Title: THE THEORY AND ESTIMATION OF COST
1THE THEORY AND ESTIMATION OF COST
2Cost in Managerial Decisions
- Costs become more important as higher profit
margins are harder to achieve as a result of - increasing competition
- changing technology
- customer demand
- Firms look for ways to cut costs in their
production processes by - restructuring and downsizing
- outsourcing
- merging and consolidating
3Definition of Cost
- For reporting purposes, cost is defined within
the domain of the accounting department. - For decision making purposes, cost is defined
based on the concept of relevancy. - A cost is relevant if it is affected by a
management decision. That is, a relevant cost
changes as a result of the decision made by the
management.
4Historical vs Replacement Cost
- E.g. You are holding an inventory of computer
chips. - The historical cost of the chips inventory is
750,000. - The current market value of the chips is
1,000,000. - If you decide to use the chips in production
today, which cost is relevant? -
5- The relevant cost is the current market value
(the replacement cost). - If the firm decides to sell the chips inventory
instead of using it in production, the firm could
earn 1,000,000 from this sale. - Hence, by using the chips in production, the firm
is forgoing the opportunity to receive the
1,000,000. - Historical cost of the chips is irrelevant for
the production decision.
6Opportunity Cost vs Out-of-Pocket Cost
- Opportunity cost is very important in managerial
decision making because it highlights the
consequences of making choices under conditions
of scarcity. - Opportunity cost is the amount or value forgone
in choosing one activity over the next best
alternative. - It is considered to be an implicit or indirect
cost.
7- An implicit cost can be contrasted with an
explicit or direct cost that represents an
out-of-pocket expense. - In the example of computer chips, the replacement
cost of 1,000,000 is the opportunity cost of
using the chips in production instead of selling
them in the market. - If the firm needs additional chips for production
and purchases them from the market, the expense
associated with this purchase would be the
out-of-pocket cost.
8Sunk vs Incremental Cost
- Incremental cost is the cost that varies with the
range of options available in a decision. - It is also called the escapable cost. If a
cost can be avoided when the decision is not
made, then it is escapable and is an incremental
cost. - An incremental cost is incurred only if the
decision is made and an alternative is chosen.
9Sunk vs Incremental Cost
- Sunk cost is the cost that does not change in
accordance with the decision alternatives. The
sunk cost is the same no matter which alternative
you choose. - Sunk cost is an inescapable cost.
- It is a cost that is incurred whether or not
there is any decision to be made about
alternatives.
10- In the example of computer chips, assume that the
current market value of the chips is 550,000
(recall that the historical cost is 750,000). - If the firm decides to use the chips in
production, the relevant cost for the firm is
550,000 - 550,000 is the replacement cost.
- 550,000 is the opportunity cost.
- 550,000 is the incremental cost since depending
on whether you decide to produce or sell, the
cost will change.
11- 750,000 - 550,000 200,000 is the sunk cost
since whether the firm produces or sells, the
firm has already paid 750,000 for these chips
and the difference between the replacement value
and the historical value is a sunk cost. - 200,000 of sunk cost is an irrelevant cost for
the decision about production. - If technology changes and the chips in the
inventory become obsolete, then the market value
of the chips will be zero. - In this case, all of the historical cost of
750,000 is the sunk cost to the firm.
12Costs and Profits
- The economists concept of profit differs from
that of the accountant. - In both cases,
- profit revenues - costs
- Economic cost ? Accounting cost
- Accounting cost out-of-pocket costs
depreciation - Economic cost Accounting cost Opportunity cost
13Economic Profit
- E.g. The manager of a small supermarket wants to
open and operate her own store. She will leave
her current job and use 50,000 of her savings
for this business venture. Her current salary is
45,000 and her 50,000 savings are currently
earning 10 interest in a savings deposit.
14Accounting and Economic Costs Related to Opening
Her Own Store
15Normal and Economic Profit
16Normal and Economic Profit
- The point of normal profit would be the economic
break-even for the firm. - Economic break-even indicates that the firms
revenue is sufficient to cover both its
out-of-pocket expense and its opportunity cost. - A normal profit does not mean no profit.
- Total economic cost includes the opportunity cost
of all resources used. - The return on capital is included as a cost since
it represents the opportunity cost of using the
capital in the current alternative.
17The Relationship Between Production and Cost
- The cost function is the production function
expressed in monetary rather than physical units. - Assumptions about the short-run production
function also apply to the short-run cost
function.
18- In addition, for the cost function we assume that
the firm is a price taker in the input market.
Therefore, it can use as many or as few inputs as
it desires as long as it pays the going market
price for them. - In the input market, the resources are still
scarce. However, any given firm is so small in
comparison with the whole market that the firm
can use as many units of input as it desires if
it pays the going market price for inputs.
19An Example Production Process
20- When the total product (Q) increases at an
increasing rate, total variable cost (TVC)
increases at a decreasing rate. - When the total product (Q) increases at a
decreasing rate, total variable cost (TVC)
increases at an increasing rate. - Total variable cost is a mirror image of total
product.
21- When the firms marginal product is increasing,
its marginal cost of production is decreasing. - When the firms marginal product is decreasing
(when the law of diminishing returns takes
affect), its marginal cost is increasing.
22Total, Average, and Marginal Cost
- total cost total fixed cost total variable
cost - TC TFC TVC
- average cost average fixed cost average
variable cost - TC / Q TFC / Q TVC / Q
- AC AFC AVC
- marginal cost marginal fixed cost marginal
variable cost - MC ?TFC / ?Q ?TVC / ?Q
- MC MVC
23The Short Run Cost Function
- Two inputs labor (L) and capital (K)
- Short-run production period
- A single product
- A given level of technology
- Price taker for the price of inputs
- The firm is operating most efficiently at all
levels of output. - Underlying production function is affected by the
law of diminishing marginal returns
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25TC
TVC
TFC
MC
AC
AVC
26- Average fixed cost declines steadily over the
range of production. - Average variable cost declines at first but
starts to increase after 4 units. - Average total cost also declines at first but
starts to increase after 4 units. - Marginal cost declines and then starts to
increase once the third unit of output is
produced. - When MC lt AVC, AVC is falling.
- When MC gt AVC, AVC is rising.
- When MC AVC, AVC is at its minimum.
27How to Increase Cost Efficiency in the Short Run?
- Since the firm is already operating as
efficiently as it can, the costs can be reduced
only if input prices come down. - In this case, the average variable cost curve
would shift downward. - If a fixed cost component becomes cheaper, the
average fixed cost curve would shift downward.
28/TL
/TL
MC1
MC1
MC2
MC2
AC1
AC1
AC2
AC2
AVC1
AVC1
AVC2
AVC2
Q
Q
When there is a reduction in input prices, AVC
and MC are affected at the same time.
When there is a reduction in input prices, AVC
and MC are affected at the same time.
29/TL
MC1
AC1
AC2
AVC1
Q
When there is a reduction in fixed costs, only AC
is affected and AVC and MC are not affected.
30The Long Run Cost Function
- In the long run, all inputs to a firms
production function may be changed. - There are no fixed inputs and thus there are no
fixed costs. - Decisions regarding long-run cost of operations
are considered to be part of the managements
planning horizon.
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32LRMC
LRAC
The long-run cost function exhibits the same
pattern of behavior as the short-run cost
function.
33Similarity Between Short-Run and Long-Run Cost
Functions
- The reason the short-run cost function exhibits
the decreasing-increasing pattern is the law of
diminishing marginal returns. - The reason the long-run cost function exhibits
the decreasing-increasing pattern is
increasing-decreasing returns to scale.
34IRTS
CRTS
DRTS
LRTP
LRTC
IRTS
CRTS
DRTS
35Economies of Scale
- If a firms long-run average cost declines as
output increases, the firm is experiencing
economies of scale. - The primary reason for economies of scale is the
underlying returns to scale in the firms
long-run production function. - The returns to scale and economies / diseconomies
of scale are mirror images of each other.
36/TL
LRAC
Q
economies of scale
constant returns to scale (neither economies
nor diseconomies)
diseconomies of scale
37Possible Reasons for Economies of Scale
- Specialization in the use of labor and capital
- Indivisible nature of many types of capital
equipment - Productive capacity of capital equipment rising
faster than purchase price - Economies in maintaining inventory of replacement
parts and maintenance personnel - Discounts from bulk purchases
- Lower cost of raising capital funds
- Spreading of promotional and research and
development costs - Management efficiencies (line and staff)
38Possible Reasons for Diseconomies of Scale
- Disproportionate rise in transportation costs
- Input market imperfections (e.g. wage rates
driven up) - Management coordination and control problems
- Disproportionate rise in staff and indirect labor
39The Envelope Curve
- The LRAC curve can be represented as a
combination of SRAC curves corresponding to each
level of scale (capacity) along the LRAC. - This acknowledges the fact that once a firm
commits itself to a certain level of capacity, it
must consider at least one of the inputs fixed as
it varies the rest.
40/TL
SRAC8
SRAC1
SRAC7
SRAC2
SRAC3
SRAC6
v
v
SRAC4
v
SRAC5
v
v
v
v
Q
Q
economies of scale
diseconomies of scale
41- The firms LRAC curve is the envelope of the
various SRAC curves. - Short-run average cost curves for the larger
plants are positioned to the right of the curves
for smaller ones. - Plants with larger capacities are greatly
influenced by economies or diseconomies of scale.
42- As a result of economies of scale, SRAC2 is
positioned below and to the right of SRAC1. - The minimum point of SRAC2 is lower than that for
SRAC1. - As a result of diseconomies of scale, SRAC6 is
positioned above and to the right of SRAC5. - The minimum point of SRAC6 is higher than that
for SRAC5.
43- Asterisks mark the minimum points on the SRACs.
- The asterisk for Plant 2s minimum SRAC depicts a
level above the average cost that would be
incurred by Plant 3 in the short-run for a
comparable level of production. - The envelope curve shows that over certain ranges
of output, a firm is better off operating a
larger plant.
44The Learning Curve
- A line showing the relationship between labor
cost and additional units of output. - Downward slope of the learning curve indicates
that the additional cost per unit declines as the
level of output increases because workers improve
with practice. - The reduction in cost from this particular source
of improvement is referred to as the learning
curve effect.
45- The learning curve effect is measured by the
percentage decrease in additional labor cost each
time the output doubles. - Learning rate is given by the following formula
- This is the rate at which average cost falls as
cumulative output doubles. -
46unit labor cost
cumulative output over time
47unit labor cost
C
B
A
LRACt
LRACt1
cumulative output over time
Qt
Qt1
From C to B, learning effect From B to A,
economies of scale effect
48Economies of Scope
- The reduction in a firms unit cost that results
from producing two or more goods jointly rather
than separately. - Sharing certain aspects of the production
process, the firm is able to decrease its unit
cost.
49COST-VOLUME-PROFIT ANALYSIS
Break-Even Analysis
- Break-even volume is the sales level for which
total revenue equals total cost. - After the break-even level, revenues start to
exceed costs and profits start to build up. - The critical question is whether the sales volume
will reach and surpass the break-even level.
50TL/
TC
TR
Q
Q1
Q2
?
There are two break-even sales levels. The
profits are positive between these two
quantities.
51TC
TL/
TR
Q
Q1
Q2
?
There are two break-even sales levels. The
profits are positive between these two
quantities.
52TL/
TR
TC
?
Q
Q
There is a single break-even sales level. The
profits are positive after this quantity.
53Applications of Break-Even Analysis
- BE analysis is very useful when decisions need
to be made about the price and quantity levels of
a proposed product.
54TL/
TR2
TR1
TC1
TC2
Q
Q4
Q3
Q2
Q1
Q4 initial break-even volume Q3 break-even
after costs decrease and revenues are constant Q2
break-even after revenues increase and costs
are constant Q1 break-even after revenues
increase and costs decrease
55Algebraic Calculation of Break-Even
- Break-even occurs where total revenues are equal
to total costs -
-
where CM is the contribution margin.
56In a multi-product firm, each product may be
required to attain a specific profit target to
maintain its place in the product
mix. Break-even analysis can be used to find the
sales volume at which this profit target will be
reached. Since the profit target is a constant
monetary figure in TL or , it can be added to
the fixed-cost figure to represent the total TL
or amount that must be obtained through
contributions from each unit sold.
This calculation will give the sales volume
necessary to cover the fixed costs and to attain
the desired target profit.
57 Break-even analysis is useful where a product
may be manufactured under two or more
technologies of production. E.g. A firm is
considering three alternative methods of
manufacturing for a product. The market price
for the product is established at 4.00 per
unit. Alternative 1 FC 20,000 AVC 2.00
/ unit Alternative 2 FC 45,000 AVC 1.00
/ unit Alternative 3 FC 70,000 AVC 0.50
/ unit
58- Assume that the decision makers estimate of
sales volume exhibit the following distribution
The profitability figures under different sales
scenarios indicate that Alternative 1 is the most
suitable choice since its break-even point is at
the low end of this distribution.
59TL/
TR
TC
Q
Q10
Alternative 1 FC 20,000 AVC 2.00 / unit P
4.00 / unit
60TL/
TR
TC
Q
Q15
Alternative 2 FC 45,000 AVC 1.00 / unit P
4.00 / unit
61TL/
TR
TC
Q
Q20
Alternative 1 FC 70,000 AVC 0.50 / unit P
4.00 / unit