Title: AAEC 2305 Fundamentals of Ag Economics
1AGEC 220
Production Costs, Supply, Price Determination
2Introduction
- A managers goal is to determine how much to
produce in order to maximize profits. - Previously we established Stage II is the
rational stage of pdn, but price information
(cost) is necessary to determine at which point
in Stage II to produce. - Profit is affected not only by how much is
produced, but also by the costs of generating
that pdn.
3Objective
- Introduce cost relationships into production.
- Combine what we know about the physical pdn
process with input price information to examine
relationship between costs of production and
level of output produced.
4Assumptions
- 1) Firms seek to maximize p
- 2) One product, one pdn method
- 3) One variable input, all others are fixed or
held constant - 4) Perfect Information
- 5) Price taker
5Cost Definitions
- Costs of Pdn or Economic Costs The payments
that a firm must make to attract inputs and keep
them from being used to produce other products. - Explicit Costs - Normal out of pocket costs of
inputs used in pdn - Implicit Costs - Costs associated with inputs
owned by the firm (i.e., opportunity costs - ex.,
land)
6Fixed vs. Variable Costs
- Fixed Costs Costs which do not vary with the
level of pdn - These costs are associated with
the fixed factors of pdn. - Incurred regardless whether any output is
produced - (Ex rent)
- Variable Costs Costs that vary as the output
level changes - These costs are associated with
variable factors of pdn. - (Ex seed cost)
7Short Run vs. Long Run
- Short Run Time period in which the firm has
both fixed variable factors of pdn, and thus
fixed variable costs. - Long Run Time period in which there are no
fixed factors of pdn, only variable factors of
pdn. Thus, the firm only incurs variable costs.
8Cost Relationships in Pdn
- Costs Based on Total Output
- 1) Total Fixed Costs (TFC)
- 2) Total Variable Costs (TVC)
- 3) Total Costs (TC)
- TFC (overhead costs) costs of inputs (implicit
explicit) that are fixed in the SR do not
change as the output level changes.
9Cost Relationships in Pdn
- TVC costs of inputs (implicit explicit) that
are variable in the SR, and change as output
level changes. - Calculated by summing the cost of each variable
input used - TVC (PX1X1) (PX2X2) . . . .
(PXnXn) - For One Variable Input
- TVC PXX
10Cost Relationships in Pdn
- TC sum of TFC TVC
- TC TFC TVC
11Total Cost Curves(Assume TFC 10 and Px 4
X Y TFC TVC
TC
12Cost Relationships in Pdn
- Costs Based on Per-Unit Output
- 1) Average Fixed Costs (AFC)
- 2) Average Variable Costs (AVC)
- 3) Average Total Costs (ATC)
- 4) Marginal Cost (MC)
- AFC Average cost of fixed inputs per unit of
output - AFC TFC / Y
13Cost Relationships in Pdn
- AVC Average cost of variable inputs per unit of
output - AVC TVC / Y
- ATC Average total cost per unit of output
- ATC TC / Y
14Cost Relationships in Pdn
- MC Increase in total cost necessary to produce
one more unit of output - MC ?TC / ?Y ?TVC / ?Y
15Cost Curves(Assume TFC 10 and Px 4
X Y TFC TVC TC AFC AVC ATC MC
16Summary of Relationships Between AFC, AVC, ATC,
MC Curves
- AFC is a continuously decreasing function w/ the
shape of a rectangular hyperbola - AVC ATC curves are U-shaped (representing
increasing decreasing returns) - The vertical distance between ATC AVC at each
output level is equal to AFC
17Summary of Relationships Between AFC, AVC, ATC,
MC Curves
- MC crosses both AVC ATC from below at their
respective minimums - ATC is also referred to as Average Cost
18Cost Curves Pdn Process
- The cost curves are derived directly from the pdn
process. - Therefore, the pdn function can be transferred
directly to the cost curves - APP AVC and MPP MC are mirror images of
each other
19Summary of Relationships
- When MPP gt APP (APP is increasing) ?
- MC lt AVC (AVC is decreasing)
- When MPP APP (APP is max) ? MC AVC (AVC is
min) - When MPP lt APP (APP is decreasing) ?
- MC gt AVC (AVC is increasing)
20Mathematical Relationships
- MC ?TC / ? Y PX / MPP
- AVC TVC / Y PX / APP
21Changes in Input Price
- Input Price Increase
- The cost of producing each output level increases
- TVC TC shift upward left TFC remains
unchanged - AVC, AC, MC shift upward left - Input Price Decrease (or technological innovation
increases productivity) - The cost of producing same amount of output
decreases - TVC TC shift downward right -
AVC, ATC, MC shift downward right
22Supply
- Supply direct price and quantity relationship
detailing the functional relationship of how
suppliers (producers, sellers, mgrs) of a
product respond to differing price levels. - It states what suppliers are WILLING and ABLE to
supply at a given price.
23Derivation of Mkt Supply Curves
- Supply curve for the individual firm is based on
the cost structure of the firm how mgrs respond
to alternative product prices as they attempt to
maximize profits. - We discussed profit maximization decision rules
for the individual firm and said that the MC
above AVC represented the firm short run supply
curve.
24Derivation of Mkt Supply Curves
- In the long run, MC curve above ATC represents
the firms long run supply curve (remember AVC
and ATC are the same in the long run). - Additionally, the firms supply curve is derived
under the assumption that the only economic
variable changing is the goods own price. All
other factors are assumed to remain constant.
25Derivation of Mkt Supply Curves
- The industry supply curve is the horizontal
summation of all individual firms supply curves
in the market.
26Example
27Example
28Law of Supply
- Law of Supply quantity of goods /or services
offered to a mkt will vary DIRECTLY with the
price. - Price increase will result in an increase in
quantity supplied. - Price decrease will result in a decrease in
quantity supplied. - The amt of increase or decrease depends on the
Elasticity of Supply.
29Elasticity of Supply (Es)
- Elasticity (in general) percentage change in the
quantity supplied relative to the percentage
change in price (or other economic variable) as
we move from one point to another on the supply
curve. - It is a measure of responsiveness of quantity to
changes in price (or other eco variable)
30Elasticity of Supply (Es)
- E ? Q / ? P
- Elasticity represents movement along the supply
curve and thus elasticity is also a measure of
the degree of slope of the supply curve.
31Elasticity of Supply (Es)
- Classifications
- Inelastic supply (Es lt 1) a change in price
brings about a smaller change in quantity (we are
less responsive to price) - Unitary supply (Es 1) a change in price
brings about an equivalent change in quantity. - Elastic supply (Es gt1) a change in price
brings about a relatively larger change in
quantity.
32Elasticity of Supply (Es)
- Mgrs economists are interested in two types of
supply elasticity measures - Own-price elasticity of supply measures the
responsiveness of quantity supplied of a good to
a change in the price of that good. - Cross-price elasticity of supply measures the
responsiveness of quantity supplied of a good to
a change in the price of a related good.
33Elasticity of Supply (Es)
- Es ? Qs / ? P ltorgt
- Es ((Q2-Q1) / (Q2Q1)) / ((P2-P1) / (P2P1))
- In class examples
34Cross-price elasticity
- ESY1Y2 ?QY1 / ?PY2
- ESY1Y2 ((QY12 QY11) / (QY12 QY11)) / ((PY22
PY21) / (PY22 PY21)) - Measures the effect of a change in the price of
good Y2 on the quantity supplied of Y1. - Read the cross-price of elasticity of supply for
product Y1 with respect to product Y2.
35Classification of Cross-price elasticity of
Supply
- Complements in production (ESY1Y2 gt 0) implies
that as the price of Y2 increases, the quantity
of Y1 supplied by the firm will also increase. - Substitutes in production (ESY1Y2 lt 0) implies
that as the price of Y2 increases, the quantity
of Y1 supplied by the firm will decrease. - In class examples
36Change in Supply versus Change in Quantity
Supplied
- Changes in quantity supplied result from changes
in the price of the product and are movements
along the supply curve. - Changes in supply result from changes in
quantity sold due to factors other than a change
in the price of the product.
37Determinants of Industry Supply
- Qs f(own price input prices, technology,
prices of alternative products, number of
sellers, other factors) - States that quantity supplied will vary with
price as long as the supply shifters are held
constant.