1 / 24

Chapter 04 Firm Production, Cost, and Revenue

Chapter 04 Firm Production, Cost, and Revenue. Chapter Outline. Production Costs Revenue Maximizing Profit. Basic Definitions. Profit : The money that business makes: Revenue minus Cost Cost : the expense that must be incurred in order to produce goods for sale

tphillip
Download Presentation

Chapter 04 Firm Production, Cost, and Revenue

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. Chapter 04Firm Production, Cost, and Revenue

  2. Chapter Outline • Production • Costs • Revenue • Maximizing Profit

  3. Basic Definitions • Profit: The money that business makes: Revenue minus Cost • Cost: the expense that must be incurred in order to produce goods for sale • Revenue: themoney that comes into the firm from the sale of their goods

  4. Economic vs. Accounting Cost • Economic Cost: All costs, both those that must be paid as well as those incurred in the form of forgone opportunities, of a business • Accounting Cost: Only those costs that must be explicitly paid by the owner of a business

  5. Production • Production Function: a graph which showshow many resources we need to produce various amounts of output • Cost Function: a graph which shows how much various amounts of production cost

  6. Inputs to Production • Fixed Inputs: resources that you cannot change • Variable Inputs: resources that can be easily changed

  7. Concepts in Production • Division of Labor: workers divide up the tasks in such a way that each can build up a momentum and not have to switch jobs • Diminishing Returns: the notion that there exists a point where the addition of resources increases production but does so at a decreasing rate

  8. Output D Production Function C B A Workers Figure 1 The Production Function

  9. A Numerical Example

  10. Costs • Fixed Costs: costs of production that we cannot change • Variable Costs: costs of production that we can change

  11. Total Cost Total Cost Function D C B A Output Figure 2 The Total Cost Function

  12. Cost Concepts • Marginal Cost: the addition to cost associated with one additional unit of output • Average Total Cost: Total Cost/Output, the cost per unit of production • Average Variable Cost: Total Variable Cost/Output, the average variable cost per unit of production • Average Fixed Cost: Total Fixed Cost/Output, the average fixed cost per unit of production

  13. P MC ATC AVC AFC Q Figure 3 Marginal Cost, Average Total, Average Variable, and Average Fixed Cost

  14. Numerical Example * MC is per 100

  15. Revenue • Marginal Revenue:additional revenue the firm receives from the sale of each unit

  16. P P S P* P*=Marginal Revenue D Market for Memory Our Firm Figure 4 Setting the Price When There are Many Competitors

  17. P MR D Market for Memory Figure 5 Marginal Revenue When there are No Competitors

  18. Numerical Example For the Many Competitors Case * MR is per 100

  19. Numerical Example For the No Competitors Case

  20. Maximizing Profit • We assume that firms wish to maximize profits

  21. Market Forms • Perfect Competition: a situation in a market where there are many firms producing the same good • Monopoly: a situation in a market where there is only one firm producing the good

  22. Rules of Production • A firm should a) produce an amount such that Marginal Revenue equals Marginal Cost (MR=MC), unless b) the price is less than the average variable cost (P<AVC).

  23. Numerical Example of Profit Maximization With Many Competitors

  24. Numerical Example of Profit Maximization With No Competitors

More Related