Title: By Muhammad Shahid Iqbal
1By Muhammad Shahid Iqbal
Engineering Economics
Module No. 06 Theory of Cost
2The Concepts of cost
- Should I go to work today?
- Should I go to college after high school?
- Should the government spend money on a new weapon
system? - These are decisions that are made everyday
however, what is the cost of our decisions? - What is the cost of going to work, or the
decision not to go to work? - What is the cost of University, or not to go to
University? - Finally what is the cost of buying that weapon
system, or the cost of not buying that weapon? - In economics it is called opportunity cost.
3The Concepts of cost
- Opportunity cost is the cost we pay when we give
up something to get something else. There can be
many alternatives that we give up to get
something else, but the opportunity cost of a
decision is the most desirable alternative we
give up to get what we want. - Opportunity cost of an input is the return that
it could earn in its best alternative use.
4The Concepts of cost
- Accounting Costs and Economic Costs
- A firms cost of production includes all the
opportunity costs of making its output of goods
and services. - Explicit and Implicit Costs
- A firms cost of production include explicit
costs and implicit costs. - Explicit costs All cash payments which the firm
makes to other factor owners for purchasing or
hiring the various factors.
5The Concepts of cost
- Implicit costs The normal return on
money-capital invested by the entrepreneur and
wages or salary of his services and money rewards
for other factors which the entrepreneur himself
owns and employs them in his own firm. - Economic Cost Accounting costs Implicit costs
6Economic Profit v/s Accounting Profit
- Economists measure a firms economic profit as
total revenue minus total cost, including both
explicit and implicit costs. - Accountants measure the accounting profit as the
firms total revenue minus only the firms
explicit costs. - When total revenue exceeds both explicit and
implicit costs, the firm earns economic profit. - Economic profit is smaller than accounting profit
7Total and Variable Costs
The total expenditure put up by an entrepreneur
to produce a certain amount of a good is called
TC C(Q) FC VC Fixed costs are those costs
that do not vary with the quantity of output
produced Variable costs are those costs that do
vary with the quantity of output produced
8The elements of cost
- Fixed costs or overhead cost can be classified
into factory overhead, administration overhead,
selling overhead and distribution overhead. - Variable costs can be further classified into
direct material, direct labor and direct
expenses. - Market price it is the price that a good or
service is offered at, or will fetch, in the
marketplace - The selling price is derived as shown below
- Direct material cost Dir. labor cost Direct
expenses Prime cost - Prime cost Factory overhead factory cost
- Factory cost office and administrative overhead
cost of production - Cost of production opening finished stock
Closing finished stock cost of goods sold - cost of goods sold selling and distribution
overhead cost of sales - cost of sales profit Sales
- Sales/quantity sold selling price per unit
9The elements of cost
Sunk Cost A cost that is forever lost after it
has been paid. ACME Coal paid 5000 to lease a
rail car. Under the terms of the lease 1000 of
this payment is refundable if the rail car is
returned within two days of signing the
lease. Average cost average cost or unit cost is
equal to total cost divided by the number of
goods produced (the output quantity, Q). It is
also equal to the sum of average variable costs
(total variable costs divided by Q) plus average
fixed costs (total fixed costs divided by Q).
10The elements of cost
- Marginal Cost The marginal cost of a product is
the cost of producing an additional unit of that
output. More formally, the marginal cost is the
derivative of total production costs with respect
to the level of output. - Marginal Revenue (MR) is the extra revenue that
an additional unit of product will bring. It is
the additional income from selling one more unit
of a good sometimes equal to price. It can also
be described as the change in total revenue
divided by the change in the number of units
sold. i.e. Q 40,000 - 2000P - Marginal cost and average cost can differ
greatly. For example, suppose it costs 1000 to
produce 100 units and 1020 to produce 101
units. The average cost per unit is 10, but the
marginal cost of the 101st unit is 20
11Break Even Analysis
- Break-even point (BEP) is the point at which cost
or expenses and revenue are equal there is no
net loss or gain. The main objective of
break-even analysis is to find the cut-off
production volume from where a firm will make
profit. - X TFC/P-V
- X TFC/Unit Contribution
- Contribution Sales TVC
- Margin of Safety Sales Break Even sales
12Break Even Analysis
- Profit Volume Ratio (P/V Ratio), The ratio of
contribution to sales is P/V ratio or C/S ratio.
It is the contribution per rupee of sales and
since the fixed cost remains constant in short
term period, P/V ratio will also measure the rate
of change of profit due to change in volume of
sales. - The P/V ratio may be expressed as follows
- Profit Contribution Fixed cost
- P/V ratio Sales Variable costs
Contribution Sales Sales - BEP F.C
- P/V ratio
13Some Definitions
Average Total Cost ATC AVC AFC ATC
C(Q)/Q Average Variable Cost AVC
VC(Q)/Q Average Fixed Cost AFC FC/Q Marginal
Cost MC DC/DQ
ATC
AVC
AFC
14Derivation of Average costs
- Q FC VC TC AFC AVC ATC MC
- 0 2000 0
- 76 400
- 248 800
- 492 1200
- 784 1600
- 1100 2000
- 1416 2400
- 1708 2800
- 1952 3200
- 2124 3600
- 2200 4000
15Relationship b/w Average Marginal Cost
- whenever MC is below AC curve, the average curve
is falling. The low MC Drags down the Average. - when MC is above AC curve, it pull the average
up the AC curve rises. - When MC equal AC, it has a neutral effect. AC
curve is flat. It has reached its lowest point.
Thus MC curve cuts through the lowest point on
the ATC curve. MC also cuts AVC through its
lowest point.
AVC
16LR Cost Functions Economies of Scale
- Economies of scale arise when the cost per unit
falls as output increases. Economies of scale are
the main advantage of increasing the scale of
production - Bulk-buying economies
- Technical economies
- Financial economies
- Marketing economies
- Managerial economies
- lower unit costs as a result of the whole
industry growing in size. - Training and education becomes more focused on
the industry - Other industries grow to support this industry