Title: Supply 2
1Supply (2)
- Supply (2) Long-run Costs
2Reading
- Sloman Economics (5th edition)
- Pages 134-137
3Guide to making notes / learning objectives
- Explain how the shape of the long-run average
cost (LRAC) curve relates to the phenomena of
increasing, decreasing, and constant returns to
scale, and to economies of scale, diseconomies of
scale and constant costs. - List assumptions behind LRAC curve
- Explain relationship between SRAC and LRAC.
4LONG-RUN COSTS
- Long-run average costs
- shape of the LRAC curve
5Alternative long-run average cost curves
Economies of Scale
Costs
O
Output
6Alternative long-run average cost curves
Diseconomies of Scale
Costs
O
Output
7Alternative long-run average cost curves
Constant costs
Costs
O
Output
8A typical long-run average cost curve
Costs
O
Output
9A typical long-run average cost curve
Economies of scale
Constant costs
Diseconomies of scale
Costs
O
Output
10Assumptions behind the curve
- Input prices do not change
- The state of technology and quality of inputs
does not change - Firms choose the least-cost combination of inputs
for each output.
11LONG-RUN COSTS
- Long-run marginal costs and the relationship with
long-run average costs
12Long-run average and marginal costs
Economies of Scale
Costs
LRAC
O
Output
13Long-run average and marginal costs
LRAC
Diseconomies of Scale
Costs
O
Output
14Long-run average and marginal costs
Constant costs
Costs
LRAC
LRMC
O
Output
15Long-run average and marginal costs
Initial economies of scale, then diseconomies of
scale
LRAC
Costs
O
Output
16Relationship between long-run and short-run
average costs
17Deriving long-run average cost curves factories
of fixed size
1 factory
Costs
2 factories
3 factories
O
Output
18Deriving long-run average cost curves factories
of fixed size
SRAC5
SRAC1
SRAC2
SRAC4
SRAC3
LRAC
Costs
O
Output
19Long-run cost curves in practice
- Minimum efficient scale
- See case study on pages 136-137