Exam 2
cost output elasticity:
% change in the cost of production resulting from a 1% increase in output: E(c) = (change in C/change in q)(C/q) OR MC / AC
to find an increase in production from increasing, decreasing, constant returns to scale
((beta+% ^)-1)q / q
Recipe for Firm's Optimization under Perfect Competition
- P = MC to find optimal output - If asked to find profit: use TR - TC - To check if a firm will continue to operate, if P > AVC. If so, firm operates at P = MC, if not, shuts down. - You should be able to identify what is fixed cost and variable cost from a cost curve
follow 3 steps to get from expansion path to a cost curve
1. Choose an output level, then find the point of tangency of that isoquant with an isocost line 2. from the chosen isocost line, determine the minimum cost of producing the ouput level that has been selected 3. graph the output-cost combination
A long-run competitive equilibrium occurs when 3 conditions occur:
1. all firms are maximizing profit 2. No firm has an incentive to enter or exit the industry because all are earning 0 economic profit. 3. the Price of the product is such that the Q(s) = Q(d)
Suppose that the price of labor (PL) is $10 and the price of capital (PK) is $20. What is the equation of the isocost line corresponding to a total cost of $100?
10L+20K = $100
marginal cost =
1st derivative of TC function
The total cost (TC) of producing computuer software diskettes (Q) is given as: TC = 200+5Q. What's the average total cost?
200/Q +5
A perfectly competitive hardware manufacturer has total revenue of $85 million, total variable cost of $45 million, and fixed costs of $10 million. What is the firm's producer surplus?
40 million
The total cost (TC) of producing computer software diskettes (Q) is given as: TC = 200 + 5Q. What is the variable cost?
5Q
the point where MP(L) = AP(L),
AP(L) is at its maximum
Calculate if the firm should shut down in the SR if they're incurring a loss
ATC > P > AVC
LMC intersects the LAC where
LAC is at its minimum
The long-run output of a profit-maximizing competitive firm is the point at which
LMC = P
the cost-output elasticity can be written and calculated as
MC / AC
If E(c) < 1
MC < AC, so there's economies of scale because costs increase less than proportionately with output)
When average cost is at a minimum,
MC = AC
If E(c) = 1
MC = AC. Costs increase proportionately with output. Neither economies or diseconomies
A firm maximizes profit by operating at the level of output where
MC = MR (= P)
The firm chooses its output so that
MC = P as long as the firm covers its AVC in SR
If E(c) > 1
MC > AC, so diseconomies of scale
perfectly competitve firm should choose its output so that
MC(q) = MR = P
the point where total production is maximized...
MP = 0
If AP(L) is decreasing....
MP(L) < AP(L)
If AP(L) is increasing...
MP(L) > AP(L)
Steeper the tangent, higher the _______. Steeper the secant, higher the ________
MP(L), AP(L)
MRTS formula with Marginal Product
MP(L)/MP(K) = - change in K/ change in L
cost minimization condition
MP(L)/w = MP(K)/r
the firm's condition for cost minimization requires
MP_L/MP_K = w/r
MRTS =
MP_l / MP_K
The slope of the isoquant at any point measures the ______
MRTS - the ability of the firm to replace capital with labor while maintaining the same level of output.
The rate at which one input can be reduced per additional unit of the other input, while holding output constant, is measured by the
MRTS, marginal rate of substitution
Because of the relationship between a perfectly competitive firm's demand curve and its marginal revenue curve, the profit maximization condition for the firm can be written as
P = MC
Calculate if the firm should shut down or not
P > ATC
Producer Surplus
PS = R - VC
Producer surplus =
PS = R -VC
Profit =
R - VC - FC
a production function assumes a given _______
Technology
Firm A has a cost output elasticity of 0.7
There are economies of scale.
total firms competing at equilibrium price =
Total production (Q)/ production for a certain month(q)
In a market with entry and exit,
a firm enters when it can earn a positive long-run profit and exits when it faces the prospect of a long-run loss.
To model the input decisions for a production system, we plot labor on the horizontal axis and capital on the vertical axis. In the short run, labor is a variable input and capital is fixed. The short-run expansion path for this produciton system is
a horizontal line
If the law of diminishing returns applies to labor then
after some level of employment, the marginal product of labor must fall
accounting cost
all explicit costs
Long Run
all inputs are variable
MRTS
amount by which the quantity of one input can be reduced when one extra unit of another input is used, so that output remains constant. MRTS = - change in K/ change in L
If we take the production function and hold the level of output constant, allowing the amounts of capital and labor to vary, the curve that is traced out is called:
an isoquant
In a supply-and-demand graph, producer surplus can be pictured as the
area between the equilibrium price line and the supply curve to the left of equilibrium output.
Relation between diminishing marginal returns and marginal cost
as you hire more labor as ouput increases, MP(L) falls, resulting in increasing marginal cost.
In a short-run production process, the marginal cost is rising and the average total cost is falling as output is increased. Thus, marginal cost is
below average total cost
PS for a market is the area
below the demand curve(market price) and above the market supply curve
The following production function q = K + L exhibits
constant returns to scale
opportunity cost
cost associated with opportunities foregone when a firm's resources are not put to their best alternative use.
Given their _______ ________, firms use the existing ________ ________ to make ______ _______ in a way that minimizes their costs
cost constraints, production technology, input choices
Expansion path
curve passing through points of tengency between a firm's isocost lines and its isoquants
LR average cost curve
curve relating average cost of production to output when all inputs, including capital, are variable.
SR average cost curve
curve relating average cost of production to output when level of capital is fixed
Production with 2 variable inputs labor: Isoquants
curve showing all possible combinations of K & L that yield the same output
LR marginal cost
curve showing the change in the long-run total cost as output is increased incrementally by 1 unit.
Assume that a firm's production process is subject to increasing returns to scale over a broad range of outputs. Long-run average costs over this output will tend to
decrease/decline
In a production process, all inputs are increased by 10%, but ouput increases less than 10%. This means that the firm experiences
decreasing returns to scale
Isoquants are
downward sloping and convex
Which of the following is a key assumption of a perfectly competitive market?
each seller has a very small share of the market
LAC exhibits
economies of scale initially but eventually exhibits diseconomies of scale at higher output levels
LAC
envelope of the short-run average cost curves
Sunk Cost
expenditure that cannot be recovered. It shouldn't influence a firm's decisions
When MC of production increases for a firm, the level of output that maximizes profit
falls
P > ATC
firm makes a profit, produces where P=MC
Average total cost
firm's total cost divided by it's level of output ATC= TC / q
total cost =
fixed cost + variable cost
Production Function
function showing the highest output that a firm can produce for every specified combination of inputs Ex: q = f(K,L) i.e output is a function of capital and labor
Isoquant map
graph combining a number of isoquants, used to describe a production function
isocost line
graph showing all possible combinations of labor and capital that can be purchased for a given total cost C = wL + rK Slope = change in K/change in L= -w/r
The long-run supply curve in a constant-cost industry is linear and
horizontal
Industry's long run supply curve: The long-run supply curve for a constant-cost industry
horizontal line at a price equal to the minimum average cost of production
Theory of a firm states
how a firm makes cost-minimizing production decisions and how its costs varies with its output
Zero Economic Profit
implies a firm is earning a normal return on its investment (its doing as well as it could by investing its money elsewhere.
Marginal cost:
increase in cost resulting from the production of one extra unit of output MC = change in VC/change in q OR change in TC/ change in q
An isocost line reveals the
input combinations that can be purchased with a given outlay of funds
Factors of production
inputs into the production process (labor, capital, materials)
prospective sunk cost
investment
When the average product is decreasing, marginal product
is less than average product
Production with one variable output (SR): Marginal Product
is the additional output produced as an input increased by one unit. MP = change in q/change in L = derivative of q in respect to L
Fixed cost
is the cost that does not vary with output levels & can only be eliminated by shutting down
Production with one variable output (SR): Average Product of Labor -
is the output per unit of labor AP(L) = q/L
At the profit-maximizing level of output, marginal profit
is zero
Along the same isoquant, the output is held constant. further the isoquant from the origin, higher the associated output
isoquant map
The supply curve for a competitive firm is
its MC curve above the minimum point of the AVC curve.
the demand curve facing an individual firm in a competitive market is both
its average revenue curve which is equal to the market price
Higher-cost firms have _____ ps, and lower cost firms have ______ps
less, more
A decreasing-cost industry has a downward-sloping
long-run industry supply curve
The slope of the total product curve is the
marginal product
Economic Cost =
opportunity cost
economic cost
opportunity cost + explicit costs
When an isocost line is just tangent to an isoquant, we know that
output is being produced at a minimum cost
SR Supply Curve of Competitive Firm & Industry: the firm's SR supply curve is the..
portion of marginal cost curve for which MC > AVC
Law of Diminishing Marginal Return
principle that as the use of an input increases with other inputs fixed, the resulting additions to output will eventually decrease. (applies to a given technology)
In the short run, when fixed cost is positive,
producer surplus is greater than profit
A production function is drawn for a _________ _____________
production technology
Joe owns a small coffee shop, and his production function is q = 3KL where q is total output in cups per hour, K is the number of coffee machines (capital) and L is the number of employees hired per hour (labor). If Joe's capital is currently fixed at K = 3 machines, what is his short run production function?
q=9L
Total Product Curve
shows the output produced for different amounts of labor output
diseconomies of scale:
situation in which a doubling of output requires more than a doubling of cost
Economies of scale
situation where output can be doubled for less than a doubling of cost.
Marginal Product (in respect to total product curve)
slope of a tangent to the total product at a given point.
when a firm is producing at an output at which LAC is falling,
the LMC < LAC.
If LAC is rising,
the LMC will lie above it.
whenever marginal cost lies below average cost,
the average cost curve falls
whenever marginal cost lies above average cost,
the average cost curve rises.
When labor usage is at 12 units, output is 36 units. From this we may infer that
the average product of labor is 3
Producer surplus in a perfectly competitive industry is
the difference between revenue and variable cost. (PS = R-VC)
ATC>P>AVC
the firm operates to minimize loss and produces at P = MC since it can still cover its variable cost and part of its fixed cost as well
AVC > P
the firm will temporarily shut down
the amount of output that a firm decides to sell has no effect on the market price in a competitive industry because
the firm's output is a small fraction of the entire industry's output.
IN an increasing-cost industry
the long-run industry supply curve is downward sloping
In an increasing-cost industry
the long-run industry supply curve is upward sloping.
The difference between the economic and accounting costs of a firm are
the opportunity costs of the factors of production that the firm owns.
the firm's cost minimizing input combination is given by
the point where the isocost is tangent to the firm's isoquant
If a competitive firm has a U-shaped marginal cost curve then
the profit maximizing output is found where MC = MR and MC is increasing
marginal cost crosses the average variable cost and average total cost curves at....
their minimum points
A few sellers may behave as if they operate in a perfectly competitive market if the market demand is:
very elastic
Marginal cost =
w / MP(L)
equation of the isocost line. (used to find optimal quantities of labor and capital)
wL + rK = budget (C)
Suppose capital and labor are perfect substitutes in a long-run production process. If labor costs $15 per hour and the rental rate of capital is $20 per hour, what can we say about the profit maximizing choice of labor and capital inputs?
we will only use labor in the production process
Short Run
will always have at least one fixed input (production factor that cannot be varied)
A straight-line isoquant
would indicate that capital and labor are perfect substitutes in production
Know the difference between accounting and economic profit
zero-economic profit = using all the capital for investments to reach a profit of 0.