10: Output & Costs Flashcards
What is any firm’s main goal?
Maximize profit
What is the difference between accounting profit and economic profit?
Accounting profit = Total Revenue - Total cost
Economic profit = Total Revenue - Opportunity Cost
What does the opportunity cost an economist care about consist of?
- Cost of resources (the only cost accountants care about)
- Cost of resources owned by firm (they could’ve produced something else instead)
- Cost of resourced owned by owner (they could’ve worked for something or someone else)
Technology efficiency vs Economic efficiency
TE: Least amount input to produce a given quantity of output
EE: Lease cost to product a given quanity of output.
TE is concerned about the quantity of inputs whereas EE is concerned about the cost of the inputs used.
Describe short run (how do you increase output during it)
One or more resources used during SR production is fixed. (i.e., usually firm’s factory)
Other resources (labor, materials, etc.) can be changed.
Decisions made in the short run are easily reversed.
(Increase amount of labor employed)
Describe long run
All materials used during LR production can be varied. (Even factory size, location)
Not easily reversed
Sunk Cost
Cost incurred by the firm that cannot be changed. i.e., if a firm bought a factory and has no resale value
What are the three components to a product schedule?
Total product: Total output in a given period
Marginal product: Increase in total product from one unit increase of labor
Average product: Total product / labor employed
Short run costs: Total cost
All resources used
Total fixed cost: Cost of firm’s fixed inputs, doesn’t change with output
Total variable cost: Cost of firm’s variable inputs, do change with output
TC = TFC + TVC
Short run costs: Marginal costs
Increase in total cost from one unit increase in total product
Short run costs: Average costs
Average fixed cost: Total fixed cost per unit of output
Average variable cost: Total variable cost per unit of output
Average total cost: Total cost per unit of output
ATC = AFC + AVC
Graph description: AFC & AVC
AFC: Falls as output increases
AVC: U-shaped, AVC falls to a minimum then starts to increase. AVC intersects with MC at its minimum.
Graph description: ATC & MC
ATC: U-shaped
Same as AVC, above MC when ATC is falling and below MC when it is rising. At its minimum, MC equals ATC.
Why are AVC and ATC U-shaped?
Initially, MC is lower than ATC and AVC, pulling it down, when MC rises higher than the graphs past their minimal points the graph goes back up.
MC has a U-shape because MP starts and rises (workers specialize) but then begin to fall (fixed input and space for the workers)
Relationship between Average & Marginal Product and Cost
MC is at its minimum when MP is at its maximum (workers are most efficient, all specializing in production)
MP rises, MC falls
AVC min = AP max