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Tiêu đề Chapter 7: The Costs of Production
Chuyên ngành Economics
Thể loại Questions for review
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Số trang 7
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If marginal cost is less greater than average variable cost, then each additional unit is adding less more to total cost than previous units added to the total cost, which implies that t

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CHAPTER 7

THE COST OF PRODUCTION

QUESTIONS FOR REVIEW

1 A firm pays its accountant an annual retainer of $10,000 Is this an economic cost?

Explicit costs are actual outlays They include all costs that involve a

monetary transaction An implicit cost is an economic cost that does not

necessarily involve a monetary transaction, but still involves the use of

resources When a firm pays an annual retainer of $10,000, there is a

monetary transaction The accountant trades his or her time in return for

money Therefore, an annual retainer is an explicit cost

2 The owner of a small retail store does her own accounting work How would you

measure the opportunity cost of her work?

Opportunity costs are measured by comparing the use of a resource with its

alternative uses The opportunity cost of doing accounting work is the time

not spent in other ways, i.e., time such as running a small business or

participating in leisure activity The economic, or opportunity, cost of doing

accounting work is measured by computing the monetary amount that the

owner’s time would be worth in its next best use.

3 Please explain whether the following statements are true or false

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a If the owner of a business pays himself no salary, then the accounting cost is

zero, but the economic cost is positive

True Since there is no monetary transaction, there is no accounting, or

explicit, cost However, since the owner of the business could be employed

elsewhere, there is an economic cost The economic cost is positive,

reflecting the opportunity cost of the owner’s time The economic cost is

the value of the next best alternative, or the amount that the owner would

earn if he took the next best job

b A firm that has positive accounting profit does not necessarily have positive

economic profit

True Accounting profit considers only the explicit, monetary costs Since

there may be some opportunity costs that were notfully realized as explicit

monetary costs, it is possible that when the opportunity costs are added in,

economic profit will become negative This indicates that the firm’s

resources are not being put to their best use

c If a firm hires a currently unemployed worker, the opportunity cost of

utilizing the worker’s services is zero

False The opportunity cost measures the value of the worker’s time, which

is unlikely to be zero Though the worker was temporarily unemployed, the

worker still possesses skills, which have a value and make the opportunity

cost of hiring the worker greater than zero In addition, since opportunity

cost is the equivalent of the worker’s next best option, it is possible that the

worker might have been able to get a better job that utilizes his skills more

efficiently Alternatively, the worker could have been doing unpaid work,

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make the profit negative, in economic terms.

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such as care of a child or elderly person at home, which would have had a

value to those receiving the service

marginal cost of production is diminishing as more units of output are produced,

what can you say about the marginal product of labor ?

The marginal product of labor must be increasing The marginal cost of

production measures the extra cost of producing one more unit of output If

this cost is diminishing, then it must be taking fewer units of labor to

produce the extra unit of output, since the extra cost refers to the extra cost

of the labor If fewer units of labor are required to produce a unit of output,

then the marginal product (extra output produced by an extra unit of labor)

must be increasing Note also, that MC=w/MPL, so that if MC is

diminishing then MPL must be increasing for any given w

5 Suppose a chair manufacturer finds that the marginal rate of technical substitution

of capital for labor in his production process is substantially greater than the ratio of

the rental rate on machinery to the wage rate for assembly-line labor How should he

alter his use of capital and labor to minimize the cost of production?

To minimize cost, the manufacturer should use a combination of capital and

labor so the rate at which he can trade capital for labor in his production

process is the same as the rate at which he can trade capital for labor in

external markets The manufacturer would be better off if he increased his

use of capital and decreased his use of labor, decreasing the marginal rate of

technical substitution, MRTS He should continue this substitution until his

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MRTS equals the ratio of the rental rate to the wage rate The MRTS in this case is equal to MPK/MPL As the manufacturer uses more K and less L, the MPK will diminish and the MPL will increase, both of which will decrease the MRTS until it is equal to the ratio of the input prices (rental rate on capital

divided by wage rate)

6 Why are isocost lines straight lines?

The isocost line represents all possible combinations of labor and capital that may be purchased for a given total cost The slope of the isocost line is the ratio of the input prices of labor and capital If input prices are fixed, then the ratio of these prices is clearly fixed and the isocost line is straight Only when the ratio or factor prices change as the quantities of inputs change is the isocost line not straight

7 Assume the marginal cost of production is increasing Can you determine whether the average variable cost is increasing or decreasing? Explain

Marginal cost can be increasing while average variable cost is either increasing or decreasing If marginal cost is less (greater) than average variable cost, then each additional unit is adding less (more) to total cost than

previous units added to the total cost, which implies that the AVC declines

(increases) Therefore, we need to know whether marginal cost is greater

than average variable cost to determine whether the AVC is increasing or

decreasing

8 Assume the marginal cost of production is greater than the average variable cost Can you determine whether the average variable cost is increasing or decreasing? Explain

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If the average variable cost is increasing (decreasing), then the last unit

produced is adding more (less) to total variable cost than the previous units

did, on average Therefore, marginal cost is above (below) average variable

cost In fact, the point where marginal cost exceeds average variable cost is

also the point where average variable cost starts to rise

9 If the firm’s average cost curves are U-shaped, why does its average variable cost

curve achieve its minimum at a lower level of output than the average total cost

curve?

Total cost is equal to fixed plus variable cost Average total cost is equal to

average fixed plus average variable cost When graphed, the difference

between the U-shaped total cost and average variable cost curves is the

average fixed cost curve Thus, falling average variable cost and average

fixed cost sum up to a falling average total cost curve Since average fixed

cost continues to fall as more output is produced, average total cost will

continue to fall even after average variable cost has reached its minimum

because the drop in average fixed cost exceeds the increase in the average

variable cost Eventually, the fall in average fixed cost becomes small

enough so that the rise in average variable cost causes average total cost to

begin to rise

10 If a firm enjoys economies of scale up to a certain output level, and then cost

increases proportionately with output, what can you say about the shape of the

long-run average cost curve?

When the firm experiences increasing returns to scale, its long-run average

cost curve is downward sloping When the firm experiences constant returns

to scale, its long-run average cost curve is horizontal If the firm experiences

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increasing returns to scale, then constant returns to scale, its long-run average

cost curve falls, then becomes horizontal

11 How does a change in the price of one input change the firm’s long-run

expansion path?

The expansion path describes the combination of inputs that the firm chooses

to minimize cost for every output level This combination depends on the

ratio of input prices: if the price of one input changes, the price ratio also

changes For example, if the price of an input increases, less of the input can

be purchased for the same total cost, and the intercept of the isocost line on

that input’s axis moves closer to the origin Also, the slope of the isocost

line, the price ratio, changes As the price ratio changes, the firm substitutes

away from the now more expensive input toward the cheaper input Thus,

the expansion path bends toward the axis of the now cheaper input

12 Distinguish between economies of scale and economies of scope Why can one

be present without the other?

Economies of scale refer to the production of one good and occur when

proportionate increases in all inputs lead to a more-than-proportionate

increase in output Economies of scope refer to the production of more than

one good and occur when joint output is less costly than the sum of the costs

of producing each good or service separately There is no direct relationship

between increasing returns to scale and economies of scope, so production

can exhibit one without the other See Exercise (14) for a case with constant

product-specific returns to scale and multiproduct economies of scope

13 Is the firm’s expansion path always a straight line?

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No If the long run expansion path is a straight line this means that the firm

always uses capital and labor in the same proportion If the capital labor

ratio changes as output is increased then the expansion path is not a straight

line

14 What is the difference between economies of scale and returns to scale?

Economies of scale measures the relationship between cost and output, i.e.,

when output is doubled, does cost double, less then double, or more than

double Returns to scale measures what happens to output when all inputs

are doubled

economies of scope

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expansion path may be horizontal if capital is fixed.

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