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Production and Costs

13. Production and Costs. CHECKPOINTS. Checkpoint 13.4. Checkpoint 13.1. Checkpoint 13.3. Clicker version. Problem 1. Problem 1. Problem 1. Problem 2. Problem 2. Problem 2. Problem 3. Problem 3. Problem 3. Checkpoint 13.2. Problem 4. Problem 4. Problem 1. Problem 2. Clicker

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Production and Costs

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  1. 13 Production and Costs CHECKPOINTS

  2. Checkpoint 13.4 Checkpoint 13.1 Checkpoint 13.3 Clicker version Problem 1 Problem 1 Problem 1 Problem 2 Problem 2 Problem 2 Problem 3 Problem 3 Problem 3 Checkpoint 13.2 Problem 4 Problem 4 Problem 1 Problem 2 Clicker version Problem 3 Problem 4

  3. Practice Problem 1 Lee is a computer programmer who earned $35,000 in 2007. But in 2007, he opened a body board manufacturing business. At the end of the first year of operation, he submitted the information in the table to his accountant. Calculate Lee’s explicit costs, implicit costs, and economic profit. CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  4. Solution Lee’s explicit costs are costs paid with money: $50,000 on materials etc; $10,000 on leased machines; $15,000 in wages; $4,000 in bank interest These items total $79,000. CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  5. Lee’s implicit costs are: $35,000 in forgone wages; $2,500 in forgone rent less the increase in the value of his cottage; $500 in forgone interest on his savings account; $25,000 in normal profit. These items total $63,000 CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  6. Lee’s economic profit equals total revenue $160,000 minus total cost. Total cost is the sum of explicit costs plus implicit costs. Total cost = $79,000 + $63,000, or $142,000. So Lee’s economic profit is $160,000 – $142,000, or $18,000. CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  7. Study Plan Problem Lee is a computer programmer who earned $50,000 in 2007. But in 2008, he opened a custom woodworking business. At the end of his first year, he submitted the information in the table to his accountant. His explicit costs are ____ and his implicit costs are ____. A. $ 50,000; $89,200 B. $86,200; $22,900 C. $89,200; $50,000 D. $22,900; $86,200 E. $22,900; $89,200 CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  8. Lee is a computer programmer who earned $50,000 in 2007. But in 2008, he opened a custom woodworking business. At the end of his first year, he submitted the information in the table to his accountant. Lee’s economic profit is ____. A. – $9,000 B. $13,800 C. $35,000 D. $77,000 E. $9,000 CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  9. Practice Problem 2 Lee is a computer programmer who earned $35,000 in 2007. But in 2007, he opened a body board manufacturing business. At the end of the first year of operation, he submitted the information in the table to his accountant. Lee’s accountant recorded the depreciation on Lee’s cottage during 2007 as $7,000. What did the accountant say Lee’s profit or loss was? CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  10. Solution The accountant measures Lee’s profit as total revenue minus explicit costs minus depreciation. Profit = $160,000 – $79,000 – $7,000 Profit = $74,000 CHECKPOINT 13.1 • He stopped renting out his cottage for $3,500 a year and used it as his factory. The market value of the cottage increased from $70,000 to $71,000. • He spent $50,000 on materials, etc. • He leased machines for $10,000 a year. • He paid $15,000 in wages. • He used $10,000 from his savings account, which earns 5% a year interest. • He borrowed $40,000 at 10% a year. • He sold $160,000 worth of body boards. • Normal profit is $25,000 a year.

  11. Practice Problem 3 What does it cost to make 100 pairs of running shoes? The Asian manufacturer of running shoes pays its workers $275 to make 100 pairs per hour. These workers use company-owned equipment that costs the company in forgone interest and economic depreciation $300 an hour. Materials cost $900. Source: washpost.com Which costs are explicit costs and which costs are implicit costs? If the total revenue from the sale of 100 pairs of shoes is $1,650, what is the manufacturer’s economic profit? CHECKPOINT 13.1

  12. Solution Explicit costs are wages of $275 and materials of $900. Implicit costs are the forgone interest and economic depreciation of $300. Economic profit equals total revenue minus total cost. Total cost is $1,475. So economic profit equals $1,650 minus $1,475, which is $175. CHECKPOINT 13.1

  13. Practice Problem 1 Tom leases a farmer’s field and grows pineapples. Tom hires students to pick and pack the pineapples. The table sets out Tom’s total production schedule. Calculate the marginal product of the third student and the average product of three students. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  14. Solution The marginal product of the third student is the change in total product that results from hiring the third student. When Tom hires 2 students, total product is 220 pineapples a day. When Tom hires 3 students, total product is 300 pineapples a day. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  15. Marginal product of the third student is the total product of 3 students minus the total product of the 2 students. That is, the marginal product of the third student is 300 pineapples – 220 pineapples a day, which equals 80 pineapples a day. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  16. Average product equals total product divided by the number of students. Average product of three students is the total product of three students divided by 3. That is, the average product of three students is 300 pineapples ÷ 3, which equals 100 pineapples a day. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  17. Practice Problem 2 Tom leases a farmer’s field and grows pineapples. Tom hires students to pick and pack the pineapples. The table sets out Tom’s total production schedule. Over what range of numbers of students does marginal product increase? CHECKPOINT 13.2

  18. Solution Marginal product of the first student is 100 pineapples a day. Marginal product of the second student is 120 pineapples a day. Marginal product of the third student is 80 pineapples a day. So marginal product increases when Tom hires the first and second students. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  19. Study Plan Problem Tom leases a farmer’s field and grows pineapples. Tom hires students to pick and pack the pineapples. The table sets out Tom’s total production schedule. Marginal product increases when Tom hires ________. A. the first and second students B. the first, second, and third students C. each additional student D. only the first student E. the first, second, third and fourth students CHECKPOINT 13.2

  20. Practice Problem 3 Tom leases a farmer’s field and grows pineapples. Tom hires students to pick and pack the pineapples. The table sets out Tom’s total production schedule. When marginal product increases, is average product greater than, less than, or equal to marginal product? CHECKPOINT 13.2

  21. Solution When Tom hires 1 student, marginal product is 100 pineapples per student and average product is 100 pineapples per student. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  22. When Tom hires 2 students, marginal product is 120 pineapples per student and average product is 110 pineapples per student. That is, when Tom hires the second student, marginal product increases and average product is less than marginal product. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  23. Practice Problem 4 Budget cuts bring layoffs to museums The Detroit Institute of Arts cut its staff by 56 full-time and 7 part-time employees and canceled some of this year’s planned exhibitions. Source: The New York Times, February 25, 2009 As the number of museum workers decreased and some planned exhibitions were canceled, how do you think the marginal product and average product of a museum worker changed in the short run? CHECKPOINT 13.2

  24. Solution With a decrease in the number of exhibitions, output of the museum (number of visitors to the museum) might fall, but the percentage decrease in output is probably less than the percentage cut in labor services. Marginal product per worker will increase and the increase in marginal product will lead to an increase in the workers’ average product. CHECKPOINT 13.2

  25. Practice Problem 1 Tom leases a farmer’s field for $120 a day and grows pineapples. He pays students $100 a day to pick and pack the pineapples and he leases capital at $80 a day. The table shows Tom’s daily output. What is Tom’s total cost and average total cost if he produces 300 pineapples a day? CHECKPOINT 13.3

  26. Solution Total cost = Total fixed cost + Total variable cost. Total fixed cost is cost of leasing the field ($120 a day) and cost of leasing the capital ($80 a day). Total fixed cost is $200 a day. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  27. Total variable cost is the wages paid. To produce 300 pineapples a day, Tom must hire 3 students at $100 a day, so total variable cost is $300 a day. Total cost = $200 + $300 Total cost = $500 a day. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  28. Average total cost is the total cost divided by total product. When Tom produces 300 pineapples a day, his total cost is $500 a day. So average total cost equals $500 ÷ 300 pineapples, which is $1.67 a pineapple. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  29. Practice Problem 2 Tom leases a farmer’s field for $120 a day and grows pineapples. He pays students $100 a day to pick and pack the pineapples and he leases capital at $80 a day. The table shows Tom’s daily output. What is the marginal cost of the 400th pineapple? CHECKPOINT 13.3

  30. Solution Marginal cost is the increase in total cost that results from picking and packing one additional pineapple a day. The TC column in the table shows the total cost of producing each output level. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  31. The total cost of producing 400 pineapples a day is $700. The total cost of producing 360 pineapples a day is $600. The increase in the number of pineapples is 40, and the increase in total cost is $100. Marginal cost is the increase in total cost divided by 40 and is $2.50 per pineapple. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  32. The MC column in the table shows the marginal cost of producing a pineapple. The marginal cost of the 380th pineapple a day is $2.50 and the marginal cost of the 410th pineapple a day is $5.00, so the marginal cost of the 400th pineapple is about $4.00. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  33. Practice Problem 3 Tom leases a farmer’s field for $120 a day and grows pineapples. He pays students $100 a day to pick and pack the pineapples and he leases capital at $80 a day. The table shows Tom’s daily output. At what output is Tom’s average total cost a minimum? CHECKPOINT 13.3

  34. Solution At the minimum of average total cost, average total cost equals marginal cost. Minimum average total cost is $1.67 a pineapple at 330 pineapples a day—midpoint between 300 and 360 pineapples. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  35. Practice Problem 4 Metropolitan Museum completes round of layoffs The museum has cut 74 jobs and 95 other workers retired. The museum also closed 15 retail shops around the country and laid off 127 other employees. The cut in its labor costs is about $10 million. The museum expects no change in the number of visitors or visitor experience. Source: The New York Times, June 22, 2009 Explain how the job cuts and shop closings will change the museum’s short-run average cost curves and marginal cost curve. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  36. Solution A cut in labor but no change in output increases marginal product of labor and decreases marginal cost of producing the output. The MC, AVC, and ATC curves shift downward. The shop closures decrease total fixed cost and shift the AFC and ATC curves downward. CHECKPOINT 13.3

  37. Practice Problem 1 Tom can lease one field for $120 a day and capital for $80 a day or two fields for $240 a day and twice as much capital at $160 a day. He hires students at $100 a day. What is his average cost when he farms two fields and grows 220 pineapples a day? CHECKPOINT 13.4 • The table shows his output with one field and two fields.

  38. Solution Total cost is fixed cost of leasing two fields at $400 a day plus $100 a day for each student hired. Tom can produce 220 pineapples with 2 fields and 1 student, so total cost is $500 a day. CHECKPOINT 13.4 • The table shows his output with one field and two fields.

  39. Average total cost is the total cost divided by output. Average total cost of producing 220 pineapples a day is $500 divided by 220 and equals $2.27 a pineapple. CHECKPOINT 13.4 • The table shows his output with one field and two fields.

  40. Practice Problem 2 Tom can lease one field for $120 a day and capital for $80 a day or two fields for $240 a day and twice as much capital at $160 a day. He hires students at $100 a day. Make a graph of Tom’s average total cost curve and show the long-run average cost curve. Over what output range will Tom use 1 field and use 2 fields? CHECKPOINT 13.4 • The table shows his output with one field and two fields.

  41. Solution The table sets out Tom’s average total costs and the figure graphs the two ATC curves. CHECKPOINT 13.4

  42. Tom’s long-run average cost curve is the lower segments of the two ATC curves, highlighted in the figure. CHECKPOINT 13.4

  43. Practice Problem 3 Tom can lease one field for $120 a day and capital for $80 a day or two fields for $240 a day and twice as much capital at $160 a day. He hires students at $100 a day. Does Tom experience constant returns to scale, economies of scale, or diseconomies of scale? CHECKPOINT 13.4 • The table shows his output with one field and two fields.

  44. Solution Tom experiences economies of scale if he doubles both labor and capital, he produces more than double the output. The red arrows show that Tom experiences economies of scale up to an output of 740 pineapples a day. The black arrow shows diseconomies of scale. CHECKPOINT 13.4 • The table shows his output with one field and two fields.

  45. Practice Problem 4 GM restructuring plan released The White House released details of its restructuring plan for GM: The firm will close 11 plants and reduce output at 3 others. Source: boston.com, May 31, 2009 Explain the effects of the restructuring plan on GM’s total fixed cost, total variable cost, short-run ATC curve, and LRAC curve. CHECKPOINT 13.4

  46. Solution Closing 11 plants will lower GM’s total fixed cost. Closing 11 plants and decreasing output at 3 plants will lower GM’s total variable cost. With a smaller scale, GM will move to the ATC curve associated with that smaller scale and move left along its LRAC curve. CHECKPOINT 13.4

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