3.3 Revenues, Costs and Profits Flashcards
1
Q
What is revenue ?
A
- the income generated from the sale of goods and services in a market
2
Q
What are the three main ways to look at revenue ?
A
- total revenue: TR = Q x price
- average revenue: AR = TR /output (Q) ➡️ also known as the demand curve
- marginal revenue: MR = change in TR / change in Q
3
Q
What is marginal revenue ?
A
- the change in revenue from selling one extra unit of output
4
Q
When does maximising revenue occur ?
A
- maximising total revenue occurs where MR is 0 ➡️ no more added revenue can be achieved from producing and selling an extra unit of output
- when MR = zero (PED = 1)
5
Q
PED and max revenue ?
A
- when demand is elastic (>1): price increase = fall in revenue / price decrease = increase in revenue
- when demand is inelastic (<1): price increase = increase in revenue / price decrease = decrease in revenue
6
Q
MR and PED ?
A
- when MR is posItive, PED is relatively elastic (a fall in price is proportionately smaller than the increase in quantity demanded)
- when MR is negative, PED is relatively inelastic (a fall in price is proportionately larger than the increase in quantity demanded)
7
Q
PED and total revenue ?
A
- PED along a straight line demand curve will vary
- at high prices, a fall in price will have an elastic response ➡️ cutting prices = rise in total revenue
- demand is price inelastic (PED < 1) towards the bottom of the demand curve ➡️ fall in price = drop in total revenue
8
Q
What is meant by price makers ?
A
- have the ability/power to set their own prices for the goods/services they sell
- occurs in all imperfectly competitive markets
- demand cure (AR curve) is downward sloping
- MR will lie below AR
9
Q
What is meant by price takers ?
A
- operate in highly/ perfectly competitive markets + have a low % of market share
- have no pricing powers ie. no control over price + must accept what price is set by the market
- they have a perfectly elastic demand curve + AR will be identical to MR (bcs every unit will be sold at exactly the same price)
- their TR curve will be an upwards sloping line
10
Q
What are economic costs ?
A
- economic costs are incurred by a business engaged in producing/supplying an output
- combination of explicit costs and opporutnity cost
- eg. if an entrepreneur invests £200,000 of their own money into a business, that money could have yielded an alternative return (interest) by being saved in a bank ➡️ the next best alternative rate of return on this money is treated as part of the economic cost of production
11
Q
What are fixed costs ?
A
- do not vary at all as the level of output changes in the short run
- have to be paid whatever the level of sales are achieved (incurred even if output is 0 in the short run)
- the higher level of fixed costs in a business, the higher the output must be in order to breakeven
- eg. rent, bills, consulting fees, fixed salary costs
12
Q
What are variable costs ?
A
- costs that relate directly to the production or sale of a product
- an increase in short run output (Q) will cause total variable costs to rise (TVC)
- AVC = TVC / output
- variable cost is determined by the marginal costs of extra units as more labour is hired
- eg. commission bonuses, wage costs, raw materials, energy/fuel, packaging costs
13
Q
Calculating total cost ?
A
- TC = total fixed costs + total variable costs
14
Q
Calculating marginal cost ?
A
- MC = the addition to total costs of producing one more unit
- MC= change in TC / change in qnty
15
Q
Calculating average costs ?
A
- AC = total cost / output
16
Q
Cost of production in the short/long run ?
A
- short run: at least one of the factor inputs is fixed (usually capital or land) ➡️ in the short run, businesses are constrained with fixed & variable factors
- long run: all factors of production are variable + the scale of production can also change ➡️ firm can benefit from economies of scale
17
Q
What is the concept of diminishing marginal returns ?
A
- in the short run, at least one factor of production is fixed (often capital or land) thus the only way to increase output is by employing more workers
- initially, adding additional workers will increase productivity (as workers use division of labour + focus on tasks that they are relatively better at)
- however as more workers are added to the fixed amount of capital/land it will become increasingly scarce ➡️ not enough to go round causing workers to get in each others way as too many workers in a fixed area
- thus productivity will fall once passed the optimum point, at the point where marginal product start to fall - ‘diminishing returns has set in’
18
Q
How is the concept of diminishing marginal productivity/returns used to explain the shape of short run costs curves ?
A
- total product = total output
- marginal product = the additional output produced when an extra worker (or other factor of production) is employed
- average product = total output / no. of workers ie. productivity