Title: Business Organisation and Production Costs
1Business Organisation and Production Costs
2Todays Lecture Structure
- Definitions of cost and profit
- Short run and long run
- Different components of costs
- Economies and diseconomies of scale
3Costs and Profits
- A basic assumption in economics is that the
driving motive of business decisions is profit
maximisation. - Profits total revenue - total costs
- Economists and accountants measure profits in
different ways
4Costs and Profits
- Total revenue price x quantity
- Costs are treated differently
- Explicit costs payments to non-owners of a firm
for the supply of their resources (wages paid to
labour, costs of electricity, etc.) - Implicit costs the opportunity costs of using
the resources already owned by the firm, where no
payment is made to outsiders (use of the factory,
input of the owner / manager,)
5Economic Profits
- Profit total revenue - total opportunity cost
- or
- Profit total revenue - (total explicit costs
total implicit costs) - Economists refer to a zero economic profit as
normalprofit (minimum necessary to keep a firm
in operation)
6The short and the long run a formal definition
- The distinction between SR and LR depends on the
ability to vary the quantity of inputs /
resources used in production - Distinction between fixed variable inputs
- fixed inputs cannot be changed during the period
of time under consideration (e.g. physical
capital assets) - a variable inputs can be changed during the
period of time under consideration (e.g. labour) - So
- Short run a period of time when there is at
least one fixed input - Long run a period of time when all inputs are
variable
7The production function
- A production function is a technical relationship
between the maximum amount of output a firm can
produce with their inputs
This is a short run production function since
the capital stock is being held fixed
8Fig. 8.1 A short run production function
Output per day
Quantity of labour
- The relationship between the change in total
output and labour is the marginal product of
labour (i.e. by how much output goes up with an
extra unit of labour - holding all other factors
constant) - Hiring more workers increases output but not at
a constant rate - The law of diminishing marginal returns states
that beyond some point the marginal product
decreases as additional units of a variable
factor are added to a fixed factor.
9Relation Between the Production Function and the
Marginal Product of Labour
Output per day
Quantity of labour
MPL
10Short run costs
- Total costs total fixed costs total variable
costs - TC TFC TVC
- Total fixed cost costs that do not vary with
output - Total variable cost costs that vary as output
changes
11Fig. 8.3 Total Cost Curves
Cost
Output
12Average Costs
- Average costs costs per unit of output
- Average fixed cost TFC divided by quantity
produced AFC TFC / Q - as output rises AFC falls continuously
- Average variable cost TVC divided by quantity
produced AVC TVC / Q - usually average variable cost is U-shaped, with
AVC falling initially and then rising as it
becomes more costly to produce additional units
of output. - Average total costs AFC AVC TC/Q
13Fig. 8.4 Average Costs
Cost
Output
14Marginal Cost
- Change in total costs due to a unit change in
output
Crucial!
If the MC is less than the ATC, then the ATC
must be falling. If the MC is more than the ATC,
then the ATC must be increasing
15Fig 8.5 Average and Marginal Costs
Cost
ATC
Output
16Fig 8.6 Average and Marginal Costs
Cost
ATC
AVC
Output
17Long Run Production Costs
- A firm operates in the short run when there is
insufficient time to alter some fixed inputs - Butthe firm plans in the long run, when all
inputs are variable - The long run average cost (LRAC) traces the
lowest cost per unit at which a firm can produce
any level of output, after the firm builds any
desired plant size
18Fig. 8.7 The LRAC or The Firms Planning Curve
Cost
SRATCl
SRATCs
SRATCm
40
30
Output
6
12
The plant size selected in the LR depends on the
expected level of production
19Fig. 8.8 The LRAC with unlimited plant size
Cost
Output
20Fig. 8.9 Scale economies
Cost
Economies of scale
Constant returns to scale
Diseconomies of scale
Output
- LRAC varies from industry to industry
- Usually economies of scale dominate diseconomies
of scale