1 / 17

Economics 202: Intermediate Microeconomic Theory

Economics 202: Intermediate Microeconomic Theory. Reminder: Review is due in class on Tuesday. Short-Run Costs of Production. A firm’s production costs equal explicit + implicit costs (i.e., the opportunity cost of their resources -- their value in their next best use)

shauna
Download Presentation

Economics 202: Intermediate Microeconomic Theory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Economics 202: Intermediate Microeconomic Theory • Reminder: Review is due in class on Tuesday

  2. Short-Run Costs of Production • A firm’s production costs equal explicit + implicit costs (i.e., the opportunity cost of their resources -- their value in their next best use) • Economic costAccounting cost Labor explicit cost (w) current expenses Capital implicit cost (r) historical price & depreciation • Measures of Short-Run Costs: • Total Fixed Costs (TFC) are costs that don’t depend on level of output • Costs they can’t adjust in short-run (plant and equipment) • Even if they shut-down, they have to pay their Fixed costs • Total Variable Costs(TVC) are costs that do depend on level of output • These can be adjusted in short-run (workers, electricity, raw materials) • More output leads to greater TVC • Total Cost = TFC + TVC at each output level • Because TVC increases with Q, so does TC • Marginal Cost = TC/Q • How much will cost increase if we make one more unit of output? • How much will a firm save if it makes one fewer unit of output?

  3. Measures of Average Cost • Average Fixed Cost (AFC) = TFC/Q • As output increases, AFC decreases. • Average Variable Cost (AVC) = TVC/Q • Average Total Cost (ATC) = TC/Q • ATC = AFC + AVC

  4. Total Product and Total Variable Cost Q • TVC is total money the firm must spend to get the necessary amount of the variable input. • To get TVC on the x-axis, multiply each quantity of labor by its cost ($10/hour) • Key point: the shape of the TVC curve is determined by the shape of the TP curve (which exhibits diminishing marginal returns) 8 TP 4 8 18 L (hours of labor) Q 8 TVC 4 $80 $180 Total Var Cost ($)

  5. Short-Run Cost Curves • We typically reverse the axes, so TC curve has the shape shown. • TFC is horizontal line. • TVC is same distance below TC at all output levels. TC $ TVC 100 • MC curve is derived from TC curve and is U-shaped due to diminishing marginal returns. • MC = TVC/ q = L*w/ q = w/MPL • Under diminishing marginal returns, each extra worker adds less to Q  each extra unit of Q requires more workers  each extra unit of Q will cost more TFC 20 4 Q $/unit MC 4 Q

  6. Short-Run Cost Curves $ TC • There are 3 average cost curves • AVC = TVC/Q = wL/Q = w/APL • Recall that APL rises to a maximum and then falls  AVC will fall then rise. • AVC is slope of ray from origin to a point on the TVC curve TVC 100 TFC 20 • AFC = TFC/Q and declines over the entire range of Q • Fixed costs are spread over more Q Q 4 $/unit ATC MC AVC • ATC = AVC + AFC AFC 4 Q

  7. Marginal-Average Relationships • If Marginal < Average, Avg is falling • If Marginal >Average, Avg is rising •  MC = AC at AC’s minimum $ TC TVC 100 TFC 20 Q 4 $/unit ATC MC AVC 4 Q

  8. Long-run vs.Short-run Cost curves LAC ($) SAC1 SAC7 SAC6 LAC SAC3 Output • Long-run is a planning horizon. Under uncertainty about future demand, the firm chooses which size plant to build, thus determining their short-run costs, until it’s time to build again. • Pick an output level and build the plant size allowing lowest avg cost • LAC is the lowest average cost attainable when all inputs are variable • If only 7 plant sizes available, LAC is a “wave”-line. • If lots and lots of plant sizes possible, LAC is the smooth line

  9. Competitive Firm Example • Assume firm operates in a perfectly competitive output market and perfectly competitive input markets • Let Q = f(K,L) = K1/3L1/3 • Find conditional factor demand functions. • Find LRTC and the “family” of SRTC functions.

  10. Competitive Firm Example • Assume w = 1, r = 1, K = 27

  11. Competitive Firm Example • Assume w = 1, r = 1, K = 27 & 64

  12. Profit Maximization • max  = TR(q) – TC(q) • max  = TR(K,L) – TC(K,L) • Derive profit-max conditions • Big Picture -- what does the profit maximization condition look like for various possibilities? Input Market Structure Output Mkt Structure:CompetitionMonopsonistic Competition P * MPL = wP * MPL = MEL Monopolistic MR * MPL = w MR * MPL = MEL

  13. Market Structures • Continuum of market structures Perfect CompetitionMonopolistic CompetitionOligopolyMonopoly many firms/buyers many smaller firms small # of bigger firms 1 supplier free entry/exit free entry/exit difficult to enter barriers to entry product homogeneity differentiated products same or different Q one product perfect information perfect info imperfect info imperfect info • Examples: Farmer’s market fast food, clothes, steel , cars, cell phones, local cable cereals, aspirin, colas ABC/NBC/CBS/Fox local utility Microsoft? • Features: Some monopoly power: L > 0 Interdependent actions D-curve is not Dmarket No single oligopoly theory ’s are eroded by entry; econ = 0

  14. Short-run Profit Maximization • Total Revenue (TR) curve is new • Profit = TR - TC • Implicit (like owner’s time) & explicit costs are included •  < 0 even if shut down (Q = 0) • max occurs where MR = MC $ TR TC TFC  • Now use per-unit cost curves • ATC = AVC + AFC • ATCmin > AVCmin • Vertical distance becomes smaller • Competitive firm’s D-curve is horiz. • max occurs where MR = MC • Profit = (AR - AC)*(Q) [green box] • (avg profit per unit)*(# units sold) • max rule does not mean the firm intentionallysets P = MC; price-taker adjust Q ‘til MR = MC Output Q* MC $/unit ATC P P=MR=AR AVC Q* Q

  15. It might be in the best interests of the firm to incur a loss If P < ATC , but P > AVC Can either shut down or operate Ceasing production may be only temporary until D picks up again Loss if Q = Q2* is yellow rectangle Loss if Q = 0 is yellow + green (note that we’re only using the Q* level to compare at same output) Operating at a Loss in the Short-run MC ATC $/unit P1 AVC P2=MR=AR P2 Q2* Q1* Output MC ATC $/unit • Loss if Q = Q3* is yellow area Loss if Q = 0 is purple area • Shutdown point is the minimum of the AVC curve since for any price below that it will be more profitable (less unprofitable) to stop producing AVC P3=MR=AR P3 Q3* Output

  16. Competitive Firm’s Short-run Supply Curve • A perfectly competitive firm’s SR supply curve is the same as its MC curve (above min AVC!) • It shows how much they will supply at any given price • Lower the price  MR < MC • Only above the shutdown point • At P1, produce Q1 (  > 0 ) At P2, produce Q2 (  > 0 ) At P3, produce Q3 (  > 0 ) At P4, produce Q4 (  < 0, but better to still operate ) At P5, produce Q5 = 0 (  < 0, but better to shut down) $/unit MC SS P1 P2 ATC AVC P3 P4 P5 Q5 Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Output

  17. Competitive Firm Example • Assume w = 1, r = 1, K = 27, then SRTC = 27 + q3/27 • Find and graph ATC, AVC, AFC, MC. • Find shutdown price and breakeven (zero profit) price • Calculate profit if P = $9

More Related