Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS PRODUCTION & COST ANALYSIS

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS PRODUCTION & COST ANALYSIS"— Presentation transcript:

1 MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS PRODUCTION & COST ANALYSIS

2 PRODUCTION Production exchange and consumption of goods and services are among the basic economic activities of life. A producer or a firm acquires different inputs like labour, machine, land, raw-material etc. Combining these inputs, it produces output. This called the process of production.

3 FACTORS OF PRODUCTION Land Labor Capital Management

4 FUCTION OF PRODUCTION Total product Average product Marginal product

5 COST ANALYSIS

6 Cost Analysis:- The economic cost that a firm incurs in the production of a good refers to the payment it must to all the resources (factors of production) employed by it in the production of that good. The normal return on money capital invested by the entrepreneur him self in his own business which he could have earned if invested outside. The cost of production of a firm changes with the changes in the output.

7 Types of cost Sunk cost :- Future cost :-
A sunk cost is an expenditure that has been incurred and cannot be recovered. All past costs are regarded as sunk cost. Sunk cost does not vary with the changes in the business activity for future it is unavoidable cost. Future cost :- Future cost is based on forecast it is relevant for most managerial decisions. Future cost may need expenditure on fixed on variable factors.

8 Indirect cost :- Cost which not directly affect to the production or any individual final product. Money cost:- When production cost is expressed in terms of monetary unit it is called money cost. Real cost :- The exertions of all the different kinds of labour that are directly or indirectly involved in making it together required, for saving the capital used in making it, all these sacrifices together will be called the real cost of production of a commodity.

9 Direct cost :- Explicit cost :-
Direct or prime cost is one can be easily & directly identified to a particular product or plant. Explicit cost :- Explicit cost is the monetary payment made by the entrepreneur for purchasing or hiring the services of various productive factors, which do not belong to him. This cost is in the nature of contractual payment. Implicit cost :- Implicit cost arises in the case of those factors, which are possessed by the entrepreneur himself. It is cost of self owned, self employment resources that are frequently overlooked in computing the expenses of a firm.

10 Actual cost :- Actual cost refers to the actual expenditure incurred for acquiring or producing a good or services. Opportunity cost :- Opportunity cost is the cost which is not actually incurred, but would have been incurred in the absence of employment of self owned factors.

11 Laws of Variable Proportions or Laws of Returns:-
This is the modern version of the law of diminishing marginal returns. Under this law, it is assumed that only one factor of production is variable while other factors are fixed. Prof. Benham state the law as follows : “As the proportion of one factor in a combination of factors is increased after a point, the average and marginal production of that factor will diminish.”

12 Laws of Variable Proportions or Laws of Returns
Three stages : Increase in product at increasing rates. (Increasing return to variable factor) Increase in product at constant rates. (Constant return to variable factor) Increase in product at decreasing rates. (Diminishing return to variable factor) Prof. Marshall : laws or returns, i.e., laws of increasing, constant and decreasing returns.

13 Laws of Variable Proportions or Laws of Returns
Law of variable proportion is related to the short period – when with the increase in the units of a variable factor, MP increases, it is increasing returns, if MP remains constant, it is constant returns, and if MP decreases, it is the stage of diminishing returns. Assumptions:- Techniques of production does not change. Other inputs remain fixed Assumes that it is possible to change factor proportions.

14 Units of Variable Input (labour) Total Product Average Marginal 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 20 50 90 120 135 144 147 148 145 25 30 27 24 21 18.5 16.4 14.5 40 15 -3

15 Law of increasing returns
Causes of increasing return : Increase in efficiency Fixed factors and fixed costs Division of labour Economies Before the point of optimum combination

16 Law of constant returns:-
According to Marshall: “The stage of constant returns comes at that point, where the effects of increasing returns and diminishing returns balance each other.” Reaching a certain point (in the table 4th unit of labour is employed) a marginal product begins to diminish. Thus the rate of increase in the total product slows down. This is the stage of diminishing return.

17 Law of diminishing returns
Causes for the operation of the law :- Certain factors become fixed. Certain factors become scarce. Substitution of all the factors is not available, and Maximum optimum level of production has already been achieved.

18 Law of returns to scale The relationship between quantities of output and the scales of production in the long run, when all the inputs are increased in the same proportion, is called law of returns to scale. Increasing return to scale – obtaining output at higher percentage than the percentage increase in the input by increasing the scale of production. Constant return to scale. Decreasing return to scale.

19 Differences between returns to a variable factor and returns to scale
Causes of the operation of the law: When internal and external economies exceed the diseconomies, the stage of increasing returns to scale operates; when economies and diseconomies are equal to each other, it becomes the stage of constant returns to scale; and when diseconomies exceed the economies, law of diminishing returns to scale is said to operate. Differences between returns to a variable factor and returns to scale Period Change in factors Change in factor ratio Change in the scale of production

20 COST CURVES

21 U-SHAPED LONG RUN AVERAGE COST CURVE
A very large flat portion in the centre of long run average cost curve is depicted. It arrives if the economies of scale are exhausted at a very modest scale of production and expansion in output, diseconomies of scale do not occur. Only after a very large increase in output, diseconomies exert themselves and bring about a rise in the long run average cost.

22 U-SHAPED LONG RUN AVERAGE COST CURVE
Y LAC COST X OUTPUT

23 L-SHAPED LONG RUN AVERAGE COST CURVE
In the beginning when output is expanded through increase in plant size & associated variable factors, cost per unit falls rapidly due to economies of scale. Even after large scale of output, the long run average cost does not rise; it may either remain constant or it may go on falling slightly. The long run average cost rapidly falls but after a point it remains flat throughout or even slope gently downwards.

24 L-SHAPED LONG RUN AVERAGE COST CURVE
y LONG RUN COST AVERAGE LAC x OUTPUT

25 ECONOMIES OF SCALE When a firm expands its size of production by increasing all the factors, it secures certain advantages known as economies of production.

26 TYPES OF ECONOMIES INTERNAL ECONOMIES Managerial economies
Marketing economies Research economies Welfare economies

27 EXTERNAL ECONOMIES Economies of information Economies of disintegration Economies of concentration Economies of welfare

28 DISECONOMIES OF SCALE When expansion of firm’s output may lead to rise in costs and thus result diseconomies instead of economies.

29 DISECONOMIES OF SCALE INTERNAL Financial diseconomies
Managerial diseconomies Risk taking diseconomies EXTERNAL Localisation diseconomies

30 THANK YOU


Download ppt "MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS PRODUCTION & COST ANALYSIS"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google