Break Even Analysis.

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Presentation transcript:

Break Even Analysis

Visual 1 Start Up Costs- The expenses that any business must pay before it can produce and distribute goods and services Variable Cost- Costs of production that change as a firm's output level changes. Fixed Cost- Costs of production that do not change as a firm's output level changes; costs that must be paid whether the firm produces or not. Total Cost- All costs associated with producing a good or service; the sum of total fixed costs plus total variable costs. Profit- the sum of money a company makes that is above their operating costs © Council for Economic Education

Visual 2 Breakeven Quantity (BEQ) Formula Breakeven quantity= amount of units produced that must be sold to breakeven with costs BEQ = Fixed costs / (total revenue per job– average cost per job) To check if your result is correct: Total units needed multiplied by the profit © Council for Economic Education

Visual 3 In its simplest form, the break-even chart is a graphical representation of costs at various levels of activity shown on the same chart as the variation of income (or sales, revenue) with the same variation in activity. The point at which neither profit nor loss is made is known as the "break-even point" and is represented on the chart below by the intersection of the two lines: A B In the diagram above, the line A represents the variation of income at varying levels of production activity ("output"). B represents the total fixed costs in the business. As output increases, variable costs are incurred, meaning that total costs (fixed + variable) also increase. At low levels of output, Costs are greater than Income. At the point of intersection, P, costs are exactly equal to income, and hence neither profit nor loss is made. © Council for Economic Education