm in the Firm 1 © 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part,
Copyright©2004 South-Western The Costs of Production.
COSTS OF THE CONSTRUCTION FIRM
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Costs of Production Chapter 8.
1 Chapter 8 Costs and the Supply of Goods. 2 Overview  Shirking and the Principle-Agent Problem  The 3 Types of Business Firms  Economic vs. Accounting.
The Costs of Production Chapter 6. In This Chapter… 6.1. The Production Process 6.2. How Much to Produce? 6.3. The Right Size: Large or Small?
Theory of Production & Cost BEC Managerial Economics.
Aim: What are short-run production costs? Do Now: What are explicit costs? Implicit costs?
# McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Businesses and Their Costs 6.
Principles of Microeconomics : Ch.13 Second Canadian Edition Chapter 13 The Costs of Production © 2002 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.
11 OUTPUT AND COSTS © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley The Firm and Its Economic Problem A firm is an institution that hires factors of production and organizes.
Chapter 7 Production and Cost in the Firm © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning.
The Costs of Production. How firms compare revenues and costs in determining how much to produce?  Explicit and implicit costs  Law of diminishing returns.
Production and Cost CHAPTER 13 C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Explain how.
1 Production Costs Economics for Today by Irvin Tucker, 6 th edition ©2009 South-Western College Publishing.
Micro E conomics Unit 7 Slide 1 Created: Jan 2007 by Jim Luke. Division of labour is the great cause of its increased power, as may be better understood.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Explain how economists measure a firm’s cost of.
Businesses and the Costs of Production 9 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
The Costs of Production Please listen to the audio as you work through the slides.
Businesses and the Costs of Production Theory of the Firm I.
Businesses and the Costs of Production 07 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 20 The Costs of Production
Businesses and the Costs of Production
UNIT 6 COSTS AND PRODUCTION: LONG AND SHORT-RUN, TOTAL, FIXED AND VARIABLE COSTS, LAW OF DIMINISHING RETURNS, INCREASING, CONSTANT AND DIMINISHING RETURNS.
Production and Costs (Part 1)
10 Businesses and the Costs of Production McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 8 The Costs of Production.
Chapter 6 Production Costs
Economic Analysis for Managers (ECO 501) Fall:2012 Semester
Businesses and the Costs of Production
Businesses and the Costs of Production
Chapter 7 Production Costs
The Costs of Production
Businesses and the Costs of Production
economics CHAPTER 4 : THEORY OF PRODUCTION and cost
Chapter 4: The Costs of Production
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 8 Production and Cost Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition Costs and Profits Microeconomic theory is based on the assumption that firms are in business to maximize profit. Profit is the difference between the revenue a firm earns by selling its output and the opportunity costs of producing that output. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition www.pdclipart.com

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition Explicit Costs Explicit costs are opportunity costs that take the form of explicit payments to suppliers of factors of production and intermediate goods. Examples: workers’ wages managers’ salaries salespeople’s commissions interest payments to banks and other creditors fees for legal advice and other services payments for energy and raw material Players’ salaries are an explicit cost for a professional football team. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition Implicit Costs Implicit costs are opportunity costs of using resources contributed by the firm’s owners (or owned by the firm itself as a legal entity) that are not obtained under contracts calling for explicit payments. Examples: Labor of a small-business owner Opportunity cost of small-business owners’ own savings invested in a business Opportunity cost of capital invested by corporate shareholders The opportunity cost of the time of a small-business owner who works without a salary is an example of an implicit cost. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition Normal Profit Table shows the implicit and explicit costs of the imaginary firm Fieldcom, Inc. Total revenue minus explicit costs equals accounting profit. Subtracting implicit costs from this quantity yields pure economic profit. The opportunity cost of capital contributed by the owners can also be called normal profit. Total Revenue $600,000 Less explicit costs: Wages and salaries 300,000 Materials and other 100,000 _________ Equals accounting profit $200,000 Less implicit costs: Owners’ forgone salary 160,000 80,000 Opportunity cost of capital 20,000 = pure economic profit $ 20,000 Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Fixed and Variable Costs Variable costs: Costs of inputs whose quantities can be changed easily in the short run Fixed costs: Costs of inputs whose quantities can be changed only in the long run by increasing or decreasing the size of the firm’s plant Sunk costs: One-time costs which, once made, cannot be recovered if the firm goes out of business The costs of owning a warehouse are a fixed cost for a trucking firm. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition www.pdclipart.com

Marginal Physical Product Marginal physical product of labor is the amount by which total output increases or decreases when the quantity of labor increases by one unit. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Law of Diminishing Returns According to the law of diminishing returns, as the amount of one variable input is increased while the amounts of all other inputs remain fixed, a point will be reached beyond which the marginal physical product of the input will decrease. Range of Diminishing Returns Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition Marginal Cost Marginal Cost is the amount by which total variable costs (labor costs, in this example) increase or decrease when the quantity of output increases by one unit. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition Family of Cost Curves TC = TVC + TFC ATC = TC/Q AVC = TVC/Q AFC = TFC/Q MC = ΔTC/ ΔQ Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Marginal-Average Rule The marginal cost curve intersects the minimum points of the average total cost and average variable cost curves. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Long- and Short-Run Average Cost Curves The position of the short-run average total cost curve for a firm depends on the size of the plant. Each plant size can be represented by a U-shaped short-run average total cost curve. The firm’s long-run average cost curve is the “envelope” of these and other possible short-run average total cost curves; that is, it is a smooth curve drawn so that it just touches the short-run curves without intersecting any of them. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Economies and Diseconomies of Scale In any output range in which long-run average cost decreases as output increases, the firm is said to experience economies of scale. In any output range in which long-run average cost increases, the firm is said to experience diseconomies of scale. If there is any range of output for which long-run average cost does not change as output varies, the firm is said to experience constant returns to scale in that range. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Appendix to Chapter Eight Costs and Output with Two Variable Inputs Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition An Isoquant An isoquantity line, or isoquant shows various ways of producing a given quantity of output. Here, Points P, Q, and R represent various ways of growing the 200 bushels of corn. A movement downward along the isoquant represents the substitution of fertilizer for land while output is maintained at 200 bushels per year. As fertilizer is substituted for land, the isoquant becomes flatter because of diminishing returns. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Least-Cost Method of Production The price of fertilizer is assumed to be $50 a ton and the rental price of land $50 per year. A set of budget lines is drawn to represent various levels of spending on inputs. Line A ($400) does not provide enough inputs to produce 200 bushels. Line C ($625) provides enough inputs to grow 200 bushels of corn using methods P or R. Line B ($500) permits the 200 bushels to be grown using method Q, which is the least-cost method given these input prices. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

Effect of a Change in Input Price Assume the price of land increases from $50 to $200 and the price of fertilizer remains fixed at $50 a ton. The $500 budget line shifts from position B to position C and now falls short of the 200-bushel isoquant. Increasing the amount spent on variable inputs to $1,000 shifts the budget line up to position D, where it just touches the isoquant at point R. Total variable cost of 200 bushels increases and fertilizer is be substituted for land, which is now relatively more costly. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition

From Isoquants to Cost Curve Part (a) of this figure shows 100, 200, and 300 bushels isoquants. Budget lines are based on input prices of $50 an acre for land and $50 a ton for fertilizer. As output expands, the firm will move from T to Q and then to W along the expansion path. Part (b) of the figure plots the amount of output and the total variable cost for each of these points, giving a total variable cost curve. Introduction to Economics (Combined Version) 5th Edition