Chapter 21: The Cost of Production

Similar documents
COST THEORY AND ESTIMATION

Micro Chapter 8 Study Guide Questions 13e

1. The advantage of sole proprietorship over partnership is that: A) it is easier to finance a business where there is only one owner.

Economics 101 Section 5

The Costs of Production

ECON 221: PRACTICE EXAM 2

Theory of Cost. General Economics

DEMAND AND SUPPLY ANALYSIS: THE FIRM

INTERMEDIATE MICROECONOMICS LECTURE 9 THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION

First page. edition Gwartney Stroup Sobel Macpherson

Marginal Product and Marginal Cost

ECON 102 Boyle Final Exam New Material Practice Exam Solutions

Long-Run Costs and Output Decisions

8a. Profit Maximization by a competitive firm: a. Cost and Revenue: Total, Average and Marginal

Exercise questions 3 Summer III, Answer all questions Multiple Choice Questions. Choose the best answer.

COST ANALYSIS. Semester II 2010/11

Unit 3: Production and Cost

Unit 3: Costs of Production and Perfect Competition

Behind the Supply Curve: Inputs and Costs

of Production and the Financing of a Firm

The Theory behind the Supply Curve. Production and Costs

ECONOMICS 53 Problem Set 4 Due before lecture on March 4

The Costs of Production

not to be republished NCERT Chapter 3 Production and Costs 3.1 PRODUCTION FUNCTION

ANSWERS To next 16 Multiple Choice Questions below B B B B A E B E C C C E C C D B

4) Economists usually assume that is a fixed input in the run. A) labor; short B) capital; short C) labor; long D) capital; long

These notes essentially correspond to chapter 7 of the text.

13 The Costs of Production

Refer to the information provided in Figure 8.10 below to answer the questions that follow.

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION. J. Mao

Fixed, Variable & Total Cost Functions

Practice MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 7. Costs. An economist is a person who, when invited to give a talk at a banquet, tells the audience there s no such thing as a free lunch.

The Costs of Production

Chapter 7. The Cost of Production. Fixed and Variable Costs. Fixed Cost Versus Sunk Cost

Costs. Lecture 5. August Reading: Perlo Chapter 7 1 / 63

STUDY GUIDE CHAPTER 3: PRODUCTION AND COSTS

How Perfectly Competitive Firms Make Output Decisions

20 : Theory of Cost 1

, to its new position, ATC 2

The Production Process and Costs. By Asst. Prof. Kessara Thanyalakpark, Ph.D.

Cost Curves. Molly W. Dahl Georgetown University Econ 101 Spring 2009

CASE FAIR OSTER PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS E L E V E N T H E D I T I O N. PEARSON 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall

Measuring Cost: Which Costs Matter? (pp )

a. If the price per ticket is $50, how much revenue does the Rolling Stones receive?

THEORY OF COST. Cost: The sacrifice incurred whenever an exchange or transformation of resources takes place.

Be able to explain and calculate average marginal cost to make production decisions

7. The Cost of Production

ECON 102 Brown Exam 2 Practice Exam Solutions

MICROECONOMICS - CLUTCH CH THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION.

Chapter 06 Testbank. 1. The economic theory of business behavior assumes that the goal of a firm is to. A. earn an accounting profit.

Test 2 Economics 321 Chappell October, Last 4 digits SSN

*** Your grade is based on your on-line answers. ***

Economic cost. Includes both the explicit and the implicit cost. Full accounting of cost to society.

Perfect Competition. Profit-Maximizing Level of Output. Profit-Maximizing Level of Output. Profit-Maximizing Level of Output

Economic cost. Full accounting of cost to society. There are counterfactual, competing allocations that underlie this concept.

Dr. Barry Haworth University of Louisville Department of Economics Economics 201. Midterm #2

Chapter 7. The Cost of Production

2) Using the data in the above table, the average total cost of producing 16 units per day is A) $ B) $5.00. C) $5.55. D) $2.22.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter-17. Theory of Production

The Costs of Production in the long run. M. En C. Eduardo Bustos Farías

Chapter 8: Costs and the Changes at Firms Over Time Solutions to End-of-Chapter Problems

Types of Cost Curves. Chapter Twenty-One. Types of Cost Curves. Types of Cost Curves. Fixed, Variable & Total Cost Functions

Costs. An economist is a person who, when invited to give a talk at a banquet, tells audience there s no such thing as a free lunch.

IV. THE FIRM AND THE MARKETPLACE

a. If the price the handbag is $298, how much revenue does Coach receive?

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION

Leader: Shealyn Course: Econ 101 Instructor: Peter Orazem Date: April 17, 2012

FARM MANAGEMENT Lecture.5 Costs, Returns and Profits on the Output Side

A PRODUCER OPTIMUM. Lecture 7 Producer Behavior

Production, Revenue, and Cost

0 $50 $0 $5 $-5 $50 $35 1 $50 $50 $40 $10 $50 $15 2 $50 $100 $55 $45 $50 $35 3 $50 $150 $90 $60 $50 $55 4 $50 $200 $145 $55 $65

Final Review questions

The Theory of the Firm

Microeconomics. Lecture Outline. Claudia Vogel. Winter Term 2009/2010. Part II Producers, Consumers, and Competitive Markets

Chapter 6 Firms: Labor Demand, Investment Demand, and Aggregate Supply

Cable TV

Price Determination under Perfect Competition

a. If the price per ticket is $45, how much revenue does Sugar Mountain earn?

File: ch08, Chapter 8: Cost Curves. Multiple Choice

c U 2 U 1 Econ 310 Practice Questions: Chaps. 4, 7-8 Figure 4.1 Other goods

ECONOMICS 103. Topic 7: Producer Theory - costs and competition revisited

c) What optimality condition defines the profit maximizing amount of the input to use? (Be brief and to the point.) VMP = r, the cost of the input

Lecture # 14 Profit Maximization

Chapter Seven. Costs

Students ScoreBooster Video Tutorials. JAMB (UTME), WAEC (SSCE, GCE), NECO, and NABTEB EXAMS. economics.

Refer to the figure below to answer the following questions.

University of Toronto November 28, ECO 100Y INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS Midterm Test # 2

Welcome to Day 8. Principles of Microeconomics

Paul Krugman and Robin Wells. Microeconomics. Third Edition. Chapter 11 Behind the Supply Curve: Inputs and Costs. Copyright 2013 by Worth Publishers

Name: Date: Use the following to answer question 3: Figure: Producer Surplus 2

CHAPTER 6 COST OF PRODUCTION

Questions and Answers

DO NOT BEGIN WORKING UNTIL YOU ARE TOLD TO DO SO. READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS FIRST.

Lecture 28.April 2008 Microeconomics Esther Kalkbrenner:

SCHOLARS INSTITUTE. NOTHING IS IMPOSSIBLE 3207, 2nd Floor Fountain Chowk Mahindra Park Tele :

Test 1 Econ 5000 Spring 2002 Dr. Rupp (Keep your answers covered. Bubble in name and id#)

Economics I Lecture: Anna Della Valle TA Andrea Venegoni. Tutorial 4 Production theory, theory of the firm

Chapter 12 Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier

Transcription:

1. ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS 22-1 Distinguish between explicit and implicit s, giving examples of each. What are the explicit and implicit s of attending college? Why does the economist classify normal profits as a? Are economic profits a of ion? Explicit s are payments the firm must make for inputs to nonowners of the firm to attract them away from other employment, for example, wages and salaries to its employees. Implicit s are nonexpenditure s that occur through the use of self-owned, self-employed resources, for example, the salary the owner of a firm forgoes by operating his or her own firm and not working for someone else. The explicit s of going to college are the tuition s, the of books, and the extra s of living away from home (if applicable). The implicit s are the income forgone and the hard grind of studying (if applicable). Economists classify normal profits as s, since in the long run the owner of a firm would close it down if a normal profit were not being earned. Since a normal profit is required to keep the entrepreneur operating the firm, a normal profit is a. Economic profits are not s of ion since the entrepreneur does not require the gaining of an economic profit to keep the firm operating. In economics, s are whatever is required to keep a firm operating. 22-2 (Key Question) Gomez runs a small pottery firm. He hires one helper at $12,000 per year, pays annual rent of $5,000 for his shop, and materials $20,000 per year. Gomez has $40,000 of his own funds invested in equipment (pottery wheels, kilns, and so forth) that could earn him $4,000 per year if alternatively invested. Gomez has been offered $15,000 per year to work as a potter for a competitor. He estimates his entrepreneurial talents are worth $3,000 per year. annual revenue from pottery sales is $72,000. Calculate accounting profits and economic profits for Gomez s pottery. Explicit s: $37,000 (= $12,000 for the helper + $5,000 of rent + $20,000 of materials). Implicit s: $22,000 (= $4,000 of forgone interest + $15,000 of forgone salary + $3,000 of entreprenuership). Accounting profit = $35,000 (= $72,000 of revenue - $37,000 of explicit s); Economic profit = $13,000 (= $72,000 - $37,000 of explicit s - $22,000 of implicit s). 22-3 Which of the following are short-run and which are long-run adjustments? (a) Wendy s builds a new restaurant; (b) Acme Steel Corporation hires 200 more ion workers; (c) A farmer increases the amount of fertilizer used on his corn crop; and (d) An Alcoa plant adds a third shift of workers. (a) Long-run- Wedny s varied plant size (b) Short-run only varies one resource (labor) and not plant size (c) Short-run only varies one resource (fertilizer) and not plant size (d) Short-run only varies one resource (labor) and not plant size 1

(b) 22-4 (Key Question ) Complete the following table by calculating marginal and average from the data given. Plot total, marginal, and average and explain in detail the relationship between each pair of curves. Explain why marginal first rises, then declines, and ultimately becomes negative. What bearing does the law of diminishing returns have on short-run s? Be specific. When marginal is rising, marginal is falling. And when marginal is diminishing, marginal is rising. Illustrate and explain graphically. Inputs labor of Marginal 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 0 15 34 51 65 74 80 83 82 Marginal data, top to bottom: 15; 19; 17; 14; 9; 6; 3; -1. data, top to bottom: 15; 17; 17; 16.25; 14.8; 13.33; 11.86; 10.25. Your diagram should have the same general characteristics as text Figure 22-2. MP is the slope the rate of change of the TP curve. When TP is rising at an increasing rate, MP is positive and rising. When TP is rising at a diminishing rate, MP is positive but falling. When TP is falling, MP is negative and falling. AP rises when MP is above it; AP falls when MP is below it. MP first rises because the fixed capital gets used more ively as added workers are employed. Each added worker contributes more to output than the previous worker because the firm is better able to use its fixed plant and equipment. As still more labor is added, the law of diminishing returns takes hold. Labor become s so abundant relative to the fixed capital that congestion occurs and marginal falls. At the extreme, the addition of labor so overcrowds the plant that the marginal of still more labor is negative total output falls. Illustrated by Figure 22-6. Because labor is the only variable input and its price (its wage rate) is constant, MC is found by dividing the wage rate by MP. When MP is rising, MC is falling; when MP reaches its maximum, MC is at its minimum; when MP is falling, MC is rising. 2

22-5 Why can the distinction between fixed and variable s be made in the short run? Classify the following as fixed or variable s: advertising expenditures, fuel, interest on company-issued bonds, shipping charges, payments for raw materials, real estate taxes, executive salaries, insurance premiums, wage payments, depreciation and obsolescence charges, sales taxes, and rental payments on leased office machinery. There are no fixed s in the long run; all s are variable. Explain. The distinction can be made because there are some s that do not vary with total output. These are the fixed s that, fundamentally, are related to the scale or size of the plant. In the short run, by definition, the scale of the plant cannot change: The firm cannot bring in more machinery or move to a larger building. All s that are related to the scale of the plant s that continue to be incurred even though the firm s output may be zero are fixed s. On the other hand, the firm can increase its output by using its plant its fixed capital more intensively, that is, by hiring more labor, or by using more materials. But by doing so, it will increase its operating s, its variable s. Advertising expenditures: variable s (although it may be reasonable to argue a fixed component). Fuel: variable s. Interest on company-issued bonds: fixed s. Shipping charges: variable s. Payments for raw materials: variable s. Real estate taxes: fixed s. Executive salarie s: fixed s. Insurance premiums: fixed s. Wage payments: variable s. Depreciation and obsolescence charges: fixed s. Sales taxes: variable s. Rental payments on leased office machinery: fixed s (although it is possible that short-term lease arrangements on some types of office equipment may rise or fall with output). In the long run, the firm can, by definition, get out of paying all of its short-run fixed s; its lease is up, it can fire its executives without penalty, the insurance has run out, and so on. All of its s at this moment, then, are variable. It can decide to continue producing at the same scale and thus reassume all its previous fixed s for the next short-run period; or it can decide to increase its scale and thus increase its fixed s; or it can decide to go out of business and thus have no s at all. 22-6 List several fixed and variable s associated with owning and operating an automobile. Suppose you are considering whether to drive your car or fly 1,000 miles to Florida for spring break. Which s fixed, variable, or both -would you take into account in making your decision? Would any implicit s be relevant? Explain. Fixed s associated with owning and operating an automobile include the price of the car (probably monthly payments); insurance; driver s license; car license; and depreciation. Variable s associated with owning and operating an automobile include gasoline, oil, lubricants; repairs; car wash; and depreciation, which is also in part a variable since the more the car is driven, the more it depreciates. The s of driving to Fort Lauderdale are the same variable s (including depreciation) listed above. Going by plane, the variable is the of the ticket. It would probably be cheaper to drive but this would leave out the relevant implicit my time and the wear and tear on myself of driving there and back. The plane would be faster. How much is it worth to me to arrive sooner and stay longer and be fresher on arrival? On the other hand, maybe I d find the car useful around Fort Lauderdale, and having one s own car saves the variable of renting if one flies. 3

22-7 (Key Question) A firm has fixed s of $60 and variable s as indicated in the table below. Complete the table. When finished, check your calculations by referring to question 4 at the end of Chapter 23. fixed variable fixed variable total Marginal 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 $ $ 0 45 85 120 150 185 225 270 325 390 465 $ $ $ $ a. Graph total fixed, total variable, and total. Explain how the law of diminishing returns influences the shapes of the total variable - and total- curves. b. Graph AFC, AVC, ATC, and MC. Explain the deriva tion and shape of each of these four curves and their relationships to one another. Specifically, explain in nontechnical terms why the MC curve intersects both the AVC and ATC curves at their minimum points. c. Explain how the locations of each of the four curves graphed in question 7b would be altered if (1) total fixed had been $100 rather than $60, and (2) total variable had been $10 less at each level of output. The total fixed s are all $60. The total s are all $60 more than the total variable. The other columns are shown in Question 4 in Chapter 23. (a) See the graph. Over the 0 to 4 range of output, the TVC and TC curves slope upward at a decreasing rate because of increasing marginal returns. The slopes of the curves then increase at an increasing rate as diminishing marginal returns occur. (b) See the graph. AFC (= TFC/Q) falls continuously since a fixed amount of capital is spread over more units of output. The MC (= change in TC/change in Q), AVC (= TVC/Q), and ATC (= TC/Q) curves are U-shaped, reflecting the influence of first increasing and then diminishing returns. The ATC curve sums AFC and AVC vertically. The ATC curve falls when the MC curve is below it; the ATC curve rises when the MC curve is above it. This means the MC curve must intersect the ATC curve at its lowest point. The same logic holds for the minimum point of the AVC curve. 4

(c1)if TFC has been $100 instead of $60, the AFC and ATC curves would be higher by an amount equal to $40 divided by the specific output. Example: at 4 units, AVC = $25.00 [= ($60 + $40)/4]; and ATC = $62.50 [= ($210 + $40)/4]. The AVC and MC curves are not affected by changes in fixed s. (c2)if TVC has been $10 less at each output, MC would be $10 lower for the first unit of output but remain the same for the remaining output. The AVC and ATC curves would also be lower by an amount equal to $10 divided by the specific output. Example: at 4 units of output, AVC = $35.00 [= $150 - $10)/4], ATC = $50 [= ($210 - $10)/4]. The AFC curve would not be affected by the change in variable s. 22-8 Indicate how each of the following would shift the (a) marginal- curve, (b) average-variable curve, (c) average -fixed- curve, and (d) average-total- curve of a manufacturing firm. In each case specify the direction of the shift. a. A reduction in business property taxes b. An increase in the nominal wages of ion workers c. A decrease in the price of electricity d. An increase in the insurance rates on plant and equipment e. An increase in transportation s (a) MC no change; AVC no change; AFC shift down; ATC shift down. (b) MC shift up; AVC shift up; AFC no change; ATC shift up. (c) MC shift down; AVC shift down; AFC no change; ATC shift down. (d) MC no change; AVC no change; AFC shift up; ATC shift up. (e) MC shift up; AVC shift up; AFC no change; ATC shift up. 5

22-9 Suppose a firm has only three possible plant-size options represented by the ATC curves shown in the accompanying figure. What plant size will the firm choose in producing (a) 50, (b) 130, (c) 160, and (d) 250 units of output? Draw the firm s long-run average- curve on the diagram and define this curve. (a) To produce 50 units, the firm will choose plant size #1, since its ATC is lower for this size firm in producing less than 80 units. (b) To produce 130 units, the firm will choose plant size #2, since its ATC is lower for size #2 in producing between 80 and 240 units. (c) To produce 160 units, the firm will choose plant size #2, since its ATC is lowest for producing between 80 and 240 units. (d) To produce 250 units, the firm will choose plant size #3, since its ATC is lowest for ion of more than 240 units. The long-run average- curve drawn on this diagram would trace AT C 1 as far as 80 units, then ATC 2 between 80 and 240 units, then finally trace ATC3 from 240 units to the end of the graph. Students could reproduce the graph in the text and then use a heavy line or different color to show this tracing. 22-10 (Key Questio n) Use the concepts of economies and diseconomies of scale to explain the shape of a firm s long-run ATC curve. What is the concept of minimum efficient scale? What bearing may the exact shape of the long-run ATC curve have on the structure of an industry? The long-run ATC curve is U-shaped. At first, long-run ATC falls as the firm expands and realizes economies of scale from labor and managerial specialization and the use of more efficient capital. The long-run ATC curve later turns upward when the enlarged firm experiences diseconomies of scale, usually resulting from managerial inefficiencies. The MES (minimum efficient scale) is the smallest level of output needed to attain all economies of scale and minimum long-run ATC. If long-run ATC drops quickly to its minimum which then extends over a long range of output, the industry will likely be composed of both large and small firms. If long-run ATC descends slowly to its minimum over a long range of output, the industry will likely be composed of a few large firms. If long-run ATC drops quickly to its minimum point and then rises abruptly, the industry will likely be composed of many small firms. 6

7