Costs of Production Flashcards
Fixed & Variable Costs
- Fixed Costs: Costs which do not vary w/ output (e.g rents, advertising, capital goods)
- Variable Costs: Change w/ output (e.g cost of raw mats increases as output increases)
Marginal, Average & Total Costs
-
Marginal Cost: Cost of producing 1 extra unit. After a point, marginal costs rise as
output increases -
Total Cost: Cost to produce a given level of output, calculated by:
- Total Costs = Total Variable Costs + Total Fixed Costs
-
Average Costs: Cost per unit/price, calculated by:
- Average Costs = Total Costs / Quantity Produced
Short Run Average Total Cost Curve
Short Run Average Total Cost Curve: U shaped due to diminishing returns
- Because FOP are fixed
- At one point, employing more resources will be less productive, meaning marginal output decreases per extra factor of production
- Marginal costs start to increase
Long Run Average Cost Curve
Long Run Average Cost Curve: Initially, average costs fall, since firms take advantage of economies of scale
- Average costs are falling as output increases
- After optimum level of output, AC is lowest, AC rises due to diseconomies of scale
How Factor Prices & Productivity Affect Firms’ Costs & Choice of Factor Inputs
- If factor inputs become more productive, firms produce more output w/ smaller input
- Results in lower unit costs of production.
- As AC of one FOP rises (e.g labour) firms likely to switch to cheaper (generally more productive) FOP (e.g capital)