Title: Key issues
1Key issues
- 1. measuring costs
- 2. short-run cost minimization
- 3. long-run cost minimization
- 4. costs are lower in long run
- 5. costs of producing multiple goods
simultaneously
2Two-step procedure to choose technology
- 1. pick all technologically efficient production
processes - 2. from these technologically efficient
production processes, pick the one that is
economically efficient (minimizes cost)
3Two reasons to study costs
- 1. understanding relationship between costs of
inputs and production helps us determine least
costly way to produce - 2. relationship between output and costs
determines nature of an industry - how many firms are in the industry
- how high price is relative to cost
4Business vs. economic costs
- business costs only explicit costs (out of
pocket) - economic costs explicit cost implicit cost
opportunity cost - opportunity cost
- value of best alternative use of the resource
- classic example "There's no such thing as a free
lunch" - What have you given up to study opportunity
costs
5Cost of running your own firm
- explicit cost 40,000 per year (rent, materials,
wage payments) - instead of paying yourself a salary, you keep any
profit at year's end - your labor opportunity cost 25,000/year you
could have earned working for another firm - business cost 40,000
- economic cost 65,000 40,000 25,000
6Its exactly this sort of attitude toward work,
Orville, that has kept you from owning your own
business.
7Capital costs
- capital is a durable good a product that is
usable for years - capital may be rented or purchased
8If capital is rented
- rental payment is the opportunity cost
- using the rental rate avoids 2 measurement
problems - don't have to worry how to allocate the initial
purchase cost over time - any adjustment in the cost of capital over time
is reflected in the rental rate
9If capital is purchased
- firm's bookkeeper may
- expense cost by recording purchase price when
it's made, or - amortize cost by spreading it over life of
capital according to IRS's arbitrary rules - economists amortize capital cost based on its
opportunity cost at each moment of time - amount that firm could charge others to rent
capital - thus, economists always use rental rate
10Depreciate a business vehicle
- Toyota Land Cruiser (sports utility vehicle) and
Cadillac Seville (car) both cost 45,000 - tax law lets you depreciate Land Cruiser in 6
years vs. 23 for Seville - after 5 years depreciated 42,408 for Land
Cruiser vs. 14,460 for Seville - reason
- Land Cruiser weighs more than 6,000 pounds and
Seville doesn't - Congress uses 6,000 pounds as a criterion to
distinguish between trucks and cars
11Short-run cost measures
- fixed cost (F) production expense that does not
vary with output - variable cost (VC) production expense that
changes with quantity of output produced - total cost (C)
- C VC F
12Sunk fixed cost
- usually assume fixed cost is sunk expenditure
that cannot be recovered - opportunity cost of capital is zero
- because you can't get this expenditure back no
matter what you do, so ignore it when making
decisions - example walk out of a bad movie early,
regardless of what you paid to attend - otherwise, fixed cost is avoidable
13(No Transcript)
14 15Marginal cost (MC)
16Average cost concepts
17Short-Run Cost Curves
18MC curve cuts AC and AVC at their minimum points
- AC and AVC curves fall when MC is below them, and
rise when MC is above them - therefore, MC cuts AC and AVC curves at their
minimum points
19Solved problem
- if short-run cost function is
- C 125 2q q2
- what are the
- fixed cost
- variable cost
- average cost
- average fixed cost
- average variable cost?
20Answer
21Production function determines shape of cost curve
- production function shows how many inputs needed
to produce a given level of output - firm's cost multiply quantity of each input by
its price and sum
22Solved problem
- if a janitorial service firm's only variable cost
is wage payments where - wage w 8 per worker per an hour
- each worker cleans 4 offices per hour
- what are the
- variable cost
- average variable cost
- marginal cost of cleaning one more office?
23Answer
24Answer (continued)
25Norwegian printing firm
- short-run AC curve is U-shaped even though AVC is
strictly upward sloping - firm's capital is fixed at 100
26Short-Run Cost Curves for a Printing Firm
27Cost effects of 10 specific tax
28Effects of a Specific Tax on Cost Curves
29Cost effects of lump-sum tax
30(No Transcript)
31 Lump-sum tax California
- 800-per-year tax is levied for the privilege
of doing business in California
32Lump-sum tax New York
- 900,600 for three-year license to sell hot
dogs in front of NY City's Metropolitan Museum of
Art
33Long-run costs
- firm adjusts all its inputs so its cost of
production is as low as possible - if capital and other variable can be varied, no
LR fixed costs (F 0) - then LR total cost LR variable cost
- C VC
34Input choice
- choose from all technologically efficient
combinations of inputs, the economically
efficient combination of inputs
35Costs of input bundles
36A Family of Isocost Lines
37Properties of isocost lines
38Cost minimization for Norwegian printing firm
39Equivalent cost-minimizing rules
- to pick lowest-cost combination of inputs
to produce a given level of output when isoquants
are smooth - lowest-isocost rule pick bundle of inputs where
lowest isocost line touches isoquant - tangency rule isoquant is tangent to isocost
line MRTS ratio of the input prices w/r - last-dollar rule last dollar spent on one input
produces as much extra output as last dollar
spent on any other input
40Derivation of last dollar rule
41Cost minimizing vs. output maximizing
- with smooth isoquants firm determines best
factor proportions by either - cost minimizing what is the lowest cost, C, at
which the firm can produce output q? - output maximizing What is the most output, q,
that can be produced at cost C?
42Relative factor price changes
- cause firm to change the mix of inputs used
- firm substitutes relatively less expensive inputs
for more expensive ones - Since r 8 kr
- original wage 24 kr, so w/r 3
- new wage 8 kr, so w/r 1
43Change in Factor Price
44Demolishing buildings U.S.
- raze through implosion (dynamite) or use
equipment
45Demolish buildings Hong Kong
- large number of workers break top story into
little pieces, cart it away, then demolish lower
floors - reason relative cost of labor is much lower in
Hong Kong
46LR cost varies with output
- examine lowest-cost factor combination for
various levels of output - expansion path
- cost-minimizing combination of labor and capital
for each output level - curve through tangency points is LR expansion
path - expansion path shows same relationship between LR
cost and output as the LR cost curve
47Expansion Path and Long-Run cost Curve
48Expansion Path and Long-Run cost Curve
49Solved Problem
- suppose that the wage rate falls (while the
rental rate of capital remains unchanged) - what happens to the expansion path?
50(No Transcript)
51Results for Lower Wage
52Shape of LR cost curves
- reason why LR AC is U-shaped different than SR
- SR
- SR AC initially downward sloping because AFC is
downward sloping - SR AC later upward sloping because of diminishing
returns - LR
- no fixed cost in LR (usually)
- production function returns to scale determine
shape
53Long-Run Cost Curves
54Economies of scale
55Causes of economies of scale
- returns to scale in production function
- sufficient condition for AC economies of scale
- not necessary condition
- in LR, firm may change ratio of K/L as it expands
output, so could have economies of scale in costs
without increasing returns to scale in production
56Costs lower in long run
- in LR, firm chooses optimal plant size level to
minimize its LR cost given q - because the firm cannot vary its capital in SR
but can in LR - SR cost ? LR cost
- SR cost gt LR cost if the "wrong" level of capital
is used in SR
57Long-Run Average Cost as the Envelope of
Short-Run Average Cost Curves
58 Long-Run Cost Curves in Printing
59Long-Run Cost Curves in Oil Pipelines
60Why LR cost ? SR cost
- firms have more flexibility in long run
- technical progress may lower cost over time
- learning by doing productive skills and
knowledge of better ways to produce that workers
and managers gain from experience
61Learning by Doing
62Learning by Doing
63Technical progress
- Thompson Blank (2000) tomato harvester
1960-1997 - labor use falls
- labor for harvesting processing tomatoes fell
from 5.3 to 0.4 hours per ton - harvest cost fell from 50 of total cost to 33
- electronic sorter further reduced harvest cost to
16 of total cost
64Cost of producing multiple goods
- outputs are linked if a single input is used to
produce all of them - mutton and wool both come from sheep
- beef and hides come from cattle
- heating fuel and gasoline come from oil
- it is less expensive to produce goods jointly
than separately (beef hides)
65Joint production
- Laura spends one day collecting mushrooms and
wild strawberries in the wood - economies of scope (PPF1)
- picking only mushrooms 8 pints
- pick only strawberries 6 pints
- pick some of each 6 pints of mushrooms and 4
pints of strawberries - no economies of scope (PPF2)
- mushrooms grow in one section and strawberries in
another - PPF2 is a straight line
66Joint Production
67Measuring scope (SC)
68Scope
69Economies of scope
- refining cheaper to produce motor gasoline,
distillate fuels, and other refined products
together - auto manufacturing four automobile manufacturers
- 25 less expensive (SC 0.25) to produce large
cars together with small cars and trucks than to
produce large cars separately and small cars and
trucks together - no economies of scope from producing trucks
together with small and large cars
70Diseconomies of scope
- using railroads to transport freight and
passengers together - 41 less expensive (SC -0.41) to transport
passengers and freight separately than together - in early 1970s passenger service was transferred
from the private railroad companies to Amtrak,
and services are separate
71Summary
- cost minimization from all technologically
efficient production processes, choose one that
is economically efficient
72Measuring costs
- use economic cost explicit implicit costs
- opportunity cost value of next best alternative
use includes both explicit and implicit costs
732. Short-run costs
- some factors are fixed in the SR
- costs vary with only variable (nonfixed) inputs
743. Long-run costs
- all factors can be varied, so all costs are
variable - AC AVC
- costs minimized where
- lowest isocost touches the relevant isoquant
- isocost is tangent to the isoquant
- last dollar spent on any input increases output
by as much as last dollar spent on any other input
754. Costs are lower in long run
- more flexibility in LR
- technological progress
- learning by doing
765. Costs of producing multiple goods
- economies of scope less expensive to produce
goods jointly rather than separately - diseconomies of scope less expensive to produce
separately