L11 - Short-Run Production and Costs Flashcards

1
Q

What factors are variable in the short run?

A

only one factor of production is variable others are fixed

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2
Q

What factors are variable in the long-run?

A

all factors of production are variable

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3
Q

What is the underlying assumption of each firm?

A

each firms objective is to maximise profit

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4
Q

How do you calculate profit?

A

Profit (π)=Total Revenue(TR) - Total cost (TC)

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5
Q

How do you calculate total revenue?

A

Total revenue = price x quantity

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6
Q

What does a firm need consider in its costs?

A
  • the cost of something is what you give up to receive it.
  • A firm’s costs include opportunity costs –> this is so a firm can make better decision by considering what they may lose out on
  • this is specific to economic costs
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7
Q

What are the two types of costs and how do Accounting Profit differ from Economic Profits?

A
  • Explicit costs: require a cash flow from the firm
  • Implicit costs: do not require a cash to flow out of the firm –> running a business is costly - owner could do something else with time and money

Difference between accounting and economic profit

  • Accounting profit = total revenue – explicit costs
  • Economic profit = total revenue – explicit costs – implicit costs
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8
Q

What is a the short-run production function?

A
  • A production function states how total output changes with labour (L) and capital (K)
  • In the short run labour is variable and capital fixed. A short-term production
    function states how total output changes with labour (L) for a given level of
    capital (K).
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9
Q

What is Total physical product of labour (TPP{L})?

A

This is total output that is produced by the units of labour, for a given capital

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10
Q

What is the Average physical product of labour (APP{L})?

A

This is the average output produced by the units of labour, for a given capital:
- APP{L}=TPP{L}/L

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11
Q

What is the Marginal physical product of labour (MPP{L})?

A

This is the extra output of producing one more unit of labour, for a given capital:
- MPP{L}=ΔTPP{L}/ΔL
OR
- MPP{L}=TPP{L+1} - TPP{L}

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12
Q

What is the Law of Diminishing Returns?

A
  • When some factors are fixed in the short run, employing another unit of a
    variable factor eventually results in smaller and smaller increases in output
    -This means to increase production larger amounts of variable factors must be
    used. Why is diminishing returns inevitable?
    -When number of tractors fixed, can only
    increase output by increasing workers.
    But sooner or later, the workers will just
    get in each other’s way
  • Short run production in subject to diminishing returns
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13
Q

How would you plot Total Physical Product on a graph?

A
  • With number of product on the y-axis and units of labour employed on the x-axis
  • at the top when dy/dx = 0 is the maximum output
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14
Q

How would you plot Marginal Physical Product on a graph?

A
  • taking the TPP graph
  • you look at the change in TPP against the change in L
  • you then plot the change on a separate graph ( on the x-axis you would plot it inbetween the value of change e.g. change from 1 worker to 2 then plot at 1.5
  • when dy/dx=0 –> show where diminishing returns sets in
  • when the MPP curve cross the x-axis –> where maximum output occurs
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15
Q

How would you plot Average Physical Product on a graph?

A
  • by taking each value of TPP and simply dividing it be the value of Labour it corresponds with and plotting those points
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16
Q

How do you calculate total costs?

A

A firm’s total cost function reflects its production function
- Total costs (TC) = total fixed costs (TFC) + total variable costs (TVC)

Total fixed(economic) costs (TFC)

  • Fixed costs are not related to the amount of output produced
  • They are incurred even if nothing is produced
  • They can change but not as a result of increasing output
  • These relate to “costs for tractors etc” in our previous example

Total variable (economic) costs (TVC)

  • Variable costs are related to the amount of output produced
  • They are not incurred if nothing is produced
  • They increase as more is produced
  • These relate to “costs of workers” in our previous example
17
Q

How do you calculate Average Total Cost?

A
  1. How much does it cost to make a unit of output on average?
    Average total costs (ATC) = average variable cost (AVC)
    + average fixed cost (AFC)
This is the average cost per unit of output:
ATC = TC/Q
= (TVC + TFC)/Q
= TVC/Q + TFC/Q
= AVC + AFC
18
Q

How do you calculate Marginal Costs?

A

How much does it cost to produce an extra unit of output?
Marginal costs (MC)
- This is the extra cost of producing one more unit of output
MC = ∆TC/∆Q
= TC{Q+1} –TC{Q)}

19
Q

What do the Average and Marginal Cost curves look like on a graph?

A
  • With Costs(£) on the y-axis and Output (Q) on the x-axis
  • the MC curve is the steepest out of all of them and rises much quicker –.> it start by falling and then start rising
  • The Average Variable Cost and Average Total Cost have a similar shape (the ATC is more circle and round in its shape) with the Average Variable cost being slightly shifted down for the ATC curve –> both fall and rise like the MC curve
20
Q

What does the Marginal Cost curve tell us?

A
  • Falling MC = increasing returns

- Rising MC = diminishing returns

21
Q

What does the Average Cost curve tell us?

A
  • When marginal cost is below average cost then average cost is falling
  • When marginal cost is above average cost, then average cost is rising
  • The bottom of the average total cost curve is the minimum efficient scale
22
Q

What is the minimum efficient scale?

A

Minimum efficient scale corresponds to the lowest point on the long run average cost curve and is also known as an output range over which a business achieves productive efficiency.
- MES is not a single output level – more likely, the MES is a range of outputs where the firm achieves constant returns to scale and has reached the lowest feasible cost per unit.