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y to produce different levels of output,the prices to be paid for acquiring those factors and physical conditions of production.costs of production is thus very important for determining the output that will be produced.
CONCEPT OF COST
ACCOUNTING COST
It includes all costs incurred by the firm in acquiring various inputs from the outside suppliers. Eg.purchase of raw material,payment of wages,rent on hired land. Also called explicit/nominal cost.
ECONOMIC COST
Sum of explicit and implicit costs. Implicit costs arise when certain inputs are owned by the employer himself and employed in the production process. Eg.Interest on capital.here capital contributed by the enterpreneurs himself. They are implicit because if the money capital contributed by enterpreneurs in his own firm,had been invested else where say bank,it would have earned a certain amount of interest. Economic cost=accounting cost(explicit cost)+implicit cost
OPPORTUNITY COST
Benham said the opportunity cost of anything is the next best alternative that could be produced instead,by the same factors or by an equivalent group of factors,costing the same amount of money. When a factor unit is employed for one use,the next best use for which this factor could have been put is forgone. OR simply it is the cost of displaced alternatives.
ILLUSTRATION
Suppose a piece of land can be employed for growing the wheat crop or rice crop.let the farmer using plot of land can produce either 80 quintals of rice or 60 quintals of wheat.if he produces only rice he cant produce wheat. Also he can produce any combination of the two crops on the production possibilty curve AB.
Assuming that he is producing 35 quintals of rice and 40 quintals of wheat by operating at point C. Now he decides to operate at point D.In this,he has to increase the production of rice by 15 quintals to make it to 50 quintals and to reduce the production of wheat from 40 quintals to 30 quintals. Therefore the opportunity cost of 15 quintals of rice is 10 quintals of wheat forgone.
TOTAL COST
It is the actual cost that must be incurred to produce a given quantity of output in the short run, using both fixed & variable inputs. OR It is the sum of total variable & total cost. TC = TVC + TFC
TFC
COST ( Rupees)
OUTPUT ( UNITS)
EXAMPLES OF TVC
COST OF RAW MATERIAL. COST OF LABOUR. COST OF FUEL ,ELECTRICITY. COST OF TRANSPORTATION etc.
0 100 200
$0 4000 6000
300
400 500 600
6000
6000 6000 6000
9000
14000 22000 34000
15000
20000 28000 40000
20
15 12 10
30
35 44 56.7
50
50 56 66.7
30
50 80 120
OBSERVATIONS
1.
2. 3.
AVC, ATC and SMC all the three curves first decrease, reach their minimum and then rise. SMC crosses AVC and ATC at their respective minimum values. SMC lies below both AVC and ATC till these curves decline; SMC lies above them when they are rising.
Marginal Cost :-The change in either Total Variable Cost or Total Cost per unit change in output TC TVC TFC TVC TVC SMC = = + =0 + = Q Q Q Q Q
4.
5.
AVC
Costs ($)
Q3 Q2 Q1 AFC
OUTPUT
TFC
TVC
SMC= TC/Q
0 100
$6000 6000
$0 4000
$40
200
300 400 500 600
6000
6000 6000 6000 6000
6000
9000 14000 22000 34000
12000
15000 20000 28000 40000
30
20 15 12 10
30
30 35 44 56.7
60
50 50 56 66.7
20
30 50 80 120
COST($)
Q3
Q1
Q2
UNITS OF OUTPUT(Q)
Economies of scale
Costs
Constant costs
Diseconomies of scale
LRAC
Output
Costs
LRAC O Output
Costs
LRAC
Output
Costs
LRAC
Output
LMC curve shows the minimum amount by which cost is increased each time, when output is increased.
LMC curve can be defined as the locus of those points on the SMC curves which corresponds to the optimum plant size for each output
LRMC
LRAC Costs O
Output
Case study
Topic: general theory on cost behavior
Huxley maquiladora is a large firm in defense industry. Its planning to shift production from its California plant to mexico.There are 3 options: 1)Negotiate subcontract : Mexican firm will manufacture steering column components as per Huxley specifications & Huxley will pay Mexican firm. 2)Shelter operation : Mexican firm should allow Huxley to maintain control over production so Mexican firm provide import/export services. 3)Setting wholly-owned subsidiary : Huxley select a plant site, staff its own employees, implement its own procedures, obtain permits.
COST BEHAVIOR
Manager want to determine relevant cost so as to make profit maximizing decisions. Fixed costs does not vary with production Variable cost increases as output increases In case of Huxley : Case 1:if company select option 1,no fixed costs Case 2:if company select option 2,fixed costs include construction, site lease, startup expenditure, plant manager salary, corporate taxes & other expenses. Case 3:if company select option 3,mostly fixed cost are construction, site lease, startup expenditure, plant manager salary, corporate tax, consulting fee,mexican legal fee.
Table 1:correlation between production theory and cost theory during these stages of production
LABOUR 0 1 2 TOTAL O/P 0 1 4 1 3 MARGINAL PRODUCT TFC($) 10 10 10 TVC($) $0 10 20 TOTAL COST ($) $10 20 30
*Let FC=$10/hr ,if worker is paid $10/hr then TC of producing 1 unit=$20 If 2 workers,4 units are produced so TC=$30 so TVC rises from $10 to $20. * Due to increase in production firm comes on law of diminishing return ,as marginal product of each additional input diminishes more input needed for producing same output ,FC do not change as production increases but TVC rises.
Table 2 : relationship between production and costs during once diminishing returns set in labor 0 1 2 3 4 Total o/p 0 1 4 6 7 1 3 2 1 Marginal product TFC($) 10 10 10 10 10 TVC($) 0 10 20 30 40 TOTAL COSTS($) 10 20 30 40 50
As FC is not changing,VC rises as production rises, TV for producing 4 units is 20$,for 6 units is 30$,for 7 units is 40$. When o/p increases by 75% TVC increases by 100%
TFC
40
total fixed cost
10$ 30
TVC
20
10
4 6 7
quantity
6 7 quantity
Total cost
50
TC
TVC
40
30
TFC
As inputs are initially added, total cost rises as a relatively slow rate. Once diminishing returns in production sets in, total costs begin to accelerate
10 1 4 6 7
average fixed cost, average variable cost, and average total cost
TOTAL O/P 0 1 4 6 7 TFC($) AFC($) TVC($) AVC($) TOTAL COST($) 10 10 5 5 5.7 20 30 40 50 20 7.5 6.6 7.1 AVERAGE TOTAL COST($)
0 10 20 30 40
as output increases, AFC decline because the TFC are spread out over more units of output. If labor to be the only variable cost, when experiencing increasing marginal product, AVC(i.e. variable cost per unit) decreases from $10 to $5. During the diminishing returns stage of production, AVC rises. The same can be said for average total cost (the sum of both total variable and total fixed costs divided by the number of units of output). Average total cost decreases as marginal product increases, but eventually rises at some point after the law of diminishing returns sets in.
AVC
AFC
QUANTITY
MARGINAL COST
Marginal cost refers to the change in costs resulting from a given change in output
total cost associated with six units is $40 and the total cost of producing seven units is $50. If the firm decides to produce the seventh unit, its expenses will rise by $10. The problem with average total cost is that it represents an average; unless marginal cost is constant, average total cost does not represent the cost of production for the output under consideration. Because fixed costs do not vary with output, marginal costs are, by definition, variable costs. $ MC
QUANTITY
LABOR 0 1 2 3
TOTAL O/P 0 1 4 6 7
TVC($) 0 10 20 30 40
MC($) 10 3.3 5 10
when output increased from 0 to 1 unit, TVC increased by $10 (the cost of the workers labor). The cost increase reflects the need to hire the first worker. Because fixed costs are incurred even if the first unit is not produced, the marginal cost of the first unit is the added cost of a worker, or $10. Increasing marginal product was encountered when the second worker was hired. Here, an additional worker resulted in three additional units of output (i.e. production increased from one unit to four units). The added variable cost was $10. The cost of the additional production, therefore, was $3.33/unit ($10 divided by three additional units of output). Note that marginal cost decreased during this stage of production. Diminishing returns began when the third worker was hired. Output increased by two units (from four units to six units) whereas TVC increased by $10. Consequently, the marginal cost of increasing production from four units to six units is $5/unit ($10 divided by two units). When the fourth worker was hired, production increased by only one unit. Hence, the marginal cost of the seventh unit is $10. Note that once diminishing returns sets in, marginal cost increases. In sum, rising marginal product results in falling marginal costs whereas decreasing marginal product leads to rising marginal costs
CONCLUSIONS
1. A firms costs consist of fixed and variable costs. Fixed costs do not vary with production. Variable costs increase as production increases. 2. Total fixed costs remain constant as output increases. Total variable costs and total costs rise at varying rates. As marginal product increases, total variable costs and total costs rise at a slower rate relative to increases in output. During diminishing returns to scale, total variable cost and total cost rise at a faster rate than output. 3. Average costs convey more useful information to the decision-maker. Average fixed costs decrease as production rises because the firms fixed costs become spread out over more units of output. Average variable costs and average total costs decrease as marginal product increases, but eventually increase at some point after the law of diminishing returns sets in. 4. The most important cost for decision-makers is marginal cost, which refers to the cost of producing additional output. Marginal cost falls during increasing returns to scale and rises during decreasing returns to scale. 5. The output at which average total cost is minimized is called minimum efficient scale. A firm does not necessarily maximize profits by producing at this level. However, it represents the lowest price the firm can charge and remain in business. 6. With respect to selecting a country to locate ones manufacturing facilities, low wage rates in a country often reflect an abundance of unskilled workers, inadequate infrastructure, and/or political instability. Hence, the firm should base its decisions on unit costs rather than hourly costs.
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