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CHAPTER 9Costs of Production

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Title: CHAPTER 9Costs of Production


1
CHAPTER 9-Costs of Production
  • How much output can a firm produce?
  • How do the costs of production vary with the rate
    of output
  • Do larger firms have a cost advantage over
    smaller firms?
  • We are talking about the Production Functioni.e.
    Costs of Production

2
Next Step for Production Function
  • How many inputs does it take to arrive at the
    desired mix of outputs. (from the factors)
  • How many workers will it take to make the new
    Board Game I LOVE ECONOMICS?
  • Definition of Production Function
  • Relationship between the maximum quantity of a
    good attainable from different combinations of
    factor inputs.

3
Maximum Output/Minimum Inputs
  • Production of goods equates cost!
  • Idea for a firm (large or small) is to minimize
    the cost while maximizing output.
  • How best to produce?
  • Whats the smallest amount of resources needed to
    produce a specific product? What is the least
    number of workers we can hire to handle the noon
    counter trade? (McDonalds). Can we lay off
    another 1,000 workers and still be competitive
    (IBM) Ford lays off 15,000 workers
  • (Factors of productionland,labor,capital,
    entrepreneurship

4
Answers to Production Q
  • The Production Function will answer what the
    maximum amount of output is attainable from
    various combinations of factor inputs. (this is
    getting the mixing bowl filled with right
    ingredients)
  • With a fixed amount of capital adding labor
    inputs can predict outputs---up to a certain
    point---then more capital needs to be added.

5
Law of Diminishing Returns
  • Did you ever fall asleep reading your economics
    text after a long day at work? Or maybe you just
    procrastinated on getting that book open.. Of
    course you have.. you have experienced
  • Diminishing returns.
  • In the short runProduction function defines the
    limit to output and how much each worker will
    contribute to that limit.

6
  • The factor that can be adjusted quickly in the SR
    is Labor.
  • Yet as more labor is hired, each unit of labor
    has less capital and land to work with
  • Things get constrained.. Hence. Marginal Physical
    Product declines
  • This refers to how many widgets

7
Example/Build a City game
  • Set up a small factory
  • Fixed factor of production(4 machines)
  • Functions of machines
  • Add variable factors one at a time.
  • If you keep adding workers- will reach a point
    where the marginal worker adds nothing to our
    total output.
  • A business person must be aware of the law of
    diminishing returns if he wants to operate
    efficiently.

8
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9
Bottom Line
  • If we keep adding workers we will reach a Point
    where--- the Marginal Worker ads nothing to our
    total output All the checkout lanes are filled
    with Tom Thumb Employees very few people are
    checking out. (Is this productive for TT?)
  • What happens to their Profit Margin?
  • Cost exceeds any benefits of hiring additional
    workers.

10
Long run/short run productivity
  • Short run period in which the quantity (and
    quality of some inputs) cannot be changed.
  • General assumption In SR labor can change while
    capital is held constant
  • Generally, as amount of labor used increases, the
    output will also increase (with reservations) See
    diminishing returns

11
Marginal Productivity
  • MPP (marginal physical product)
  • The change in total output that results from
    employment of one additional unit of input.

Formula MPP change in total output
change in input quantity
same figure as approximate avg output. On
diminishing returns chart
12
Employment Dilemmas
  • Sometimes employees
  • dont measure
  • up
  • Output does
  • not justify
  • Their negative
  • inputs

13
Marginal Physical Product MPP-
  • Marginal Productivity
  • When the MPP of labor (MPPL gt0), then total
    output increases.
  • Improving the ratio of labor to other factors
    increases the MPP of labor.

14
MPP Chart
MPP ?Q ? L
Marginal Physical Product
15
MPP Graph(actually diminishing marginal physical
product.
50
Total output (per day)
45
40
10 jeans
35
30
Third worker
25
20
Marginal physical product (per worker)
15
10
5
0
3
4
5
1
2
6
7
8
16
Falling MPP implies Rising MC
  • The MPP actually mirrors the output/worker.
  • MPP is the additional output obtained by
    employing one more unit of input..
  • If MPP each additional unit of input is
  • producing less and ultimately adds more cost
    to each additional input.
  • . (i.e. input cost is rising marginal cost is
    increasing

17
Falling MPP Implies Rising Marginal Cost

Diminishing marginal productivity implies . . .
Rising marginal cost
18
  • What about Marginal Revenue? The change in total
    revenue associated with one additional unit of
    input.
  • If marginal costs are increasing marginal revenue
    is decreasing.

19
Productivity- Right Mix of Output
20
REVIEW TERMINOLOGY
  • Factors of production- Resource inputs used to
    produce goods and services (land,labor,capital,
    entrepreneurship)
  • Productivity-Output per unit of input (output per
    labor hour)
  • Efficiency-maximum output of a good from the
    resources used in production
  • Opportunity Cost-The MOST DESIRABLE
  • GS that are forgone in order to obtain something
    else.
  • Short Run-The period in which the quantity
    (and/or quality) of some inputs cannot be changed.

21
Quick quiz
  • If input prices are rising, will Marginal cost be
    rising?
  • If you have a fixed amount of capital and
    continue to add labor inputs, will marginal
    product always increase?
  • What is marginal physical product?

22
Costs, Prices, Output in Competitive Markets
  • All competition that is not PURE is IMPERFECT
  • Whether a firm exists in a perfectly competitive
    market or imperfectly competitive market, it will
    TRY to MAXIMIZE PROFITS or MINIMIZE LOSSES.

23
Fixed, Variable, Total Costs
  • What is a definition of profit?

Which market might this carton apply today?
24
ANSWER!
  • TR-TCPROFIT
  • How much money am I taking in? (TR)
  • How much is it costing me to produce my output?
    (TC)

25
Economic Profit vs Accounting Profit(the
difference lies in how cost is defined)
  • Economic Cost Explicit Cost Implicit Cost
  • Accounting Costs are all the costs that have an
    explicit dollar cost attached to it. TR-TC
  • Economic cost represents the value of all
    resources used to produce a good or service
    opportunity cost.

The two diverge whenever a factor of production
is not paid an explicit wage (rent) (own the
land) (not paying yourself a salary)
26
Accounting, Economic and Normal Profit II
27
  • Suppose a company incurs the following costs
    labor, 400 equipment, 300 and materials,
    100. The company owns the building so it doesnt
    have to pay the usual 800 in rent.
  • What is the total accounting cost?
  • What is the total economic cost?
  • How would accounting and economic costs change if
    the company sold the building and then leased it
    back?

28
Fixed Costs
  • All costs are classified as fixed or variable. In
    the short run, the firm can only use its existing
    facilities to increase its output. During the
    short-run, there are several important costs that
    are fixed.
  • Fixed costs do not change when the firm changes
    its level of output
  • Name some
  • -interest on debts of the firm, payments for
    rent, insurance premiums, taxes on real property,
    salaries.

29
Average Fixed Cost AFC
  • Average fixed cost, AFC declines as the firm
    increases its output.
  • Divide TFC by Q AFC
  • TFC/Q AFC

30
Graph
  • 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

c O S T S
AFC
Quantity
31
Graph explanation
  • If a firm had nothing but fixed costs, the more
    it produced the lower its unit cost (AFC)
    However, the firm is also confronted by variable
    costs.
  • What are Variable Costs?
  • Variable Costs increase as the firm increases its
    output.
  • All costs that are not fixed---are variable!

32
Continued Variable Costs
  • When a firm increases its output, it must acquire
    more productive resources.
  • Examples
  • More laborers
  • Wages
  • Electricity
  • Paint, sugar, plastic, steel, etc.
  • Variable costs any costs that rises as the
    firm produces more and costs that fall as the
    firm produces less.
  • This is the cost that producers have control
    over.

33
Quick QuizIdentify which is Fixed or Variable
Cost
  • Mortgage payments on a factory
  • Electric bills at a print shop
  • The cost of a new robot at General Motors plant
  • Premiums on liability insurance at the XYZ
    Corporation
  • Wages paid to auto workers
  • Contract paid to top management at GE

34
Bottom Line---
  • The bottom line is productivity whether it is a
    worker on an assembly line or a CEO.
  • Remember Harry Truman said recession is when a
    neighbor loses his job..depression is when you
    lose yours! ?

Why is productivity measured by the federal
government?
35
Total Variable Cost and Average Variable Cost
  • AVC is found by dividing TVC by Q
  • TVC/Q AVC
  • Although Average fixed cost declines continually,
    average variable cost does not. At first AVC
    usually declines as the firms output increases.
    After reaching a minimum, then AVC begins to rise.

36
AVC and Diminishing Returns
  • The AVC curve will have the general shape of the
    letter U. This is explained by the Law of
    diminishing returns.
  • Law says as more and more units of a variable
    factor of production are added to a fixed factor
    of production (such as capital equipment)
    eventually a point will be reached at which the
    output accounted for by each additional unit of
    the variable factor will start to decline.

37
Total Cost
  • Total Cost is the sum of total fixed cost and
    total variable cost.
  • When a firm increases its output, total cost
    tends to rise
  • Fixed cost remains unchanged, naturally, but
    total cost will be pulled up by the rise in total
    variable cost with the rise in output.
  • ATC TC/Q or adding AFC AVC

38
  • Marginal Resource Cost
  • Marginal cost (MC) is the increase in total costs
    associated with a one unit increase in
    production. (see overhead chart)

39
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40
Graph ATC/AVC/AFC
41
Minimum Average Cost
  • The bottom of the U-shaped average total cost
    curve represents the minimum average total costs.
  • It identifies the lowest possible opportunity
    costs to produce the product.

42
A Cost Summary
  • The output decision has to be based not only on
    the capacity to produce (the production function)
    but also on the costs of production (the cost
    functions).

43
A Cost Summary
  • The marginal cost curve always intersects the ATC
    curve at its lowest point.

MC
ATC
44
Basic Cost Curves
MC
ATC
AVC
m
AFC
n
45
Friendly reminders
  • If marginal is greater than average, then average
    must be rising..(your 3 exams average to 85..
    Your 4th is 92.. Your average will increase above
    85)
  • If marginal is less than average, then average
    must be falling(your 4th grade is 74. This will
    pull down the average of 85)
  • If marginal equals average, then average is at
    its extreme (neither rising or falling) at that
    point..With a grade of 85 on your 4th test, your
    average grade will not change if you had an 85
    average on the other three exams.

46
Mathematical Rule
  • Whenever a number added to a series of numbers is
    less than their average, the average must
    decline.
  • When a number added to a series of numbers is
    larger than their average, the average must
    rise..
  • Marginal Cost helps a firm decide whether to
    increase or decrease output.
  • Marginal cost is the cost that the firm can
    control most directly.

47
Adding numbers
48
A Cost Summary
  • If MC gt ATC, ATC is increasing
  • If MC lt ATC, ATC is decreasing
  • If MC ATC, ATC at minimum

49
Identify these curves!
50
Production and CostShort and Long Run
  • Short Run - A period of time in which some inputs
    in the production process are fixed.
  • Long Run - A period of time in which all inputs
    in the production process can be varied (no
    inputs are fixed).

51
LONG RUN Costs
  • Over the long-run---ALL COSTS ARE VARIABLE.
  • Taxes, interest rates, and other costs that are
    fixed in the SR can change.
  • The size of the firm can also affect costs. The
    principle that explains this is called
  • ECONOMIES OF SCALE- (means as firms enlarge their
    plants, their unit costs decline because of mass
    production and other factors such as
  • Specialization, factor substitution, better
    equipment, research, marketing advantages,
    stability.

52
Long- Run Costs Continued
  • There are no fixed costs in the long-run
  • The long-run cost curve is just a summary of our
    best short-run cost possibilities using existing
    technology facilities.
  • Like all average cost curves, the long-run LATC
    curve has its own marginal cost curve. The
    long-run marginal cost LMC curve is not a
    composite of short-run marginal cost curves.
    Rather it is computed on the basis of the costs
    reflected in the long-run ACT curve itself.

53
Marginal Physical Product and Marginal Cost I
54
Notice that as the MPP curve rises, the MC curve
falls and as the MPP curve falls, the MC curve
rises.
55
Sunk Cost
  • A cost incurred in the past that cannot be
    changed by current decisions and therefore cannot
    be recovered.

56
Long-Run Average CostsLR Costs are determined by
SR options.
Best for output levels below a
Best for output levels in Excess of b
57
Long-Run Marginal Costs
  • The long-run marginal costs curve intersects our
    long-run cost curve at its lowest point.

58
Long-Run Costs with Unlimited Options
59
Economies of Scale
  • There are many optional plant sizes available in
    long-run production.
  • One option is the decision to use one large plant
    or several smaller plants to produce a given
    amount of output.

60
Constant Returns to Scale and Diseconomies of
Scale
  • Constant Returns increases in plant size do not
    affect minimum average cost minimum per-unit
    costs are identical for small plants and large
    plants.
  • Diseconomies of Scaleincrease in plant size
    results in reducing operating efficiency

61
Economies of Scale
62
Question Are trade deficits a signal that the
U.S. cannot compete in the global marketplace?Is
Outsourcing Good?
  • Answer No and Yes respectively. Low wages are
    not a reliable measure of global competitiveness.
  • Competition regardless of where it takes place,
    has to produce MORE OUTPUT for a given quantity
    of INPUTS.
  • A workers contribution to the production
    process is measured by MPP. A workers MPP
    depends on the quantity and quality of other
    resources in the production process plus the
    workers educational skills and skill-level.

63
U.S. Labor vs Mexico Labor
  • The higher wages paid in America as opposed to
    Mexico reflects the capital used in American
    production, education of the worker, advanced
    technology, etc.---must measure UNIT LABOR COST

Should the federal government be criticized for
NAFTA?
64
Checking unit labor costUnit Labor cost wage
rate MPP
  • America
  • Unit Labor Cost
  • 12.00 per hour
  • 6 units per hour
  • 2/unit of output
  • Mexico
  • Unit Labor Cost
  • 3.00 per hour
  • 1 unit/hr
  • 3/unit of output

65
Real World Labor Cost/wage rate
  • Low wage rate does not always indicate lower unit
    output cost. Service jobs are an exception if
    education stays levelChina has lower wage
    rateso should HP produce printers there?
  • Mexican labor in the previous example would be
    more costly to use even though the wage rate is
    lower.

66
Bottom Line Productive Statement
  • Productivity in any economy means staying
    competitive in the global markets and making
    more things than others.
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