econ chapter 13
Refer to Figure 7-10, if the market equilibrium price falls from $120 to $80, how much is the change in total consumer surplus in the market?
$1000
Tom's Tent Company has total fixed costs of $300,000 per year. The firm's average variable cost is $80 for 10,000 tents. At that level of output, the firm's average total costs equal
$110
At Q = 5, the marginal buyer is willing to pay $50 for a t-shirt. Suppose P = $30. What will the consumer surplus be?
$20
Refer to Figure 7-10, if the market equilibrium falls from $120 to $80, how much consumer analysis do consumers entering the market after the price drop receive?
$200
The Three Amigo's company produced and sold 500 dog beds. The average cost of production per dog bed was $50. Each dog bed can be sold for a price of $65. The Three Amigo's total costs are
$25,000
Bob purchases a book for $6, and his consumer surplus is $2. How much is Bob willing to pay for the book?
$8
Refer to Figure 7-10, if the market equilibrium price is $120, how much is total consumer surplus?
$800
total surplus
** CS + PS measure of society's well-being - to consider whether the market's allocation is efficient total surplus = value to buyers - cost to sellers - sum of consumer and producer surplus area below the demand curve and above the supply curve
Total Revenue (TR)
** Price x Quantity (P x Q) the amount a firm receives for the sale of its output
Consumer Surplus (CS)
** WTP - P - the amount a buyer is willing to pay for a good minus the amount the buyer actually pays for it - benefits buyers receive from participating in a market
total cost (TC)
** fixed costs + variable costs the market value of the inputs a firm uses in production
the benevolent social planner
- all knowing, all powerful, well intentioned dictator - wants to maximize the economic well-being of everyone in society - evaluate market outcomes - cares about efficiency and equality
Allocation of resources refers to
-how much of each good is produced -which producers produce it -which consumers consume it
Refer to Figure 13-2, what is the marginal product of the first worker?
A. 300
Average Total Cost (ATC)
ATC = TC/Q = AFC + AVC - the cost of the typical unit produced - total cost divided by the quantity of output
in the long run...
ATC at any Q is the cost per unit using the most efficient mix of inputs for that Q (e.g. the factory size with he lowest ATC)
economies of scale
ATC falls as Q increases
You work at the local store that sells refurbished iPads The store is running a sale on the refurbished iPad mini 3. Each of your roommates wants one. Their willingness to pay is given below. If the sale price is $200, who will buy an iPad, and what is the quantity demanded? Alexis: $250 Cameron: $175 Fatima: $300 Jamir: $125
Alexis and Fatima will buy one each. Hence, Qd = 2 when P = $200
the law of decreasing returns
As a firm uses more of a variable input, with a given quantity of fixed inputs, the marginal product of the variable input eventually decreases
Refer to Figure 7-12, how much are consumer surplus, producer surplus, and total surplus at the market equilibrium price?
Consumer: $312,50 Producer: $312.50 Total: $625
Total Cost (TC)
FC + VC - total cost of producing a given amount of output
Average Fixed Cost (AFC)
FC/Q
A buyer is willing to buy a product at a price greater than or equal to his willingness to pay, but would refuse to buy a product at a price less than his willingness to pay. T/F?
False
Let L represent the number of workers hired by a firm, and let Q represent that firm's quantity of output. Assume two points on the firm's production function are (L = 12, Q = 122) and (L = 13, Q = 132). Then the marginal product of the 13th worker is a. 8 units of output. b. 10 units of output. c. 122 units of output. d. 132 units of output.
a. 8 units of output
The average fixed cost curve. A. always declines with increased levels of output. B. always rises with increased levels of output. C. declines as long as it is above marginal cost. D. declines as long as it is below marginal cost.
a. always declines with increased levels of output
Long Run (LR)
all inputs are variable (e.g. firms can build more factories or sell existing ones)
producer surplus
amount received by sellers - cost to sellers area below P and above the S curve - sellers' gains
Refer to 13-2. Curve A represents which type of cost curve?
average fixed cost
allocation of resources
decentralized (in a market economy) - determined by interactions of many self-interested buyers and sellers
Refer to Figure 7-1, when the price rises from P1 to P2, consumer surplus...
decreases by an amount equal to B + C
A drought in California destroys many red grapes. As a result of the drought, the consumer surplus in the market for red grapes
decreases, and the consumer surplus in the market for red wine decreases
equality
distribute economic prosperity uniformly among the members of society - every member of society gets an equal slice of the pie?
fixed costs (FC)
do not vary with the quantity of output produced incur even if production is zero
In the long run a company that produces and sells popcorn incurs total costs of $1050 when output is 90 canisters and $1200 when output is 120 canisters. The popcorn company exhibits
economies of scale because average total cost is falling as output rises.
Jelani invested $80,000 in the factory and equipment to start the business last year: $30,000 from savings and borrowed $50,000 (interest 10% for saving and borrowing). Identify and calculate the explicit and implicit costs.
explicit cost: the interest Jelani has to pay every year - the 10% interest on the borrowed money = 0.10 × 50,000 = $5,000 implicit cost: the interest Jelani could have earned if savings were saved not spent - the 10% on $30,000 = 0.10 × 30,000 = $3,000 the opportunity cost of capital = $8,000 per year
A firm's opportunity costs of production are equal to its
explicit costs + implicit costs
total cost
explicit costs + implicit costs
Jelani owns a small gelato shop on campus. Jelani pays $20,000 a year for raw materials, and $12,000 in rent. Jelani can work at the local coffee shop for $25,000 a year. Identify and calculate the explicit and implicit costs.
explicit costs: raw materials and rent = $32,000 implicit cost: opportunity cost of the owner's time = $25,000 total cost = $57,000
Marginal returns start to decrease when more and more workers __________.
have to share the same equipment and workspace
A difference between explicit and implicit costs is that
implicit costs do not require a direct monetary outlay by the firm, whereas explicit costs do
implicit costs
input costs that do not require an outlay of money by the firm (opportunity cost of the owner's time)
explicit costs
input costs that require an outlay of money by the firm (paying wages to workers)
In the long run,
inputs that were fixed in the short run become variable
When average variable cost is at its minimum level, marginal product ________.
is at its maximum level
When a factory is operating in the short run,
it cannot adjust the quantity of fixed inputs
Suppose that a "doggie day care" firm uses only two inputs: hourly workers (labor) and a building (capital). In the short run, the firm most likely considers
labor to be variable and capital to be fixed
Firms may experience diseconomies of scale when
large management structures are bureaucratic and inefficient - more common when Q is high
What are economies of scale?
long-run average total cost falls as the quantity of output increases
When a firm experiences diseconomies of scale,
long-run average total cost increases as output increases - ATC rises as Q increases
When a firm experiences constant returns to scale,
long-run average total cost is unchanged, even when output increases.
Economies of scale occur when
long-run average total costs fall as output increases
An increase in the rent that a firm pays for its factory does not increase ___________ .
marginal cost
The minimum points of the average variable cost and average total cost curves occur where
marginal cost curve intersects those curves
Average variable cost is at a minimum when __________ .
marginal cost equals average variable cost
The average product of labor increases as output increases if __________ .
marginal product exceeds average product
market failures
market power: a single buyer or seller (small group) control market prices - markets are inefficient externalities: decisions of buyers and sellers affect people who are not participants in the market at all - inefficient equilibrium: from the standpoint of society as a whole
A result of welfare economics is that the equilibrium price of a product is the best price because it
maximizes the combined welfare of buyers and sellers
increasing marginal returns
occur when the marginal product of an additional worker exceeds the marginal product of the previous worker - has positive slope
decreasing marginal returns
occur when the marginal product of an additional worker is less than the marginal product of the previous worker - has negative slope
assumption
production in the short run factory size is fixed to increase production, hire more workers
An increase in the wage rate _________.
shifts the average total cost curve and the marginal cost curve upward
the goal of firms
to maximize profit, which equals total revenue minus total cost
economic profit
total revenue minus total cost (including both explicit and implicit costs)
accounting profit
total revenue minus total explicit cost
Jelani owns a small gelato shop on campus. She can make 15,000 pints of gelato a year, and sell them at $5 each. If Jelani's total costs are $65,000 a year, how much profit will be brought in after one year?
total revenue: $5 x 15,000 = $75,000 profit: $75,000 - $65,000 = $10,000
consumer surplus
value to buyers - amount paid by buyers area below the D curve and above P - buyers' gains
If a firm produces nothing, which of the following costs will be zero?
variable cost
variable costs (VC)
vary with the quantity of output produced
Marginal Cost (MC)
ΔTC / ΔQ - the increase in total cost that rises from quantity of input - determined by shape of MP curve
Cost
the value of everything a seller must give up to produce a good, inc. opportunity cost - measure of willingness to sell, only iff price > cost
Free Market Outcomes
1. Allocate the supply of goods to the buyers who value them most, as measured by their WTP 2. Allocate the demand for goods to the sellers who can produce them at the lowest cost 3. Produce the quantity of goods that maximizes the sum of consumer and producer surplus - raising or lowering the quantity of a good would not increase total surplus
Cindy's Car Wash has average variable costs of $2 and average fixed costs of $3 when it produces 100 units of output (car washes). The firm's total cost is
500
What best describes economic profit and accounting profit?
Economic profit equals total revenue minus both explicit and implicit costs; Accounting profit equals total revenue minus total explicit cost
constant returns to scale
Long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity of output changes - ATC stays the same as Q increases
marginal product of labor
MPL = ∆Q / ∆L
Which definition best describes diminishing marginal product?
Marginal product of an input declines as the quantity of the input increases
total producer surplus
PS = 1/2 x b x h
Total revenue equals
Price x Quantity
profit equation
TR - TC
Which of the following is an example of an implicit cost?
The owner of a firm forgoing an opportunity to earn a large salary working for a Wall Street brokerage firm
Jelani owns a small gelato shop on campus. She can make 15,000 pints of gelato a year, and sell them at $5 each. Jelani pays $20,000 a year for raw materials, and $12,000 in rent. Jelani can work at the local coffee shop for $25,000 a year. Jelani invested $80,000 in the factory and equipment to start the business last year: $30,000 from savings and borrowed $50,000 (interest 10% for saving and borrowing). Calculate accounting and economic profit.
Total revenue TR = $5 × 15,000 = $75,000 Explicit costs = raw materials + rent + interest paid = $20,000 + $12,000 + $5,000 = $37,000 Implicit costs = alternative job + forgone interest = $25,000 + $3,000 = $28,000 Accounting profit = TR - explicit costs = $75,000 - $37,000 = $38,000 Economic profit = TR - (explicit + implicit costs) = $75,000 - ($37,000 + $28,000) = $10,000 = Accounting profit - implicit cost
All else equal, an increase in supply will cause an increase in consumer surplus. T/F?
True
Average Variable Cost (AVC)
VC/Q - shape is determined by shape of AP curve
average product curve
shows the average product that is generated by input at each level of the input - has an upside down U shape
Short run (SR)
some inputs are fixed (e.g factories, land) the costs of these inputs are FC
What is welfare economics?
studies how the allocation of resources affects economic well-being
efficiency
the allocation of resources maximizes total surplus - is the pie as big as possible?
Producer Surplus (PS)
the amount a seller is paid for a good minus the seller's cost - price received minus willingness to sell area below the price and above the supply curve - total area is the sum of the producer surplus of all sellers
total consumer surplus
the area below the demand curve and above the market price - the height of the demand curve = the value buyers place on the good (WTP) - Each buyer's CS = WTP - P
A firm's cost of production equals _________ .
the costs of all resources used by the firm whether bought in the marketplace or owned by the firm.
assumption
the goal of a firm is to maximize profit
marginal product
the increase in output arising from an additional unit of that input other inputs constant slope of the production function
Willingness to Sell (WTS)
the lowest price accepted by a seller for one unit of a good or service
diminishing marginal product
the marginal product of an input declines as the quantity of the input increases production functions gets flatter as Q of inputs are increased the slope of the production function decreases hiring one extra worker... - increases output by MPL - increases costs by the wage paid
Willingness to Pay (WTP)
the maximum amount that a buyer will pay for a good and how much that buyer values the good
production function
the relationship between quantity of inputs used to make a good and the quantity of output of that good gets flatter as production rises
In the long run, with an increase in the plant size, __________.
the short-run average total cost curve shifts downward if economies of scale exist