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Lecture 3 Basic Micro: production and exchange

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Title: Lecture 3 Basic Micro: production and exchange


1
Lecture 3Basic Micro production and exchange
  • Introductory Economics for the Treasury
  • Dr. Paul Frijters
  • http//econrsss.anu.edu.au/frijters

2
Production
  • Key terms in this lecture
  • 1. Inputs resources production factors
  • 2. Outputs sold production outcomes
  • 3. Complementarity and substitution
  • 4. Costs of production.
  • 5. Increasing, constant, and decreasing returns
    to scale
  • 6. Comparative advantage and exchange
  • 7. Basic competition

3
Recap Factors of production

These two are known as the basic factors of
production. The other factors of production are
essentially a form of conserved labour.
4
Recap basic forms of sold output
  • 1. Final consumption good anything that can be
    directly consumed, i.e. that is valued for
    itself. E.g. a sigar.
  • 2. Intermediary production good something that
    is itself already a combination of basic
    production factors but serves as an input into
    the production of final consumption goods. E.g.
    shredded tobacco leaves, or stationary.
  • 3. Services intangible goods that are valued for
    themselves. E.g. security or entertainment.
  • Note that unsold production is a pure loss, i.e.
    waste.

5
Complements or substitutes?
  • In production
  • Two inputs are seen as complements when one input
    raises the productivity of the other input.
    Examples a computer and a worker, a sales
    department and a production department, a soldier
    and a gun, nuts and bolts, income tax laws and
    tax collectors, tertiary education systems and
    RD.
  • Two inputs are seen as substitutes when one input
    reduces or has the same function as the other
    input. Examples a computer and a typewriter, a
    combine harvester or low-skilled labour.

6
Rules of thumb
  • 1. High-skilled labour and capital are generally
    complements. Implication high-skilled labour
    profits from a low price of capital.
  • 2. Low-skilled labour and capital are
    substitutes. Implication low-skilled labour
    suffers from a low price of capital.
  • 3. Different specialisations are generally
    complements. Implication a higher degree of
    specialisation increases production.

7
Complement or substitute?
  • In Consumption
  • - two goods are said to be complements if the
    consumption value of one increases with the
    other. Examples a pipe and tobacco, a cd and a
    cd-player.
  • - two goods are said to be substitutes if the
    consumption value of the one decreases with
    consumption of the other. Examples two soft
    drinks, a car and a motorbike.

8
Basic terms Costs of production
  • Total Costs
  • A firm organises the manufacture of a good or
    service. An industry is made up of all those
    firms producing the same commodity. The amount
    spent on producing a given amount of a good is
    called total cost, TC, and is found by adding
    together variable and fixed costs.

9
Variable Costs
  • Variable costs, VC, are the costs that depend on
    how many goods are being made (output). If just
    one more unit is made then total variable costs
    rise. Variable costs include the following
  • Weekly wages paid to the shop floor workers.
  • The cost of buying raw materials and components.
  • The cost of electricity and gas.

10
Fixed Costs
  • Fixed costs, FC, are totally independent of
    output. Fixed costs have to be paid out even if
    the firm stops production. Fixed costs include
    the following
  • monthly salaries paid to managers
  • rent paid for the use of premises
  • rates paid to the council
  • any interest paid on loans
  • insurance payments in case of accidents
  • money put aside to replace work-out machines and
    vehicles sometime in the future (depreciation).

11
Average and Marginal Cost
  • Average cost, AC or unit is the cost of producing
    one item and is calculated by dividing total
    costs by total sold output.
  • Marginal cost, MC is the (long-run) cost of
    producing one extra unit and is calculated by
    dividing the change in total costs by the change
    in output.
  • Profit maximisation principle you choose your
    level of output such that the marginal revenue
    you obtain from the last good sold equals your
    marginal cost. If you cannot manipulate the
    price, you produce until marginal costs equals
    price.

12
Economies of scale
  • Increasing returns to scale when the unit costs
    go down with the scale of production. These occur
    when mass producing a good results in lower
    average cost.
  • Main example when these occur when fixed costs
    are high and variable costs are low.
  • Economies of scale occur within an firm
    (internal) or within an industry (external).

13
Internal economies of scale of firms
  • These are economies made within a firm as a
    result of mass production. As the firm produces
    more and more goods, so average cost begin to
    fall because of
  • Technical economies made in the actual production
    of the good. For example, large firms can use
    expensive machinery, intensively.
  • Managerial economies made in the administration
    of a large firm by splitting up management jobs
    and employing specialist accountants, salesmen,
    etc.
  • Financial economies made by borrowing money at
    lower rates of interest than smaller firms.
  • Marketing economies made by spreading the high
    cost of advertising on television and in national
    newspapers, across a large level of output.
  • Commercial economies made when buying supplies in
    bulk and therefore gaining a larger discount.
  • Research and development economies made when
    developing new and better products.

14
External economies to scale
  • External Economies of Scale
  • These are economies made outside the firm as a
    result of its location and occur when
  • A local skilled labour force is available.
  • Specialist local back-up forms can supply parts
    or services.
  • An area has a good transport network.
  • An area has an excellent reputation for producing
    a particular good. For example, Sydney is
    associated with tourism.

15
Internal Diseconomies of Scale
  • These occur when the firm has become too large
    and inefficient. As the firm increases
    production, eventually average costs begin to
    rise because
  • Management becomes out of touch with the shop
    floor and some machinery becomes over-manned.
  • Decisions are not taken quickly and there is too
    much form filling.
  • Lack of communication in a large firm means than
    management tasks sometimes get done twice.
  • Poor labour relations may develop in large
    companies.

16
External Diseconomies of Scale
  • These occur for instance when too many firms have
    located in one area. Unit costs begin to rise
    because
  • Local labour becomes scarce and firms now have to
    offer higher wages to attract new workers.
  • Land and factories become scarce and rents begin
    to rise.
  • Local roads become congested and so transport
    costs begin to rise.

17
Economies of scale and size
  • Basic point competition moves a system towards
    the point where the opportunities for economies
    of scale cease.
  • Why? As long as there are still increasing
    economies of scale, a bigger organisation has
    lower average costs and can hence undercut /
    drive out smaller competitors.

18
Implications
  • 1. Without interference, if the economies of
    scale continue to outweigh the diseconomies (also
    known as decreasing returns to scale), everything
    moves towards a single organisation, called a
    natural monopoly.
  • 2. From a cost-minimising perspective you want
    this to happen as long as you can control the
    power of the remaining organisation or trust this
    organisation to work in your interest.

19
Rules of thumb
  • 1. On the country level, production is generally
    believed to be constant returns to scale (i.e.
    there is no inherent reason why a small country
    is generally more or less productive than a
    bigger one).
  • 2. Manufacturing, network industries (mobile
    phones, basic software), and communication
    vehicles (languages) are generally believed to
    have increasing returns to scale.
  • Specialised professional services (accounting,
    law, consulting, engineering) are generally
    believed to quickly suffer from decreasing
    returns to scale.

20
Economies of scale in the state
  • 1. Economies of scale of information gathering
    it is very costly to set up an organisation that
    can continuously keep track of one person, but
    keeping track of the next persons becomes
    progressively easier.
  • 2. Economies of scale of violence to be able to
    punish one person anywhere is costly. To be able
    to do so with many becomes cheaper.

21
.
  • 3. Economies of scale in expectation formation
    it is very difficult to make one person believe
    that all other persons behave/think a certain
    way. It is only marginally more difficult to make
    everyone believe everyone else behaves/thinks a
    certain way. Expectation formation is related to
    state loyalty (we all support the same team
    because we all support the same team).
  • These are actually all examples of the economies
    of scale inherent in networks

22
The basic point about networks
  • First 4 points, 4 connections. Each point can
    travel to 3 others 12 point-destinations, 3
    point-destinations per node.

Second 5 point, 5 connections 20
point-destinations with only 1 More connection,
i.e. 8 point destination at a cost of 1 node more
23
Implications
  • 1. The state is the natural monopoly of violence,
    having defeated all other suppliers of violence
    with its lower cost.
  • 2. The state has lower costs of anything
    involving the monitoring of large slices of the
    population or anything involving the punishment
    of individuals. Simply from a cost point-of-view
    it should hence undertake all those activities
    where the involuntary cooperation of many is very
    important.

24
Examples of efficient state production
  • 1) taxation in general,
  • 2) organising education when young, whilst
    retrieving the cost in the form of taxes when
    old,
  • 3) basic welfare insurance schemes and basic
    pension schemes where again the payment is tax,
  • 4) The monitoring of laws on individuals and
    organisations,

25
Comparative advantage and exchange
  • Basic terms
  • 1. The Production Possibilities Frontier (PPF) is
    a graph showing the various combinations of
    output that the economy can possibly produce
    given the available factors of production and
    technology.
  • 2. A producer who requires smaller quantities of
    inputs to produce a good has an absolute
    advantage in the production of that good.
  • 3. A producer who has lower opportunity costs of
    producing a good has a comparative advantage in
    the production of that good, i.e. is relatively
    more productive than another in this activity
    versus another one.

26
Conclusion on basic exchange
  • 1. Voluntary exchange allows each person (or
    country) to specialise in what they are
    relatively best at, leading to gains for both.
  • 2. Preventing voluntary exchange in such a
    stylised environment, for instance via tariffs or
    quotas or even outright trade bans, leads to loss
    for both.

27
Example of the interview
  • Suppose you are in a country that exports wool to
    a specific other country and imports potatoes.
    Your country is particularly suited for producing
    wool and is particularly badly suited for making
    potatoes.

28
.
  • Nevertheless, a local farmer wants to start
    producing potatoes but cannot compete in price
    with the foreign import. He asks you to ban or
    restrict the import of potatoes. You do not fear
    reprisals of the other country if you would.
  • What do you do and what is your reasoning?

29
Standard economic answer
  • A quota prevents specialisation into fields of
    comparative advantage (here wool) and hence
    leads to a loss for this country even in the
    absence of reprisals. Giving the farmer a subsidy
    to try potatoes merely impoverishes the taxpayers
    (the wool farmers)
  • Equivalent formulations
  • - the potato farmer can be put to better use you
    tell him to grow wool or look for something else
    to do.
  • - consumers (i.e. the wool farmers) lose out when
    forced to consume home-grown potatoes.

30
Distribution of answers
  • - the majority (over 60) had roughly correct
    answers. Many added political considerations.
  • - some 40 was susceptible to the belief that
    protecting your home industry improves the
    outcome for your own country, which in this
    stylised example is untrue the protected
    industry (home potatoes) gains at the expense of
    the other industry (wool) via higher potatoe
    prices. There is a net loss which is the gains
    from specialisation.

31
Rules of thumb
  • 1. The majority of trade is within small areas
    trade between specialists occurs mainly within
    villages, provinces, and countries.
  • 2. One has comparative advantages in the
    production of things that require the factor of
    production (resource) you have most.
  • 2a. For Australia that includes the production of
    things needing a lot of land.
  • 2b. For China and India that means things whose
    production needs a lot of low-skilled labour.
  • 2c. For the EU/US that means capital and
    skill-intensive production.

32
Sneak preview of next week
33
Competition with many suppliers basic intuition
  • Sellers (cost)
  • 30 (price offers)
  • 32
  • 34
  • 36
  • 40
  • 45
  • 50
  • 80
  • 120

Buyer prepared to pay 100 AUS
34
Interpretation
  • 1. The supply at price less than 30 is 0, and
    increases with price.
  • 2. If the sellers can coordinate, they would set
    the price to 100. Without coordination, they fear
    the other
  • 3. The price bidding stops only when the minimum
    cost seller offers a price just below 32. He
    makes a profit of 2. The buyer makes a surplus
    of 68.
  • 4. If one seller other than the minimum cost
    seller captures the market, the price would be
    higher and costs are inefficiently high.

35
More buyers .
Buyers prepared to pay
  • Sellers (cost) (price offers)
  • 30 (100)
  • 32 (70)
  • 34 (40)
  • 36 (35)
  • 40 (33)
  • 45 (31)
  • 50 (29)
  • 80
  • 120

36
Implications
  • 1. When price too low (say, 30), more goods are
    demanded than supplied drives up price.
  • 2. When price is too high (say, 80), more goods
    are supplied than demanded drives down price
  • 3. Here, when the price is just below 35, demand
    equals supply and no other buyer or supplier
    enters the market.
  • 4. With many uncoordinating suppliers, it will be
    the lowest cost suppliers who eventually produce
    which is efficient from a social view.
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