Lab 4 (Materi)
Lab 4 (Materi)
• Average variable cost is the average variable cost per unit of all
units being produced. So, average variable cost follows marginal
cost, but lags behind.
• Sunk costs occur when firms have no control over fixed costs in
the short run.
• Accounting costs are Out-of-pocket costs or costs as an
accountant would define them. Sometimes referred to as explicit
costs.
• Economic costs are costs that include the full opportunity costs of
all inputs. These include what are often called implicit costs.
• In the short run, every firm is constrained by some fixed input that
(1) leads to diminishing returns to variable inputs and (2) limits its
capacity to produce. As a firm approaches that capacity, it becomes
increasingly costly to produce successively higher levels of output.
Marginal costs ultimately increase with output in the short run.
• The relationship between marginal cost and average variable cost:
a. When marginal cost is below average cost, AC is declining.
b. When marginal cost is above average cost, AC is increasing.
• Output Decisions
Remember that we are working under two assumptions:
a. that the industry we are examining is perfectly
competitive
b. that firms choose the level of output that yields the
maximum total profit
o Revenue
a. Total Revenue is the total amount that a firm takes in from
the sale of its output. TR = P x q
b. Marginal Revenue is the additional revenue that a firm
takes in when it increases output by one additional unit.
o In perfect competition, MR = P, therefore, the profit-maximizing
perfectly competitive firm will produce up to the point where the
price of its output is just equal to short run marginal cost. The key
idea is that firms will produce as long as marginal revenue
exceeds marginal cost.