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Costs of Production

Costs of Production. Chapter 20. Economic Costs. Economic costs are the costs faced when deciding how to use resources They can be obvious costs like wages or rents – explicit costs Or hidden – such as interest income lost when money from savings is used – implicit costs. Profits.

MikeCarlo
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Costs of Production

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  1. Costs of Production Chapter 20

  2. Economic Costs • Economic costs are the costs faced when deciding how to use resources • They can be obvious costs like wages or rents – explicit costs • Or hidden – such as interest income lost when money from savings is used – implicit costs

  3. Profits • Accounting Profits are the monies received from revenue after all explicit costs have been paid • Economic profit is the monies received from revenue after all explicit and implicit costs have been covered

  4. Short and Long Run • Firms profits often depend upon how quickly they respond to changes in demand • Depends upon how fast resource use can be adjusted • Variable resources are easy to adjust – work labor longer, buy more materials • Fixed resources are much harder to adjust and take time – size of the building, machinery available

  5. Short Run • Short Run is a time period to small to adjust size of capital resources but long enough to adjust how it is used • Example – machines can be worked longer, more workers can be added to shifts, more materials used in the plant • In the short run plant capacity is fixed

  6. Long Run • Long run is the time period where firms can adjust plant capacity – all resources can be adjusted now • Build a new plant, buy more equipment • Firms can also arrange to leave or enter the industry as needed • Known as a variable plant period

  7. Short Run Production • Production costs depend upon the prices of resources and the amount of resources needed to produce the desired quantity of goods • Labor output relationship – how much is produced per worker • Total Product – total quantity produced • Marginal Product – additional output produced when an extra unit of a VARIABLE resource is added to the production process • change in total product/change in labor input • Average Product – measures labor productivity – output per unit of labor • Total product/units of labor

  8. Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns • Assumes technology is fixed so methods of production do not change • As additional units of variable resources are added to fixed resource, at some point the additional (marginal) product (output) from that extra variable resource will decline • In other words: as you add more labor to a fixed resource, the output rises by smaller and smaller amounts

  9. WHY? • The logic is simple – overcrowding will eventually take place • At first, adding an additional worker to a plant can help – they can help create division of labor and specialization • Each worker becomes more efficient as they focus on one task • Eventually though too many workers create delays and people have to wait to use equipment which causes slow downs in production • Slow downs mean the additional workers create less additional production than the people before them did

  10. Total, Marginal and Average Product • The law of diminishing marginal returns affects total, marginal and average product • Total product goes through 3 stages based on the changes in marginal product • Marginal product is the slope of total product • Total will increase, at an increasing rate, when marginal is rising • Total will increase, but at a decreasing rate, when marginal is positive but falling • Total will be maximized when marginal is zero • Total will fall when marginal goes negative

  11. Average product will follow the same tendencies (given it is simply total divided by quantity) • It will increase, reach a maximum and then begin to fall as more variable inputs are added • If marginal exceeds average, average product rises • If marginal is less than average, average product will fall • Because of this, marginal and average intersect where average is at it’s maximum • You must look at the math to understand this – if you add a number larger than average to the average, average will rise. If you add a number smaller than average to the average, average falls.

  12. Production AP Ouput MP

  13. Production Costs • Fixed Costs – cost that do not change with output so exist even if production is 0 • Rent, interest payments, depreciation of equipment • Variable Costs – cost that changes with production due to increased use of variable inputs • Wages, material costs, utility payments • As production increases, variable will increase as well • At first it will increase in decreasing amounts, then it will begin to increase in increasing amounts

  14. Variable – why? • This change in variable costs is due to the shape of the marginal product curve • As marginal product rises, it does not take much of an increase in variable resources to increase production • One additional worker can increase production by a lot if they contribute to specialization and efficient use of resources • Small units of additional variable resources mean small increases in costs • As marginal product begins to fall, it will take more and more variable resources to produce increasing quantities • As overcrowding takes place, it will take larger amounts workers just to see an increase in production

  15. Total Cost: sum of fixed and variable costs • At 0 production there will still be a total cost equal to fixed cost • As production increases and variable resources are added, total will increase by the amount of variable costs

  16. Average Costs: per unit cost of production • Useful in making comparisons with price per unit for a good • Average fixed cost: total fixed cost / quantity • AFC declines as quantity rises since it never changes and is spread over larger production numbers • Average Variable Cost: total variable cost / quantity • AVC declines initially, reaches a minimum and then increases again because VC originally increase by smaller amounts, then begin to increase by increasing amounts

  17. Again this is due to diminishing marginal returns • AVC will decline initially because it does not take much additional variable resources to increase production • Firms are inefficient and costly at first but as output increases specialization makes it more efficient and cheaper to run • It will hit its minimum point when marginal product is at its maximum • After that as overcrowding takes place, larger numbers of variable resources are needed to increase production so variable costs (total and average) begin to rise

  18. Average Total Cost: total cost / quantity • Graphically it is the AFC and AVC curves added together so the distance between ATC and AVC represents the AFC ATC Costs AVC AFC Q

  19. Marginal Cost • The additional cost of producing one more unit of output • Reflection of changes in VARIABLE costs • Change in total cost / change in quantity • These are the costs that can be controlled immediately – should we produce another unit? YES – costs are incurred. NO – costs are not incurred

  20. Production decisions are usually marginally based • Combined with marginal revenue (additional revenue received from one more sale) it tells firms if they should produce the additional unit – will it be profitable? • Marginal cost curves decline sharply, reach a minimum and then begin rising rapidly • Reflects the fact that variable costs increase by decreasing amounts, reach a minimum and then begin rising

  21. MC and MP • MC curve shape is reflection of law of diminishing marginal returns • As MP is rising, MC of labor is falling (remember don’t need a lot of extra labor to get that additional output so costs rise at a decreasing rate) • Can see this if you divide the constant cost (assume all workers are hired at same wage rate) of a worker by their marginal product • Once diminishing returns kicks in, MP begins to fall and MC begins to rise • MC and MP are opposites – when MP is rising, MC is falling; when MP is at it’s peak, MC is at it’s minimum; when MP begins to fall, MC is rising

  22. MC, ATC and AVC • MC will intersect ATC and AVC at their minimum points • When the marginal cost added is less than the average, average will fall • When the marginal cost added is greater than the average, average will rise • MC and ATC intersect where ATC has ceased to fall but has not yet begin rising – the minimum point on the ATC curve (MC reacts faster and more sharply than ATC) • MC also crosses AVC at the minimum point for the same reason • MC is not affected by AFC because marginal is a reflection of change and TFC do not change

  23. MC AVC Costs Production AP MP Q of labor Q of output Comparing Curves

  24. What causes the curves to shift? • Changes in resource prices or technology • Changes in costs will change the curves • If fixed costs increase, AFC will shift up and ATC will move up – AVC and MC will NOT move because both are based on variable resources • If variable costs increase, AVC, ATC and MC will all shift upward • More efficient technology that increases productivity will lower costs

  25. Long Run Production Costs • In the long run ALL resources can be adjusted • Different amounts of variable resources can be used, more/equipment can be owned, plant size can change • Therefore, in the long run, ALL costs become variable so we only really look at TOTAL costs

  26. Firm Size and Costs • What is the relationship between the plant size of a firm and the costs they face? • At first, larger plant sizes may actually result in falling ATC but eventually, larger and larger plants will result in rising ATC

  27. ATC-4 ATC-1 ATC-2 ATC-5 ATC-3 LRATC Dashed lines tell you where a firm needs to move to a new plant size. At this point, a new larger plant can produce at lower ATC than the existing plant Average Total Costs 20 30 50 60 Output

  28. At outputs of 20 or less, plant size 1 is best. • At 21 – 30 it gets lower ATC with plant size 2 • At 31 – 50 plant size 3 is best • 51 – 60 plant size 4 • 61+ plant size 5 is best • Each plant will have higher total costs than the one before it BUT ATC (per unit costs) will be lower • Each individual curve represents a short run production for different plants. Together they make up the Long Run ATC curve for the firm • LRATC shows the lowest ATC at which any output level can be produced as firms have time to make adjustments in plant size

  29. Economies of Scale • Why is LRATC u-shaped? • NOT due to law of diminishing marginal returns – it does is short run only; does not apply in the long run • Economies of Scale (economies of mass production): reductions in the average total cost of production as a firm expands plant size in the long run

  30. Why Economies of Scale lead to downsloping long run ATC curves • Labor Specialization: as plants increase in size labor is able to become more specific and specialized in their job • There is more room and ability to divide workers up into single specific tasks • Focusing on one task makes a worker better and more efficient at their job • No more production time loss from switching jobs

  31. Managerial Specialization: greater specialization of managers • Individual group managers who can work with certain tasks and small groups rather than a single plant manager who has to supervise multiple tasks and hundreds of workers • Leads to greater efficiency • Efficient Capital: more efficient equipment, more efficient use of current equipment • Other Factors: per unit design and development costs, advertising costs fall as production increases, experience and therefore efficiency rises as production rises • As inputs rise, production rises by large amounts, ATC falls

  32. Diseconomies of Scale • Rising ATC as firms increase expands production in the long run • Mainly due to difficulty in controlling and managing a large operation • As plant size increases, personnel size increases and more managers get involved. • Key executives move further away from hands on understanding and more people are needed to understand and absorb all details of production. • Delegation leads communication and cooperation problems. Efficiency falls and costs rise. • Also easier for workers to slack off and drop in efficiency as workers feel more isolated. More management is needed to watch them and so costs rise. • Increases in inputs lead to a small increase in production so ATC rises

  33. Constant Returns to Scale • Production range where ATC does not change as production increases • Increases in inputs have a proportionate increase in production size

  34. Minimum Efficient Scale • Lowest level of output at which a firm can minimize long run average costs • Some industries can only support one or a few firms who can produce efficiently to meet consumer demand – these industries lead to natural monopolies or oligopolies • LRATC shape is determined by technology and economies/diseconomies of scale • Industries can have firms of different plant sizes who all operate on the same portion of a LRATC curve • The shape of the ATC curve determines the number of firms in an industry

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