Lecture on Output and Cost
Israt Hossain, Lecturer
BA, DIU
Output and Cost
Chapter 11
Microeconomics by Michael Parkin
Long run & Short run
• The long run is a time frame in which the quantities of all factors of
production can be varied.
• Long-run decisions are not easily reversed.
• The past expenditure on a plant that has no resale value is a sunk cost.
• The short run is a time frame in which the quantity of at least one
factor of production is fixed.
• For most firms, capital, land, and entrepreneurship are fixed factors of production and
labor is the variable factor of production.
• We call the fixed factors of production the firm’s plant.
• Labor is the variable factor generally.
Product Schedules
• Total product is the maximum output that a given quantity of labor
can produce.
• The marginal product of labor is the increase in total product that
results from a one-unit increase in the quantity of labor employed,
with all other inputs remaining the same.
• The average product of labor is equal to total product divided by the
quantity of labor employed.
• Average product tells how productive workers are on average.
Product
Schedules
Continued.
Total Product
Curve
• The shape of TP Curve is steeper
initially and afterwards it gets flatter.
• It separates the attainable output
levels from those that are
unattainable like PPF.
• The area inside the curve, are
attainable, but they are inefficient.
• Only the points on the total product
curve are technologically efficient.
Marginal
Product Curve
• Marginal product is also measured by
the slope of the total product curve.
• The shapes of the product curves are
similar because almost every production
process has two features:
• Increasing marginal returns initially.
• Diminishing marginal returns eventually.
Marginal Returns.
• Increasing marginal returns occur when the marginal product of an
additional worker exceeds the marginal product of the previous
worker.
• Cause: Increased specialization and division of labor in the production
process.
• Diminishing marginal returns occur when the marginal product of an
additional worker is less than the marginal product of the previous
worker.
• Cause: . As more workers are added in the same space and capital, there is
less and less for the additional workers to do that is productive.
Marginal Returns Continued.
• Hiring more and more workers continues to increase output but by
successively smaller amounts.
• The law of diminishing returns : As a firm uses more of a variable factor
of production with a given quantity of the fixed factor of production, the
marginal product of the variable factor eventually diminishes.
• Most production processes experience increasing marginal returns
initially, but all production processes eventually reach a point of
diminishing marginal returns.
Average
Product curve
• The average product is largest
when average product and
marginal product are equal.
• the marginal product curve cuts
the average product curve at the
point of maximum average
product.
• For the number of workers at
which marginal product is less
than average product, average
product is decreasing and vice
versa.
Cost.
• A firm’s total cost (TC) is the cost of all the factors of production it
uses.
• Total fixed cost (TFC) is the cost of the firm’s fixed factors.
• Total variable cost (TVC) is the cost of the firm’s variable factors.
• Total cost is the sum of total fixed cost and total variable cost.
Total Cost Curves
Marginal Cost
• A firm’s marginal cost is the increase in total cost that results from a one-unit
increase in output.
• We calculate marginal cost as the increase in total cost divided by the
increase in output.
• Marginal cost curve is U-shaped as marginal cost successively increases after
getting decreased for a while.
Chart
Marginal and
Average Cost
curves
• Marginal cost is smaller with the
raise in production while output
level is low because of division of
labor and increased specialization.
• But as output increases further,
marginal cost eventually increases
because of the law of diminishing
returns.
• To produce more, higher quantity of
labor is required according to the
law which raises MC.
Average Cost
• Average fixed cost (AFC) is total fixed cost per unit of output.
• Average variable cost (AVC) is total variable cost per unit of output.
• Average total cost (ATC) is total cost per unit of output.
• TC= TFC + TVC
• TC/Q= (TFC/Q) + (TVC/Q)
• ATC= AFC +AVC
Average Cost & Marginal Cost
• The marginal cost curve (MC) intersects the average variable cost curve
and the average total cost curve at their minimum points.
• When marginal cost is less than average cost, average cost is decreasing.
• When marginal cost exceeds average cost, average cost is increasing.
• This relationship holds for both the ATC curve and the AVC curve.
• Reason : The general relationship between the marginal and average
value.
The Average Total Cost Curve Is U-Shaped
• The shape of ATC curve combines the shapes of the AFC and AVC curves.
• Average variable cost decreases initially but increases eventually due to:
• Diminishing returns means that as output increases, ever-larger amounts of labor are
needed to produce an additional unit of output .
• So as output increases, average variable cost decreases initially but increase eventually.
• When output increases, the firm spreads its total fixed cost over a larger
output and so its average fixed cost decreases.
Continued.
• Initially, as output increases, both average fixed cost and average
variable cost decrease, so average total cost decreases. The ATC curve
slopes downward.
• With average fixed cost decreasing more quickly than average variable
cost is increasing, the ATC curve continues to slope downward.
• Eventually, average variable cost starts to increase more quickly than
average fixed cost decreases, so average total cost starts to increase.
The ATC curve slopes upward.