Chapter 13 The Costs of Production
According to the Law of Supply:
- Firms are willing to produce and sell a greater quantity of a good when the price of the good is high. - This results in a supply curve that slopes upward.
Three Important Properties of Cost Curves
1. Marginal cost eventually rises with the quantity of output. 2. The average-total-cost curve is U-shaped. 3. The marginal-cost curve crosses the average-total-cost curve at the minimum of average total cost.
ATC=
TC/Q
PROFIT =
TOTAL REVENUE (TR) - TOTAL COST (TC)
The average total-cost curve is _________________.
U-shaped
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.
fixed costs
costs that do not vary with the quantity of output produced
variable costs
costs that vary with the quantity output produced
Some of the opportunity costs, such as the wages a firm pays its workers, are ___________.
explicit
average fixed cost
fixed cost divided by the quantity of output
Average total cost declines as _______________________.
output increases
In the short run, ________________________________
some costs are fixed.
Modern microeconomics is about
supply, demand, and market equilibrium
Economic Profit
takes both explicit and implicit costs into account, whereas accounting profits considers only explicit costs.
total revenue
the amount a firm receives for the sale of its output
marginal cost
the increase in total cost that arises from an extra unit of production
total cost
the market value of the inputs a firm uses in production
When the marginal product declines, ____________________________________________.
the production function becomes flatter.
Goal of firms =
to maximize profit, which equals total revenue minus total cost
economic profit
total revenue MINUS toal cost, including both explicit and implicit costs
accounting profit
total revenue MINUS total explicit cost
profit
total revenue minus total cost
average variable cost
variable cost divided by the quantity of output
economies of scale
the property whereby long-run average total cost falls as the quantity of output increases
diseconomies of scale
the property whereby long-run average total cost rises as the quantity of output increases
constant returns to scale
the property whereby long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity of output changes.
diminishing marginal product
the property whereby the marginal product if an input declines as the quantity of the input increases.
efficient scale
the quantity of output that minimizes average total cost
production function
the relationship between quantity of inputs used to make a good and the quantity of output of the good
explicit costs
input costs that require an outlay of money by the firm
MC=
change in total cost/change in quantity
At very low levels of output average total cost is high because_________________________________________
fixed cost is spread over only a few unit
Costs of production may be divided into _________________ and _____________________.
fixed costs and variable costs
In the long run, ___________________________________
fixed costs become variable costs.
Other opportunity costs, such as the wages the firm owner gives up by working in the firm rather than taking another job, are ___________.
implicit
implicit costs
input costs that do not require an outlay of money by the firm