COMM 171 - Lecture 5 Production Flashcards

1
Q

what is production, production function, fixed input and variable input

A

Production is the process of turning inputs into outputs.
* The cost structure of a firm depends on the nature of the

production process.
* A production function is the relationship between the
quantity of inputs a firm uses and the quantity of output it
produces.
– A fixed input is an input whose quantity is fixed for a
period of time and cannot be varied
– A variable input is an input whose quantity the firm can
vary at any time

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2
Q

Long run, short run, and total product curve and what is the x and y axis of the total product curve

A

The long run is the period in which all inputs can be
varied.

  • The short run is the period in which at least one input is
    fixed.
  • The total product curve shows how the quantity of
    output depends on the quantity of the variable input for a given quantity of the fixed input.

X axis is the quantity of labor
Y axis is th Q producded

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3
Q

What is marginal product and what is MPL and its formula

A

Marginal product is the change in output resulting from a one-unit increase in
the amount of one input

MPL = MPL is the change in output that results from employing an added unit of labor.

MPL = Change in quantity / Change in Labor

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4
Q

Why is marginal product of labor goes down as more quantity of labors

A

Because there are diminshing returns to an input.

MPL) is the change in output that results from employing an added unit of labor.

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5
Q

What happens to total product and amrginal product when fixed input goes up

A

With more land (fixed input) each worker can produce more. This shifts the total product curve up.

  • So the MPL of each worker is higher when the farm is larger; the MPL curve shifts up, too.
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6
Q

What is a fixed and variable cost

A

A fixed cost is a cost that does not depend on the quantity
of output produced. It is the cost of the fixed input.
– E.g., A workstation (sewing machine, table, seating chair)
* A variable cost is a cost that depends on the quantity of
output produced. It is the cost of the variable input.

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7
Q

What is marginal cost and formula and does it decrease or incerase

A

The marginal cost is the change in total cost generated by one
additional unit of output

MC = Change in total cost / change in quantity.

Because there are diminishing returns to inputs in
this example. As output increases, the marginal product
of the variable input declines.
* This implies that more and more of the variable input
must be used to produce each additional unit of
output as the amount of output already produced rises.
* And since each unit of the variable input must be paid for,
the cost per additional unit of output also rises.

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8
Q

ATC, AFC, AVC

A

Average total cost =
ATC = TC/Q

Average fixed cost =
AFC = FC/Q

Average variable cost =
AVC = VC/Q

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9
Q

Average total cost curve. Increasing ouput has two opposing effects on average total cost

A

The spreading effect: The larger the output, the more
output over which fixed cost is spread, leading to lower
average fixed cost.

– The diminishing returns effect: The larger the output, the
more variable input required to produce additional units,
which leads to higher average variable cost.

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10
Q

Marginal cost upwards because.. Average variable cost upwards because. average fixed cost downwards because.

A

Marginal cost is upward-sloping because of diminishing
returns.

  1. Average variable cost also is upward-sloping but is flatter

than the marginal cost curve.
3. Average fixed cost is downward-sloping because of the spreading effect.

  1. The marginal cost curve intersects the average total cost curve from below, crossing it at its lowest point.
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11
Q

The minimum-cost output

A

The minimum-cost output is the quantity of output at which average total cost is lowest—the bottom of the U-shaped average total cost curve

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12
Q

Three general principles that are always true about a
firm’s marginal cost and average total cost curves.

At the minimum-cost output,

At output less than the minimum-cost output

At output greater than the minimum-cost output,

A

At the minimum-cost output, average total cost is equal to
marginal cost.

  1. At output less than the minimum-cost output, marginal cost is less than average total cost and average total cost is falling.
  2. At output greater than the minimum-cost output, marginal cost is greater than average total cost and average total cost is rising.
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13
Q

Returns to scale

There are increasing returns to scale (economies of
scale)

There are decreasing returns to scale (diseconomies
of scale)

There are constant returns to scale

A

There are increasing returns to scale (economies of
scale) when long-run average total cost declines as
output increases.
* There are decreasing returns to scale (diseconomies
of scale) when long-run average total cost increases as
output increases.
* There are constant returns to scale when long-run
average total cost is constant as output increases

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14
Q

The x and y Axis and where do you find it?
of Total Product (TP), marginal cost, marginal product, total cost

A

Total Product (TP) Q Input (Q of labor) Q of Ouput (Quantity of wheat…) Technology of firm (usually given) Derive TC,

Marginal product Q Input Q output . Source is : Slope of Total product We use it to dDerive TC

Total Cost (TC) Q of ouput ouput Cost TP + FC and VC/unit Eg. Price of labor Derive MC

Marginal Cost (MC) Q Ouput Cost Slope of TC Supply curve overlaps the MC curve

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