Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Plan for today 1.We look at the Homework I set at the end of Lecture 11. 2.We will quickly revise the relationships between.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Module Representatives Athena Fu Emma Wilson-Young Krishna Patel Liz Blum Michaela Lucas Kenny Yang.
Advertisements

Microeconomics 2 John Hey. “The opposite of love is not hate, it's indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it's indifference. The opposite.
Costs, Isocost and Isoquant
Chapter 9 Costs.
Who Wants to be an Economist? Part II Disclaimer: questions in the exam will not have this kind of multiple choice format. The type of exercises in the.
Lectures in Microeconomics-Charles W. Upton Cost Function Basics.
Chapter 8 Costs © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
Principles of Microeconomics - Chapter 1
Economics of Input and Product Substitution
Definitions of Costs It is important to differentiate between accounting cost and economic cost the accountant’s view of cost stresses out-of-pocket expenses,
The Cost-Minimization Problem We said a firm maximizes profit. Part of this involves minimizing costs for any given level of output. For given w 1, w 2.
Managerial Economics & Business Strategy
1 Short-Run Costs and Output Decisions. 2 Decisions Facing Firms DECISIONS are based on INFORMATION How much of each input to demand 3. Which production.
The Production Process: The Behavior of Profit-Maximizing Firms
You have seen that firms in perfectly competitive industries make three specific decisions.
Chapter 10 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Microeconomia Corso E John Hey. Compito a casa/Homework CES technology with parameters c 1 =0.4, c 2 =0.5, ρ=0.9 and s=1.0. The production function: y.
Chapter 4 Consumer and Firm Behavior: The Work- Leisure Decision and Profit Maximization Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
Lecture 9: The Cost of Production
10.1 Chapter 10 –Theory of Production and Cost in the Long Run(LR)  The theory of production in the LR provides the theoretical basis for firm decision-making.
Chapter 6 Production. The Production Function A production function tells us the maximum output a firm can produce (in a given period) given available.
Chapter 3 Labor Demand McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 3 Labor Demand.
11. Cost minimization Econ 494 Spring 2013.
Chapter 8 © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western Costs.
Short-run Production Function
Theory of the Firm 1) How a firm makes cost- minimizing production decisions. 2) How its costs vary with output. Chapter 6: Production: How to combine.
Lecture Notes. Cost Minimization Before looked at maximizing Profits (π) = TR – TC or π =pf(L,K) – wL – rK But now also look at cost minimization That.
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Supply: the firm Firms have to decide (at least) two things: (1) How to produce and (2) How much to produce. (If a monopolist.
Microeconomics Course E John Hey. This week: The Firm Tuesday Chapter 11: Cost minimisation and the demand for factors. Wednesday Chapter 12: Cost curves.
Microeconomia Corso E John Hey. Chapter 7 – what do we know? Individual with given preferences and income m faces prices p 1 and p 2 for two goods:1 and.
PPA 723: Managerial Economics Study Guide: Production, Cost, and Supply.
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Health Warning There is a LOT of detail in the Maple html file. Do not be swamped by this detail. Stand back and try and understand.
Microeconomics Course E John Hey. An overview...of the first two parts of the course......of the most important points.
1 Chapters 9: Perfect Competition. 2 Perfect Competition Assumptions: Free Entry All buyers and sellers have perfect information Many firms producing.
Microeconomics Corso E John Hey. Chapter 26 The LABOUR MARKET The supply of labour. The demand for labour. Equilibrium. Minimum wage legislation?
The Production Process. Production Analysis Production Function Q = f(K,L) Describes available technology and feasible means of converting inputs into.
Chapter 7 The Cost of Production. Chapter 7Slide 2 Topics to be Discussed Measuring Cost: Which Costs Matter? Cost in the Short Run Cost in the Long Run.
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Note about Chapter 16 We will study this on Wednesday. It is important because it shows that the work we have been doing is.
Microeconomics Corso E John Hey. Note about Chapter 16 We will study this next week. It is important because it shows that the work we have been doing.
Lecture 8 Profit Maximization. Comparison of consumer theory with producer theory In consumer theory we learned that the main objective of consumer is.
Applied Economics for Business Management Lecture #8.
CHAPTER 7 Costs and supply ©McGraw-Hill Education, 2014.
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Chapter 13: totals In totals space, areas do not mean anything. slopes do – the corresponding marginal. Think of the units.
Microeconomics Corso E John Hey. Chapter 14 Production possibility frontiers. Case 1: linear technology... two people. Case 2: non-linear technology...
Microeconomics 2 John Hey.
Production & Costs Continued… Agenda: I.Consumer and Producer Theory: similarities and differences II. Isoquants & The Marginal Rate of Technical Substitution.
1 Chapter 1 Appendix. 2 Indifference Curve Analysis Market Baskets are combinations of various goods. Indifference Curves are curves connecting various.
Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture, 5e Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture, 5e Chapter 5: Production and Cost Copyright.
Microeconomics Corso E John Hey. Summary of Chapter 8 The contract curve shows the allocations that are efficient in the sense of Pareto. There always.
ECN 201: Principle of Microeconomics Nusrat Jahan Lecture 6 Producer Theory.
Review Class Seven Producer theory  Key sentence: A representative, or say, typical firm will maximize his profit under the restriction of technology.
CDAE Class 21 Nov 7 Last class: Result of Quiz 6 6. Costs Today: Problem set 5 questions 6. Costs Next class: 6. Costs 7. Profit maximization and.
Theory of the Firm Theory of the Firm: How a firm makes cost-minimizing production decisions; how its costs vary with output. Chapter 6: Production: How.
Microeconomics 2 John Hey. Lecture 26: The Labour Market The supply of labour (consumer: leisure time/money trade-off). The demand for labour (theory.
University of Papua New Guinea Principles of Microeconomics Lecture 9: An introduction to firms.
Chapter Fifteen: Production Costs.
Short-Run Costs and Output Decisions
Short-Run Costs and Output Decisions
Short-run Production Function
Short-Run Costs and Output Decisions
Labor demand in the long run
Costs 10-1.
ECN 201: Principles of Microeconomics
Production and cost.
Chapter 5: Production and Cost
Chapter 6 The Cost of Production Chapter 6 1.
Production & Cost in the Long Run
CHAPTER Perfect Competition 8.
Short-Run Costs and Output Decisions
Presentation transcript:

Microeconomics 2 John Hey

Plan for today 1.We look at the Homework I set at the end of Lecture We will quickly revise the relationships between the total, average and marginal cost curves. 3.We look at the optimal supply (“how much?”) decision of the competitive firm (one who takes all prices as given). 4.We will show that the supply curve is the marginal cost curve (if upward sloping) and that the firms’ profit is the area between the supply curve and the price of output. (which is the parallel of the result for the consumer surplus)

Homework CES technology with parameters c 1 =0.4, c 2 =0.5, ρ=0.9 and s=1.0. (Note: constant returns to scale.) The production function: y = ((0.4q )+(0.5q )) -1/0.9 I have inserted the isoquant for output = 40 (and also that for output = 60). I have inserted the lowest isocost at the prices w 1 = 1 and w 2 = 1 for the inputs. The optimal combination: q 1 = 33.38, q 2 = and the cost = =

What you should do Find the optimal combination (either graphically or otherwise) and the (minimum) cost to produce the output for the following: w 1 = 2 w 2 = 1 y=40 w 1 = 3 w 2 = 1 y=40 w 1 = 1 w 2 = 1 y=60 w 1 = 2 w 2 = 1 y=60 w 1 = 3 w 2 = 1 y=60 Put the results in a table.

You can do this graphically or algebraically Algebraically The formulae (in the Maple file) are: q 1 =y 1/s (c 1 /w 1 ) 1/(1+ρ) [(c 1 w 1 ρ ) 1/(1+ρ) ) +(c 2 w 2 ρ ) 1/(1+ρ) ] 1/ρ q 2 =y 1/s (c 2 /w 2 ) 1/(1+ρ) [(c 1 w 1 ρ ) 1/(1+ρ) ) +(c 2 w 2 ρ ) 1/(1+ρ) ] 1/ρ where y is the desired output.

Results yw1w1 w2w2 q1q1 q2q2 cost

Chapter 12 The total cost C(y) is the minimum cost to produce a given level of output y. It is always upward-sloping (in the long period passes through the origin) and its shape depends upon the returns to scale: decreasing ↔ convex constant ↔ linear increasing ↔ concave

Chapter 12 The total cost C(y) is the minimum cost to produce a given level of output y. The average cost, C(y)/y, is the slope of the line from the origin to the total cost curve. The marginal cost, the rate at which total cost increases with output, is equal to the slope of the total cost curve.

Constant returns to scale: total cost

Constant returns to scale: marginal and average costs

Total cost: decreasing returns to scale

Two examples (of average and marginal costs) with decreasing returns

Average cost at an output of 40

Average cost at the output of 80

The average cost curve

Marginal cost at the output 40

Marginal cost at the output 80

The marginal cost curve

From the total cost curve to the marginal cost curve and back. The marginal cost curve is the slope of the total cost curve hence the total cost curve is the area under the marginal cost curve. The marginal cost curve is the derivative of the total cost curve hence the total cost curve is the integral of the marginal cost curve.

Chapter 13 Today we find the optimal output for a perfectly competitive firm......that takes the price of its output as given. We will assume to begin with that the firm has decreasing returns to scale. We will see later that there are problems if the firm has increasing or constant returns to scale. Let us go to the Maple html file in which we assume to begin with that the output price is 30 (per unit).

Chapter 13: summary The condition for the optimal output: price = marginal cost where marginal cost is rising. It follows that the supply curve of the firm is simply its marginal cost curve. The profit/surplus of the firm is the area between the price and its supply curve.

Chapter 13 Goodbye!