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Cost Analysis and Supply

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Title: Cost Analysis and Supply


1
Session 2
Managerial Economics
  • Cost Analysis and Supply

Professor Changqi Wu
2
Topics for Today
  • Production and Cost
  • Cost Concepts
  • Cost Analysis
  • Firms Production Decision
  • Supply Curve
  • Market Mechanism

3
1. Production and Cost
  • Production process utilizes productive inputs to
    produce useful output for buyers
  • Categories of production inputs
  • labor (skilled and unskilled)
  • capital
  • technology
  • Management skills

4
Production Function
  • Production Function indicates the highest output
    that a firm can produce for every specified
    combination of inputs given the state of
    technology.
  • The production function for two inputs
  • Q F(K,L)
  • Q Output, K Capital, L Labor

5
Production with One Variable Input
Output per Month
Output per Month
D
112
Marginal product
30
C
Average product
Total product
E
20
60
B
10
A
Labor per Month
Labor per Month
0
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
1
8
0
2
3
4
5
6
7
9
10
1
6
Diminishing Marginal Returns
  • As the use of an input increases in equal
    increments, a point will be reached at which the
    resulting additions to output decreases (i.e.
    Marginal Product declines).

7
From Production to Cost
  • A production function measures the relationship
    between inputs and output.
  • To determine the optimal level of output, we must
    translate the production technology to dollar
    value of costs.

8
Cost is not Waste
  • A cost curve depicts the relationship between
    output and the most efficient way of producing
    that output.
  • A cost curve is the mirror image of the
    production function
  • Input price change moves cost curve
  • Technology change moves cost curve

9
Economic and Accounting Concepts of Cost
  • Accounting Cost
  • Actual expenses plus depreciation charges for
    capital equipment
  • Historical records
  • Economic Cost
  • Cost of utilizing economic resources in
    production, including opportunity cost
  • Forward looking

10
Opportunity Cost
  • Business decision making requires information on
    future alternative courses of action
  • Opportunity cost measures the forgone net revenue
    from the best alternative course of action
  • Example of opportunity cost
  • Shanghai Petrochemicals

11
Shanghai Petrochemicals
  • Shanghai Petrochemicals is a listed company at
    the Stock Exchanges of both New York and Hong
    Kong.
  • Its 1994 Annual Report shows that the company
    made a profit of RMB 1.77 billion.
  • In that year Shanghai Petrochemicals bought 4.5
    million ton of crude oil at the subsidized price
    of RMB670/ton while the crude oil price in the
    international market was at average RMB1100/ton.
  • Indirect cost savings due to the government
    subsidies amounted to RMB 1.93 billion.
  • The company actually lost RMB 150 million in that
    year.

12
2. Concepts of Cost
  • The total cost of production equals the fixed
    cost (the cost of the fixed inputs) plus the
    variable cost (the cost of the variable inputs)

13
Total Cost Curves of a Firm
14
Average Total Cost
  • Average Total Cost (ATC) is the cost per unit of
    output, or average fixed cost (AFC) plus average
    variable cost (AVC). This can be written

15
Marginal Cost
  • Marginal Cost (MC) is the cost of expanding
    output by one unit. Since fixed cost have no
    impact on marginal cost, it can be written as

16
Unit Cost Curves
Cost ( per unit)
100
MC
75
50
ATC
AVC
25
AFC
Output (units/yr.)
1
0
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
17
Fixed Cost and Sunk Cost
  • Expenditure that has been made and cannot be
    recovered.
  • Sunk cost should not influence a firms decision.
  • An example
  • A firm pays 500,000 of deposit for an option to
    buy a building.
  • The cost of the building is 5 million or a total
    of 5.5 million.
  • The firm finds another building for 5.25
    million.
  • Which building should the firm buy?

18
3. Cost Analysis
  • Economy of scale
  • Economy of scope
  • Economy of experience
  • Economy of time

19
3.1 Economy of Scale
  • Economy of scale means
  • Average cost declines when the scale of
    production expands
  • Economy of scale may arise at different levels of
    production
  • product level, plant level, firm level
  • Economy of scale may arise at different aspects
    of business operations
  • production, marketing, RD

20
Economy of Scale
Unit Costs (/unit)
10
5
LAC (including cost of capital)
Annual Sales Volume (units per year)
4000
5000
1000
Your current sales volume.
Small firms current sales volume.
MES
21
Sources of Economy of Scale
  • Production requires significant fixed inputs
  • indivisibility
  • Physical laws the two third rule
  • construction cost k (throughput)2/3
  • Economy of mass reserves
  • Specialized labor
  • Economy of scales in purchasing

22
Minimum Efficient Scale is ...
  • the smallest production scale at which minimum
    unit cost is attained
  • Methods to assess MES in an industry
  • Statistical estimation of cost function
  • The survivor principle
  • Profitability and firm size
  • Engineering approach
  • MES may change when technology advances

23
Economy of Scale in Action
  • Take advantages of economy of scale
  • Building inventory
  • Contracting out
  • Developing backlog
  • Strategic implications of economy of scale

24
3.2 Economy of Experiences
Unit Cost
  • Experience curves are characterized by their
    slope
  • (also called BCG slope or progress ratio)
  • Slope by how much do unit costs fall
  • --- as a percentage of a baseline level ---
    when
  • cumulative output doubles.

1.00/unit
0.80/unit
Experience Curve with 80 Slope
Cumulative Production Volume (total number
of units produced to date)
100
200
25
Sources of Experience Effect
  • Labor efficiency
  • New processes and improved methods
  • Product redesign
  • Product standardization

26
Economy of Experience in Action
  • We can use experience curve to forecast cost
    changes
  • Forward pricing pricing based on future cost
  • strategic effect moving down quickly along
    experience curve to gain competitive advantage
  • Using pre-launch announcement to prevent rivals
    from taking advantage of economy of learning
  • A firms enjoying a experience based low cost
    should take measures to reduce employee turnovers

27
Economy of Experience in Action
  • Earlier-mover advantage refers to the idea that
    "the rich get richer
  • Because your business unit has entered a market
    early (either by happenstance or superior
    foresight), your past success in the market
    sustains a dynamics whereby your cost or benefit
    advantage becomes more pronounced over time.

28
Economies of Scale Versus Learning
  • Production capacity
  • Time span

29
Economies ofScale Versus Learning
Cost ( per unit of output)
Output
30
3.3 Economy of Scope
  • Economy of scope exists when the total cost of a
    single firm with multiple products is lower than
    the sum of the total costs of two independent
    firms with each producing the a single product.
  • Examples
  • Chicken farm--poultry and eggs
  • Automobile company--cars and trucks
  • Universal banking

31
Degree of Economies of Scope
  • The degree of economies of scope measures the
    savings in cost and can be written
  • If SC gt 0 -- Economies of scope
  • If SC lt 0 -- Diseconomies of scope

32
3.4 Economy of Time
  • The Case of PC Market
  • Moores Law dominates
  • Highly competitive with modulization
  • Product life cycle is only 3 months
  • Price of components falls 50 a year. One
    percent a week.

33
What is Dell doing?
Price
B1
B
V1
Sales Line (price now fixed)
V
Time Line
W
A
U
X
Rate of Price Decline
X1
Y
Rate of Price Decline
Y1
Time
34
Implications
  • Can we apply the Dell model to other businesses?
  • Toyota introduced the build-to-order system in
    1999
  • Costs were lowed
  • Client satisfaction rose.

35
4. Output Decision and Supply
36
Choosing Output in the Short Run
  • A competitive firm acts as a price-taker, its
    marginal revenue is a horizontal line
  • P D MR AR
  • Observations
  • P MR
  • MR MC
  • P MC

37
A Competitive FirmMaking a Positive Profit
Price ( per unit)
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
Output
38
A Competitive FirmIncurring Losses
Price ( per unit)
Would this producer continue to produce with a
loss?
Output
39
Summary of Production Decisions
  • Profit is maximized when MC MR
  • If P gt ATC the firm is making profits.
  • If AVC lt P lt ATC the firm should produce at a
    loss.
  • If P lt AVC lt ATC the firm should shut-down.

40
Supply Curve
  • Supply curve depicts the relationship between
    price and quantity supplied
  • Supply curve depend on the time needed for
    production adjustment
  • Short-run supply curve replicates part of a
    firms marginal cost curve
  • Industry supply curve is horizontal add-up of
    individual firms supply curves

41
A Firms Supply Curve
S MC above AVC
Price ( per unit)
MC
ATC
P2
AVC
P1
P AVC
Shut-down
Output
q1
q2
42
Observations
  • Supply is upward sloping due to diminishing
    returns.
  • Higher price compensates the firm for higher cost
    of additional output and increases total profit
    because it applies to all units.

43
Industry Supply
per unit
Question If increasing output raises
input costs, what impact would it have on market
supply?
Quantity
0
2
4
8
10
5
7
15
21
44
Supply Elasticity
  • Supply elasticity is
  • Responsiveness of supply of a good to changes in
    price
  • measured as change of the supply for an item if
    the price changes by 1
  • Property
  • Price elasticity of supply gt 0

45
Producer Surplus
  • Firms earn a surplus on all but the last unit of
    output.
  • The producer surplus is the sum over all units
    produced of the difference between the market
    price of the good and the marginal cost of
    production.
  • Producer surplus is very sensitive to price
    changes

46
Producer Surplus of a Firm
Price ( per unit of output)
0
Output
47
5. The Market Mechanism
  • Characteristics of a competitive market
  • Many buyers and sellers in the marketplace.
  • All sellers sell identical products.
  • Free entry and exit.
  • Perfect information

48
The Market Mechanism
  • A market is at equilibrium when market demand
    equals market supply
  • When demand or supply conditions change, market
    equilibrium will change.
  • Price may deviate from market equilibrium. When
    that happens, market participants react to the
    new market conditions. That restores the market
    equilibrium.

49
The Market Equilibrium
Price ( per unit)
Quantity
50
The Market Mechanism
51
The Market Mechanism
52
Changes In Market Equilibrium
  • Raw material prices fall
  • S shifts to S
  • Surplus _at_ P1 of Q1, Q2
  • Equilibrium _at_ P3, Q3

P
Q
53
Changes In Market Equilibrium
P
  • Income Increases
  • Demand shifts to D
  • Shortage _at_ P1 of Q1, Q2
  • Equilibrium _at_ P3, Q3

P3
P1
Q3
Q2
Q
Q1
54
Intervention in the Marketplace
  • Price control creates shortages/surplus
  • To solve the shortage problem
  • Rationing
  • Queuing and searching non-price competition
  • Black market solution

55
Key Learning Points
  • Cost is not waste, it reflects the technical
    aspects of production and input prices.
  • Opportunity cost is vital for decision-making,
    but is hardly reflected in financial statements.
  • A profit seeker sets his marginal cost equal to
    his marginal revenue
  • Market mechanism can lead to efficient allocation
    of resources.
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