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Theory of the Firm
Section 2.3 HL
Discuss the following with the person next to you:

      •What is the difference between profit and revenue?
      •Come up with concrete examples of:
           - Monopolies
           - Oligopolies
           - Monopolistic Competition
           - Perfect Competition

      • What is the goal of a firm?
Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm
                                 Introduction to the Four Market Structures

 Most competition                                                                 Least competition
  Pure (or Perfect)              Monopolistic                    Oligopoly               Monopoly
  Competition                    competition
VERY large number of firms                                    A few large firms         Only ONE firm. The
                                Fairly large number of
                                                              dominate an industry      firm IS the industry!
                                firms
Each firm is so small that
changes in its own output do                                  A change in one firm's    Significant barriers to
                                Firms are small relative to
not affect market price, i.e.                                 output has significant    entry exist,
                                the industry, meaning
firms are price takers                                        impact on the market      preventing new firms
                                changes in one firms
                                                              price, firms are price-   from entering and
                                output have only a slight
Firms all produce identical                                   makers.                   competing with the
                                impact on market price
products, with no                                                                       monopolist
differentiation                                               Products can be iden-
                                Products are slightly
                                                              tical (such as oil) or
                                differentiated. Firms will                              the Monopolist can
Completely free entry and                                     differentiated (such as
                                advertise to try and                                    maintain significant
exit from the industry, i.e.                                  Macs and Dells)
                                further differentiate                                   profits due to the lack
NO barriers to entry.           product. Branding!
                                                              There are significant     of competition.
                                Advertising!
All producers and                                             barriers to entry
consumers have perfect                                                                  Changes in the firm's
                                No barriers to entry, firms
knowledge of prices, costs,                                   Firms will likely use     output cause changes
                                can enter or leave easily
and quality and availability                                  advertising to try and    in the price, i.e. the
of products                                                   differentiate their       firm is a price-maker!
                                                              products from
                                                              competitors'
Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm
                                   Introduction to the Four Market Structures
Examples of different market structures: Based on the characteristics of the different market structures,
brainstorm examples of each.



 Pure                              Monopolistic                   Oligopoly                 Monopoly
 Competition                       competition




     Practice: Different types of Market Structure - NCEE Activity 24
Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm
                                          Unit Overview


 Unit 2.3.1 - Introduction to Market Structures         Long-run
 and Cost Theory                                        ·Economies of scale
                                                        ·Diseconomies of scale
 Intro to Market Structures                             ·Long-run cost curves
 ·Pure competition
 ·Monopolistic competition                              Revenues
 ·Oligopoly                                             ·Total revenue
 ·Monopoly
                                                        ·Marginal revenue
                                                        ·Average revenue
 Cost theory
 ·Types of costs: fixed costs, variable costs
 ·Total, average and marginal costs                     Profit
 ·Accounting costs = opportunity costs = economic       ·Distinction between normal (zero) and
 costs                                                  supernormal (abnormal) profit
                                                        ·Profit maximization in terms of total revenue
 Short-run                                              and total costs, and in terms of marginal
 ·Law of diminishing returns                            revenue and marginal cost
 ·Total product, average product, marginal product      ·Profit maximization assumed to be the main
 ·Short-run cost curves                                 goal of firms but other goals exist (sales volume
                                                        maximization, revenue maximization,
                                                        environmental concerns)


Blog posts: “Economies of Scale”                     Blog posts: "Costs of Production"

Blog posts: "Productivity"                      Blog posts: “Law of Diminishing Returns”
Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm
                                          Unit Overview

2.3.2 - Perfect competition                            Efficiency in monopoly
·Assumptions of the model                              ·Price discrimination
·Demand curve facing the industry and the firm in      >>Definition
perfect competition                                    >>Reasons for price discrimination
·Profit-maximizing level of output and price in the    >>Necessary conditions for the practice of price
short-run and long-run                                 discrimination
·The possibility of abnormal profits/losses in the     >>Possible advantages to either the producer or
short-run and normal profits in the long-run           the consumer
·Shut-down price, break-even price
·Definitions of allocative and productive efficiency   2.3.4 - Monopolistic competition
·Efficiency in perfect competition                     ·Assumptions of the model
                                                       ·Short-run and long-run equilibrium
2.3.3 - Monopoly                                       ·Product differentiation
·Assumptions of the model                              ·Efficiency in monopolistic competition
·Sources of monopoly power/barriers to entry
·Natural monopoly                                      2.3.5 - Oligopoly
·Demand curve facing the monopolist                    ·Assumptions of the model
·Profit-maximizing level of output                     ·Colusive and non-collusive oligopoly
·Advantages and disadvantages of monopoly in           ·Cartels
comparison with perfect competition                    ·Kinked demand curve as one model to describe
                                                       interdependent behavior (IB HL only)
                                                       ·Importance of non-price competition
                                                       ·Theory of contestable markets (IB HL only)
Costs of Production
                                 Big Ideas
Important questions:

   1)   What is productivity and how does it change as resources
        (LAND, LABOR, CAPITAL) are added to production?

   2)   What are the different costs faced by firms in the short-run and
        the long-run?

   3)   What is the relationship between the productivity of its
        resources and the costs faced by a firm?

   4)   Why does understanding productivity and costs matter to firms?



        Discussion Question: What is productivity, and why
                       do firms care about it?

                   Blog posts: "Productivity"
Costs of Production
                              Law of Diminishing Returns
Understanding Productivity:
  Productivity (OUTPUT) : The amount of output attributable to a unit of
  input. Examples of productivity:
          "Better training has increased the productivity of workers"
          "The new robot is more productive than older versions"
          "Adding fertilizer has increased the productivity of farmland"
  Total prod. (TP or TO) is the total output of a particular firm
        Example of TP: "After hiring more workers the firm's total product
        increased."

  Marginal prod. of labor (MPL) is the change in total product resulting from each
  additional worker.
  >>MPL = ∆TP/∆L

  Average prod. of labor (APL) is the output, on average, by each
  worker
         >>APL = TP/units of L
Costs of Production
                                 Law of Diminishing Returns
Law of Diminishing Returns:states that as additional units of a variable resource
are added to fixed resources, beyond some point the marginal product of the
variable resource will decline.
            HUH? Let's illustrate this with an example
Example: Paper Chain Factory
Instructions:
       1) Use inputs (land, labor and capital) to create a product (paper chains)
       2) Labor is the only variable resource. Land and capital are fixed.
       3) Production rounds last one minute
       4) Record production data in a data table

     LAND (fixed)                LABOR (variable)               CAPITAL (fixed)
Costs of Production
                              Law of Diminishing Returns

                              Units of labor    TP         MP   AP
One worker has one minute
to make the longest chain
possible.                           0

A volunteer is needed to            1
record output data in the
                                    2
table to the right.
                                    3
As more workers are
added, TP, MP and AP will           4
be calculated and recorded.
                                    5
  MP = ∆TP/∆L
      L
                                    6

AP = TP/units of L
  L                                 7

                                    8
Costs of Production
                                          Law of Diminishing Returns
MP/   9        Marginal/Average Product
AP    8

      7                                           Data:
      6
                                                    Units of labor     TP   MP   AP
      5

      4                                                   0
      3

      2
                                                          1
      1
                                                          2
      0

      -1        1    2    3    4    5
                                                          3
      -2

                                                          4
 TP 18              Total Product
      16
                                                          5
      14

      12                                                  6
      10
                                                          7
       8

       6                                                  8
       4

       2



           0    1    2     3    4    5
                         Units of Labor
Costs of Production
                                                  Law of Diminishing Returns
             Marginal/Average Product
 MP/AP

                                                      Observations:
                          Diminishing
                          returns sets in
                                                        Describe what happens to TP as more and more
                                                        labor is added to a fixed amount of capital and land

                                                         TP increases at an increasing rate as workers' MP
                                         AP
                                                         increases, at a decreasing rate as MP falls, and
                                                         declines as MP becomes negative.
                                         MP             What is the relationship between TP and MP?
         0   10    20       30      40      50

                   Units of Labor                        MP is the rate of increase in TP
TP                Total Product
                                                        What is the relationship between MP and AP?
                                                            When MP is greater than AP, AP increases. MP
                                                            intersects AP at its highest point, and when MP is
                                                 TP         less than AP, AP decreases
                        MP becomes negative,
                        TP begins to fall
                                                        Why does a producer care about the productivity of i
                                                        workers and other resources?
                                                              Because firms’ average and marginal costs in
     0       10    20      30       40      50                the short-run are inversely related to the
                   Units of Labor                             productivity of its workers
Costs of Production
                                       Law of Diminishing Returns
Conclusions:

·Explanation of increasing returns :




·Explanation of diminishing returns:




·Negative marginal product and implications:



·Implications of diminishing marginal returns to producers:




                    Blog posts: “Law of Diminishing Returns”
Costs of Production
               Marginal/Average Product
                                                         Law of Diminishing Returns
MP/   9
                                                             Posters for Econ.
AP    8

      7                                   Data:
      6                                     Units of labor     TP         MP          AP
      5
                                                  0             0
      4

      3
                                                  1             6
      2

      1                                           2             14
      0

      -1        1    2    3    4    5             3             21
      -2
                                                  4             24
 TP   18
                    Total Product
      16                                          5             20
      14

      12

      10

       8

       6

       4

       2                                  Fill in the chart and the graphs above.
           0    1    2     3    4    5
                                              Where is the law of diminishing
                         Units of Labor       returns?
Costs of Production
                                         Productivity and costs
Productivity and Costs: As worker productivity increases, firms get "more for
their money", meaning per-unit and marginal costs decrease. When productivity
decreases, costs increase.

                                                    Discussion: When productivity of workers is
                 Costs and Productivity             rising, firms costs are falling, since they're
                                                    getting more output for workers while paying
                                             MC     them the same wages.
 Product/costs




                                                    ·When marginal product is increasing
                                                    (increasing returns) marginal cost is falling

                                            AP      ·When MP is at its maximum, MC is at its
                                                    minimum
                                              AC
                                                    ·When diminishing returns set in, MP begins
                                                    falling and MC begins rising

                                                    ·MP intersects average product at its highest
                                            MP      point, and MC intersects average total cost at its
                                                    lowest point
                      Units of Labor/
                      units of output

          Summary: Increasing marginal returns is reflected in a declining marginal cost, and
          diminishing marginal returns in a rising marginal cost!
Costs of Production
                           Short-run Costs of Production

What is the short-run? "the fixed-plant period"
The short-run is the period of time over which a firm's plant size is fixed.
Capital cannot and land cannot be varied, labor is the only variable
resource. To increase output in the short-run, a firm can only increase
inputs of labor, not the other resources.

Total Costs:
Total fixed costs (TFC): These are the costs a firm faces that do not
vary with changes in short-run output. Could include rent on factory
space, interest on capital (already acquired).

Total variable costs (TVC): These are the costs a firm faces which
change with the level of output in the short-run. Could include
payment for raw materials, fuel, power, transportation services,
wages for workers, etc...

Total cost:TFC + TVC at each level of output
Costs of Production
                                Short-run Costs of Production
Resource costs in the short-run:
   Rent - the payment for land: Rent is fixed in the short-run since firms cannot add this
   resource to production. Rents must be paid regardless of the level of the firm's output.

   Interest - the payment for capital: Interest is fixed in the short-run since firms cannot
   add this resource to production. Interest must be paid on loans regardless of the level of
   the firm's output.

   Wages - the payment for labor: Wages are variable in the short-run, since firms can hire
   or fire workers to use existing land and capital resources. Wage costs increase when new
   workers are hired, and decrease when workers are laid off.

   Normal profit:the minimum level of profit needed just to keep an entrepreneur operating
   in his current market. If he does not earn normal profit, an entrepreneur will direct his skills
   towards another market. Normal profit is a cost because if a firm does not earn normal
   profit, it is not covering its costs and may shut down.



 Other short-run variable costs of production:
 ·Transportation costs: Firms pay lower transport costs at lower levels of output.
 ·Raw material costs: vary with the level of output
 ·Manufactured inputs: fewer parts are needed from suppliers when a firm lowers output.
Costs of Production
                                       Short-run Costs of Production
 Graphing total costs:
 TFC: Notice that regardless of the level of output, TFC remains constant. This is because these
 are costs that do not vary with output.

 TVC: Notice that when output is zero, TVC is zero, because you do not need to hire any workers
 or use any raw materials if you're not producing anything. As output increases, TVC continues to
 increase

 TC: Notice that when output is zero, TC = TFC. But once the factory begins pumping out
 products, TC rises with TVC. TC is the sum of TFC and TVC, since both fixed and variable costs
 make up total cost.
                                          TC
                                                     Diminishing returns:
Costs
                                               TVC   ·Notice that TC and TVC increase at a
                                                     decreasing rate at first. This is when
                                                     marginal product is increasing as more
                                                     labor is employed (firms get "more for their
                                                     money")

                                                     ·However, beyond some point, costs begin
  100                                          TFC
                                                     to increase at an increasing rate. This is
                                                     where diminishing returns set in and MP is
                                                     decreasing. The firm is getting less
    0              Point at which    Q of output     additional output from each worker hired,
                   diminishing
                   returns sets in                   but must pay the same wages regardless.
                                                     (The firm gets "less for its money")
Costs of Production
                             Short-run Costs of Production
Average Costs:
 Average fixed cost:AFC=TFC/Q
 AFC will decline as output rises, never increases. This is because the fixed cost
 (which never goes up) is “spread out” as output goes up. This is called “spreading
 the overhead”

 Average variable cost:AVC = TVC/Q
 For simplicity, we will assume that labor is the only variable input, the labor cost per
 unit of output is the AVC

 Average total cost:ATC = TC/Q
 Sometimes called unit cost or per unit cost. ATC also equals AFC + AVC




 Marginal Cost = the additional cost of producing one more unit of
 output.
                           MC = ∆TVC/∆Q.
Theory of the Firm
Section 2.3 HL
         Price




                 Quantity of output



    Draw a graph to represent revenue and explain it.
Costs of Production
                                            Short-run Costs of Production
    Graphing Average and Marginal Costs:
    AFC: it declines as output increases. This is called "spreading the overhead".

    ATC and AVC: At first they are declining as output increases. This is during the stage when MP is
    increasing, since new labor is making better use of capital and beginning to specialize.

    AVC: When AVC is at its minimum, average product is at its maximum, meaning workers are producing
    the most output per worker. As more workers are added, average product begins to go down, and AVC
    begins to rise.
Costs




                     Short-run Costs                           Things to notice:
                                                               ·the vertical distance between ATC and
                                                               AVC equals the AFC at each level of
                                            MC                 output.

                                                        ATC
                                                               ·MC intersects both AVC and ATC at their
                                                               minimum. This is because if the last unit
                                                        AVC
                                                               produced costs less than the average,
                                                               then the average must be falling, and vis
                                                               versa (just like your test scores!)
                                                      AFC
                                                               ·MC is at its minimum when MP is at its
                          Point at which          Q            maximum, because beyond that point
                          diminishing
                          returns sets in
                                                               diminishing returns sets in and the firm
                                                               starts getting less for its money!
Costs of Production
                                  Short-run Costs of Production
Labor is the only variable resource and the wage = $200 / week
Rent and interest are fixed costs, and = $400 / week

        QL       TP (Q      TFC     TVC     TC       AFC      AVC      ATC         MC
                 supplied
                 )

        0        0          400
        1        10
        2        25
        3        45
        4        70
        5        90
        6        105

        7        115
        8        120
 Describe and explain what happens to each of the following as output increases:
 1) TFC 2) TC 3) AFC 4) AVC and ATC 5) MC
Costs of Production
                                  Short-run Costs of Production
Labor is the only variable resource and the wage = $200 / week
Rent and interest are fixed costs, and = $400 / week

        QL       TP (Q      TFC     TVC     TC       AFC      AVC      ATC         MC
                 supplied
                 )

        0        0          400
        1        10
        2        25
        3        45
        4        70
        5        90
        6        105

        7        115
        8        120
 Describe and explain what happens to each of the following as output increases:
 1) TFC 2) TC 3) AFC 4) AVC and ATC 5) MC
Costs of Production
                                   Short-run Costs of Production
Costs



        Short-run Costs
                                               Discussion Questions: Short-run Costs
                            MC


                                         ATC
                                         AVC
                                                1) State the law of diminishing returns
                                                   and explain how it determines the
                                       AFC
                                                   shape of the marginal cost curve.
                                   Q
                                 TC
Costs




                                   TVC          2) Explain the relationship between the
                                                   marginal cost curve and the average
                                                   variable and average total cost curves.

                                                3) What determines the distance
                                       TFC

                                                   between the ATC and the AVC at a
          Point at which
                                                   particular level of output.
                                   Q
          diminishing
          returns sets in
Costs of Production
                             Short-run vs. Long-run costs
Long-run is the variable plant period, meaning that firms can open up new plants, add
capital to existing plants, or close plans and remove capital if need be.

Economies of scale: are the cost advantages that a business obtains due to
expansion. As new plants open, ATC declines. WHY?
·better specialization, division of labor, bulk buying, lower interest on loans,
lower per unit transport costs, larger and more efficient machines, etc...

                   Also called "Increasing returns to scale"

Minimum Efficient Scale (MES): The minimum level of output a firm must
achieve to achieve the lowest average total cost.

Diseconomies of Scale: When a firm becomes "too big for its own good" it
experiences diseconomies of scale. Continuing to add plants and increase output
causes ATC to rise. WHY? Mostly due to control and communications problems,
trying to coordinate production across a wide geographic area may make firm less
efficient.

                    Also called "Decreasing returns to scale"


                    Blog posts: “Economies of Scale”
Theory of the Firm
Section 2.3 HL


  Define economies of scale in your own
  words and explain why they are
  possible.

  You may use your notes but not    your
  book.
Costs of Production
                             Short-run vs. Long-run costs
           Graphing long-run ATC: The gray curves represent all the SR ATC
           curves the firm experiences as it opens new plants. As it opens its first
           10 plants, ATC declines, while for plants 11-16 ATC remains constant.
Costs


           Beyond 16 plants the firm's ATC begins to rise, indicating it has gotten
           too big.



                                                                            ATC   LR




        Economies                                                  Diseconomies
        of scale                                                   of scale
                                  Constant returns
                                  to scale
                            MES
                                                                 Q
                  Blog posts: "Economies of Scale"
FIXED COST (FC)

        VARIABLE COST (VC)

Costs   TOTAL COST (TC)




               Quantity of output
AFC

        AVC
                                   MC
Costs   ATC




              Quantity of output
TP (TO)



WHAT GOES HERE?




                            WHAT GOES HERE?
AP (AO)

                  MP (MO)

WHAT GOES HERE?




                            WHAT GOES HERE?
TC

          TR

COSTS $




               Quantity of Output
MC

          MR

COSTS $




               Quantity of Output
LRAC (LRATC)



COSTS $




                 Quantity of Output

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Unit 2 3 1 Costs Of Production

  • 1. Theory of the Firm Section 2.3 HL Discuss the following with the person next to you: •What is the difference between profit and revenue? •Come up with concrete examples of: - Monopolies - Oligopolies - Monopolistic Competition - Perfect Competition • What is the goal of a firm?
  • 2. Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm Introduction to the Four Market Structures Most competition Least competition Pure (or Perfect) Monopolistic Oligopoly Monopoly Competition competition VERY large number of firms A few large firms Only ONE firm. The Fairly large number of dominate an industry firm IS the industry! firms Each firm is so small that changes in its own output do A change in one firm's Significant barriers to Firms are small relative to not affect market price, i.e. output has significant entry exist, the industry, meaning firms are price takers impact on the market preventing new firms changes in one firms price, firms are price- from entering and output have only a slight Firms all produce identical makers. competing with the impact on market price products, with no monopolist differentiation Products can be iden- Products are slightly tical (such as oil) or differentiated. Firms will the Monopolist can Completely free entry and differentiated (such as advertise to try and maintain significant exit from the industry, i.e. Macs and Dells) further differentiate profits due to the lack NO barriers to entry. product. Branding! There are significant of competition. Advertising! All producers and barriers to entry consumers have perfect Changes in the firm's No barriers to entry, firms knowledge of prices, costs, Firms will likely use output cause changes can enter or leave easily and quality and availability advertising to try and in the price, i.e. the of products differentiate their firm is a price-maker! products from competitors'
  • 3. Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm Introduction to the Four Market Structures Examples of different market structures: Based on the characteristics of the different market structures, brainstorm examples of each. Pure Monopolistic Oligopoly Monopoly Competition competition Practice: Different types of Market Structure - NCEE Activity 24
  • 4. Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm Unit Overview Unit 2.3.1 - Introduction to Market Structures Long-run and Cost Theory ·Economies of scale ·Diseconomies of scale Intro to Market Structures ·Long-run cost curves ·Pure competition ·Monopolistic competition Revenues ·Oligopoly ·Total revenue ·Monopoly ·Marginal revenue ·Average revenue Cost theory ·Types of costs: fixed costs, variable costs ·Total, average and marginal costs Profit ·Accounting costs = opportunity costs = economic ·Distinction between normal (zero) and costs supernormal (abnormal) profit ·Profit maximization in terms of total revenue Short-run and total costs, and in terms of marginal ·Law of diminishing returns revenue and marginal cost ·Total product, average product, marginal product ·Profit maximization assumed to be the main ·Short-run cost curves goal of firms but other goals exist (sales volume maximization, revenue maximization, environmental concerns) Blog posts: “Economies of Scale” Blog posts: "Costs of Production" Blog posts: "Productivity" Blog posts: “Law of Diminishing Returns”
  • 5. Unit 2.3 - Theory of the Firm Unit Overview 2.3.2 - Perfect competition Efficiency in monopoly ·Assumptions of the model ·Price discrimination ·Demand curve facing the industry and the firm in >>Definition perfect competition >>Reasons for price discrimination ·Profit-maximizing level of output and price in the >>Necessary conditions for the practice of price short-run and long-run discrimination ·The possibility of abnormal profits/losses in the >>Possible advantages to either the producer or short-run and normal profits in the long-run the consumer ·Shut-down price, break-even price ·Definitions of allocative and productive efficiency 2.3.4 - Monopolistic competition ·Efficiency in perfect competition ·Assumptions of the model ·Short-run and long-run equilibrium 2.3.3 - Monopoly ·Product differentiation ·Assumptions of the model ·Efficiency in monopolistic competition ·Sources of monopoly power/barriers to entry ·Natural monopoly 2.3.5 - Oligopoly ·Demand curve facing the monopolist ·Assumptions of the model ·Profit-maximizing level of output ·Colusive and non-collusive oligopoly ·Advantages and disadvantages of monopoly in ·Cartels comparison with perfect competition ·Kinked demand curve as one model to describe interdependent behavior (IB HL only) ·Importance of non-price competition ·Theory of contestable markets (IB HL only)
  • 6. Costs of Production Big Ideas Important questions: 1) What is productivity and how does it change as resources (LAND, LABOR, CAPITAL) are added to production? 2) What are the different costs faced by firms in the short-run and the long-run? 3) What is the relationship between the productivity of its resources and the costs faced by a firm? 4) Why does understanding productivity and costs matter to firms? Discussion Question: What is productivity, and why do firms care about it? Blog posts: "Productivity"
  • 7. Costs of Production Law of Diminishing Returns Understanding Productivity: Productivity (OUTPUT) : The amount of output attributable to a unit of input. Examples of productivity: "Better training has increased the productivity of workers" "The new robot is more productive than older versions" "Adding fertilizer has increased the productivity of farmland" Total prod. (TP or TO) is the total output of a particular firm Example of TP: "After hiring more workers the firm's total product increased." Marginal prod. of labor (MPL) is the change in total product resulting from each additional worker. >>MPL = ∆TP/∆L Average prod. of labor (APL) is the output, on average, by each worker >>APL = TP/units of L
  • 8. Costs of Production Law of Diminishing Returns Law of Diminishing Returns:states that as additional units of a variable resource are added to fixed resources, beyond some point the marginal product of the variable resource will decline. HUH? Let's illustrate this with an example Example: Paper Chain Factory Instructions: 1) Use inputs (land, labor and capital) to create a product (paper chains) 2) Labor is the only variable resource. Land and capital are fixed. 3) Production rounds last one minute 4) Record production data in a data table LAND (fixed) LABOR (variable) CAPITAL (fixed)
  • 9. Costs of Production Law of Diminishing Returns Units of labor TP MP AP One worker has one minute to make the longest chain possible. 0 A volunteer is needed to 1 record output data in the 2 table to the right. 3 As more workers are added, TP, MP and AP will 4 be calculated and recorded. 5 MP = ∆TP/∆L L 6 AP = TP/units of L L 7 8
  • 10. Costs of Production Law of Diminishing Returns MP/ 9 Marginal/Average Product AP 8 7 Data: 6 Units of labor TP MP AP 5 4 0 3 2 1 1 2 0 -1 1 2 3 4 5 3 -2 4 TP 18 Total Product 16 5 14 12 6 10 7 8 6 8 4 2 0 1 2 3 4 5 Units of Labor
  • 11. Costs of Production Law of Diminishing Returns Marginal/Average Product MP/AP Observations: Diminishing returns sets in Describe what happens to TP as more and more labor is added to a fixed amount of capital and land TP increases at an increasing rate as workers' MP AP increases, at a decreasing rate as MP falls, and declines as MP becomes negative. MP What is the relationship between TP and MP? 0 10 20 30 40 50 Units of Labor MP is the rate of increase in TP TP Total Product What is the relationship between MP and AP? When MP is greater than AP, AP increases. MP intersects AP at its highest point, and when MP is TP less than AP, AP decreases MP becomes negative, TP begins to fall Why does a producer care about the productivity of i workers and other resources? Because firms’ average and marginal costs in 0 10 20 30 40 50 the short-run are inversely related to the Units of Labor productivity of its workers
  • 12. Costs of Production Law of Diminishing Returns Conclusions: ·Explanation of increasing returns : ·Explanation of diminishing returns: ·Negative marginal product and implications: ·Implications of diminishing marginal returns to producers: Blog posts: “Law of Diminishing Returns”
  • 13. Costs of Production Marginal/Average Product Law of Diminishing Returns MP/ 9 Posters for Econ. AP 8 7 Data: 6 Units of labor TP MP AP 5 0 0 4 3 1 6 2 1 2 14 0 -1 1 2 3 4 5 3 21 -2 4 24 TP 18 Total Product 16 5 20 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 Fill in the chart and the graphs above. 0 1 2 3 4 5 Where is the law of diminishing Units of Labor returns?
  • 14. Costs of Production Productivity and costs Productivity and Costs: As worker productivity increases, firms get "more for their money", meaning per-unit and marginal costs decrease. When productivity decreases, costs increase. Discussion: When productivity of workers is Costs and Productivity rising, firms costs are falling, since they're getting more output for workers while paying MC them the same wages. Product/costs ·When marginal product is increasing (increasing returns) marginal cost is falling AP ·When MP is at its maximum, MC is at its minimum AC ·When diminishing returns set in, MP begins falling and MC begins rising ·MP intersects average product at its highest MP point, and MC intersects average total cost at its lowest point Units of Labor/ units of output Summary: Increasing marginal returns is reflected in a declining marginal cost, and diminishing marginal returns in a rising marginal cost!
  • 15. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production What is the short-run? "the fixed-plant period" The short-run is the period of time over which a firm's plant size is fixed. Capital cannot and land cannot be varied, labor is the only variable resource. To increase output in the short-run, a firm can only increase inputs of labor, not the other resources. Total Costs: Total fixed costs (TFC): These are the costs a firm faces that do not vary with changes in short-run output. Could include rent on factory space, interest on capital (already acquired). Total variable costs (TVC): These are the costs a firm faces which change with the level of output in the short-run. Could include payment for raw materials, fuel, power, transportation services, wages for workers, etc... Total cost:TFC + TVC at each level of output
  • 16. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Resource costs in the short-run: Rent - the payment for land: Rent is fixed in the short-run since firms cannot add this resource to production. Rents must be paid regardless of the level of the firm's output. Interest - the payment for capital: Interest is fixed in the short-run since firms cannot add this resource to production. Interest must be paid on loans regardless of the level of the firm's output. Wages - the payment for labor: Wages are variable in the short-run, since firms can hire or fire workers to use existing land and capital resources. Wage costs increase when new workers are hired, and decrease when workers are laid off. Normal profit:the minimum level of profit needed just to keep an entrepreneur operating in his current market. If he does not earn normal profit, an entrepreneur will direct his skills towards another market. Normal profit is a cost because if a firm does not earn normal profit, it is not covering its costs and may shut down. Other short-run variable costs of production: ·Transportation costs: Firms pay lower transport costs at lower levels of output. ·Raw material costs: vary with the level of output ·Manufactured inputs: fewer parts are needed from suppliers when a firm lowers output.
  • 17. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Graphing total costs: TFC: Notice that regardless of the level of output, TFC remains constant. This is because these are costs that do not vary with output. TVC: Notice that when output is zero, TVC is zero, because you do not need to hire any workers or use any raw materials if you're not producing anything. As output increases, TVC continues to increase TC: Notice that when output is zero, TC = TFC. But once the factory begins pumping out products, TC rises with TVC. TC is the sum of TFC and TVC, since both fixed and variable costs make up total cost. TC Diminishing returns: Costs TVC ·Notice that TC and TVC increase at a decreasing rate at first. This is when marginal product is increasing as more labor is employed (firms get "more for their money") ·However, beyond some point, costs begin 100 TFC to increase at an increasing rate. This is where diminishing returns set in and MP is decreasing. The firm is getting less 0 Point at which Q of output additional output from each worker hired, diminishing returns sets in but must pay the same wages regardless. (The firm gets "less for its money")
  • 18. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Average Costs: Average fixed cost:AFC=TFC/Q AFC will decline as output rises, never increases. This is because the fixed cost (which never goes up) is “spread out” as output goes up. This is called “spreading the overhead” Average variable cost:AVC = TVC/Q For simplicity, we will assume that labor is the only variable input, the labor cost per unit of output is the AVC Average total cost:ATC = TC/Q Sometimes called unit cost or per unit cost. ATC also equals AFC + AVC Marginal Cost = the additional cost of producing one more unit of output. MC = ∆TVC/∆Q.
  • 19. Theory of the Firm Section 2.3 HL Price Quantity of output Draw a graph to represent revenue and explain it.
  • 20. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Graphing Average and Marginal Costs: AFC: it declines as output increases. This is called "spreading the overhead". ATC and AVC: At first they are declining as output increases. This is during the stage when MP is increasing, since new labor is making better use of capital and beginning to specialize. AVC: When AVC is at its minimum, average product is at its maximum, meaning workers are producing the most output per worker. As more workers are added, average product begins to go down, and AVC begins to rise. Costs Short-run Costs Things to notice: ·the vertical distance between ATC and AVC equals the AFC at each level of MC output. ATC ·MC intersects both AVC and ATC at their minimum. This is because if the last unit AVC produced costs less than the average, then the average must be falling, and vis versa (just like your test scores!) AFC ·MC is at its minimum when MP is at its Point at which Q maximum, because beyond that point diminishing returns sets in diminishing returns sets in and the firm starts getting less for its money!
  • 21. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Labor is the only variable resource and the wage = $200 / week Rent and interest are fixed costs, and = $400 / week QL TP (Q TFC TVC TC AFC AVC ATC MC supplied ) 0 0 400 1 10 2 25 3 45 4 70 5 90 6 105 7 115 8 120 Describe and explain what happens to each of the following as output increases: 1) TFC 2) TC 3) AFC 4) AVC and ATC 5) MC
  • 22. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Labor is the only variable resource and the wage = $200 / week Rent and interest are fixed costs, and = $400 / week QL TP (Q TFC TVC TC AFC AVC ATC MC supplied ) 0 0 400 1 10 2 25 3 45 4 70 5 90 6 105 7 115 8 120 Describe and explain what happens to each of the following as output increases: 1) TFC 2) TC 3) AFC 4) AVC and ATC 5) MC
  • 23. Costs of Production Short-run Costs of Production Costs Short-run Costs Discussion Questions: Short-run Costs MC ATC AVC 1) State the law of diminishing returns and explain how it determines the AFC shape of the marginal cost curve. Q TC Costs TVC 2) Explain the relationship between the marginal cost curve and the average variable and average total cost curves. 3) What determines the distance TFC between the ATC and the AVC at a Point at which particular level of output. Q diminishing returns sets in
  • 24. Costs of Production Short-run vs. Long-run costs Long-run is the variable plant period, meaning that firms can open up new plants, add capital to existing plants, or close plans and remove capital if need be. Economies of scale: are the cost advantages that a business obtains due to expansion. As new plants open, ATC declines. WHY? ·better specialization, division of labor, bulk buying, lower interest on loans, lower per unit transport costs, larger and more efficient machines, etc... Also called "Increasing returns to scale" Minimum Efficient Scale (MES): The minimum level of output a firm must achieve to achieve the lowest average total cost. Diseconomies of Scale: When a firm becomes "too big for its own good" it experiences diseconomies of scale. Continuing to add plants and increase output causes ATC to rise. WHY? Mostly due to control and communications problems, trying to coordinate production across a wide geographic area may make firm less efficient. Also called "Decreasing returns to scale" Blog posts: “Economies of Scale”
  • 25. Theory of the Firm Section 2.3 HL Define economies of scale in your own words and explain why they are possible. You may use your notes but not your book.
  • 26. Costs of Production Short-run vs. Long-run costs Graphing long-run ATC: The gray curves represent all the SR ATC curves the firm experiences as it opens new plants. As it opens its first 10 plants, ATC declines, while for plants 11-16 ATC remains constant. Costs Beyond 16 plants the firm's ATC begins to rise, indicating it has gotten too big. ATC LR Economies Diseconomies of scale of scale Constant returns to scale MES Q Blog posts: "Economies of Scale"
  • 27. FIXED COST (FC) VARIABLE COST (VC) Costs TOTAL COST (TC) Quantity of output
  • 28. AFC AVC MC Costs ATC Quantity of output
  • 29. TP (TO) WHAT GOES HERE? WHAT GOES HERE?
  • 30. AP (AO) MP (MO) WHAT GOES HERE? WHAT GOES HERE?
  • 31. TC TR COSTS $ Quantity of Output
  • 32. MC MR COSTS $ Quantity of Output
  • 33. LRAC (LRATC) COSTS $ Quantity of Output