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Cost theory 
By DANIYAL KHAN 
PRESENTED TO 
SIR AZEEM BHATTI
The Meaning of Costs 
 Opportunity costs 
meaning of opportunity cost 
examples 
Measuring a firm’s opportunity costs 
factors not owned by the firm: explicit costs 
factors already owned by the firm: implicit costs
Costs 
 Short run – Diminishing marginal returns 
results from adding successive quantities of 
variable factors to a fixed factor 
 Long run – Increases in capacity can lead to 
increasing, decreasing or constant returns to 
scale
Costs 
 In buying factor inputs, the firm 
will incur costs 
 Costs are classified as: 
 Fixed costs – costs that are not related directly to 
production – rent, rates, insurance costs, admin costs. 
They can change but not in relation to output 
 Variable Costs – costs directly related 
to variations in output. Raw materials, labour, fuel, etc
Costs 
 Total Cost - the sum of all costs incurred in 
production 
 TC = FC + VC 
 Average Cost – the cost per unit 
of output 
 AC = TC/Output 
Marginal Cost – the cost of one more or one 
fewer units of production 
MC = TCn – TCn-1 units
Marginal Product and Costs 
Suppose a firm pays each worker $50 a day. 
Units of 
Total 
Labor 
Product 
MP VC MC 
0 0 10 0 5 
1 10 15 50 3.33 
2 25 20 100 2.5 
3 45 15 150 3.33 
4 60 10 200 5 
5 70 5 250 10 
6 75 300
A Firm’s Short Run Costs
Average Costs 
Average Total cost – firm’s total cost divided by its level of output 
(average cost per unit of output) 
ATC=AC=TC/Q 
Average Fixed cost – fixed cost divided by level of output (fixed cost 
per unit of output) 
AFC=FC/Q 
Average variable cost – variable cost divided by the level of output. 
AVC=VC/Q
Marginal Cost – change (increase) in cost resulting from the 
production of one extra unit of output 
Denote “Δ” - change. For example ΔTC - change in total cost 
MC=ΔTC/ΔQ 
Example: when 4 units of output are produced, the cost is 80, when 5 
units are produced, the cost is 90. MC=(90-80)/1=10 
MC=ΔVC/ΔQ 
since TC=(FC+VC) and FC does not change with Q
Cost Curves for a Firm 
Fixed cost does not 
vary with output 
50 FC 
Output 
Cost 
($ per 
year) 
400 
300 
200 
100 
TC 
VC 
Variable cost 
increases with 
production and 
the rate varies with 
increasing & 
decreasing returns. 
Total cost 
is the vertical 
sum of FC 
and VC. 
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Average total cost curve (ATC) 
The average fixed cost curve is a rectangular 
hyperbola as the curve becomes asymptotes 
to the axes. 
The average variable cost is a mirror image of 
the average product curve . 
The average total cost curve is the sum of AFC 
and the AVC.
When both the curves are falling, the ATC 
which is the sum of both is also falling. 
When AVC starts to rise, the average fixed 
cost curve falls faster and hence the sum 
falls. Beyond a point, the rise in AVC is more 
than the fall in AFC and their sum rises. 
 Hence the ATC is an U shaped curve
 AVC = W.L/Q 
= W/AP 
= W. 1/AP 
Hence AP and AVC are inversely related. 
Thus AVC is an inverted U shaped curve 
 MC = Change in TC = d (WL)/dQ 
= WdL/dQ 
= W(1/MP) 
Hence The Marginal cost is the inverse of the MP 
curve.
Short-run Costs and Marginal Product 
 production with one input L – labor; (capital is fixed) 
 Assume the wage rate (w) is fixed 
 Variable costs is the per unit cost of extra labor times the amount of 
extra labor: VC=wL 
Denote “Δ” - change. For example ΔVC is change in variable cost. 
MC=ΔVC/ΔQ ; MC =w/MPL, 
where MPL=ΔQ/ΔL 
With diminishing marginal returns: marginal cost increases as output 
increases.
Average and marginal costs 
Diminishing marginal 
returns set in here 
fig Output (Q) Costs (£) 
MC 
x
The Relationship Between MP, AP, 
MC, and AVC
Average and marginal costs 
fig Output (Q) Costs (£) 
AVC 
AFC 
MC 
x 
AC 
z 
y
Shift of the curves 
TC’ 
150 FC’ 
50 FC 
Output 
Cost 
($ per 
year) 
400 
300 
200 
100 
TC 
VC 
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Summary 
In the short run, the total cost of any level of output is the sum of fixed 
and variable costs: TC=FC+VC 
Average fixed (AFC), average variable (AVC), and average total costs 
(ATC) are fixed, variable, and total costs per unit of output; marginal 
cost is the extra cost of producing 1 more unit of output. 
AFC is decreasing 
AVC and ATC are U-shaped, reflecting increasing and then diminishing 
returns. 
Marginal cost curve (MC) falls and then rises, intersecting both AVC 
and ATC at their minimum points.
The Envelope Relationship 
 In the long run all inputs are flexible, while in 
the short run some inputs are not flexible. 
 As a result, long-run cost will always be less 
than or equal to short-run cost.
The Long-Run Cost Function 
 LRAC is made up for 
SRACs 
 SRAC curves represent 
various plant sizes 
 Once a plant size is 
chosen, per-unit 
production costs are 
found by moving along 
that particular SRAC 
curve
The Long-Run Cost Function 
 The LRAC is the lower envelope of all of the 
SRAC curves. 
Minimum efficient scale is the lowest output 
level for which LRAC is minimized 
Is LRAC a function of market size? 
What are implications?
The Envelope Relationship 
 The envelope relationship explains that: 
At the planned output level, short-run average 
total cost equals long-run average total cost. 
At all other levels of output, short-run average 
total cost is higher than long-run average total 
cost.
Deriving long-run average cost curves: 
factories of fixed size 
fig 
SRAC3 
Costs Output 
O 
SRAC5 
SRAC4 
5 factories 
4 factories 
2 factories 
3 factories 
1 factory 
SRAC1 SRAC2
Deriving long-run average cost curves: 
factories of fixed size 
SRAC1 
fig 
SRAC2 SRAC4 
SRAC3 
SRAC5 
LRAC 
Costs Output 
O
Envelope of Short-Run 
Average Total Cost Curves 
Costs per unit 
SRMC4 
SRATC2 SRATC3 
LRATC 
SRATC4 
SRATC1 SRMC1 
SRMC2 
SRMC3 
0 Quantity 
Q2 Q3
Envelope of Short-Run Average Total 
Cost Curves 
Costs per unit 
SRMC4 
SRATC2 SRATC3 
LRATC 
SRATC4 
SRATC1 SRMC1 
SRMC2 
SRMC3 
0 Quantity 
Q2 Q3
The Learning Curve 
 Measures the percentage 
decrease in additional labor 
cost each time output 
doubles. 
 An “80 percent” learning 
curve implies that the labor 
costs associated with the 
incremental output will 
decrease to 80% of their 
previous level.
The LR Relationship Between 
Production and Cost 
 In the long run, all inputs are variable. 
 What makes up LRAC?
Production in the Long run 
 Economies of scale 
specialisation & division of labour 
indivisibilities 
container principle 
greater efficiency of large machines 
by-products 
multi-stage production 
organisational & administrative economies 
financial economies
Production in the Long run 
 Diseconomies of scale 
managerial diseconomies 
effects of workers and industrial relations 
risks of interdependencies 
 External economies of scale 
 Location 
balancing the distance from suppliers and 
consumers 
importance of transport costs 
Ancillary industries-by products
 Internal economies and diseconomies 
affect the shape of the LAC 
 External Economies affect the position of the 
LAC 
 External Diseconomies may cause increase 
in prices of the factors of production
Economies of Scope 
 There are economies of scope when the 
costs of producing goods are interdependent 
so that it is less costly for a firm to produce 
one good when it is already producing 
another. 
 S = TC(QA)+TC(QB )- TC(QA QB) 
TC(Q A,QB )
Economies of Scope 
 Firms look for both economies of scope and 
economies of scale. 
 Economies of scope play an important role in 
firms’ decisions of what combination of goods 
to produce.
Summary 
 An economically efficient production process 
must be technically efficient, but a technically 
efficient process may not be economically 
efficient. 
 The long-run average total cost curve is U-shaped 
because economies of scale cause 
average total cost to decrease; diseconomies of 
scale eventually cause average total cost to 
increase.
Summary 
 Marginal cost and short-run average cost curves 
slope upward because of diminishing marginal 
productivity. 
 The long-run average cost curve slopes upward 
because of diseconomies of scale. 
 The envelope relationship between short-run and 
long-run average cost curves shows that the 
short-run average cost curves are always above 
the long-run average cost curve.
Summary 
 Marginal cost and short-run average cost curves 
slope upward because of diminishing marginal 
productivity. 
 The long-run average cost curve slopes upward 
because of diseconomies of scale. 
 The envelope relationship between short-run and 
long-run average cost curves shows that the 
short-run average cost curves are always above 
the long-run average cost curve.
Summary 
 Marginal cost and short-run average cost curves 
slope upward because of diminishing marginal 
productivity. 
 The long-run average cost curve slopes upward 
because of diseconomies of scale. 
 The envelope relationship between short-run and 
long-run average cost curves shows that the 
short-run average cost curves are always above 
the long-run average cost curve.
Revenue 
 Total revenue – the total amount received from 
selling a given output 
 TR = P x Q 
 Average Revenue – the average amount 
received from selling each unit 
 AR = TR / Q 
 Marginal revenue – the amount received from 
selling one extra unit 
of output 
 MR = TRn – TR n-1 units

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Cost 2

  • 1. Cost theory By DANIYAL KHAN PRESENTED TO SIR AZEEM BHATTI
  • 2. The Meaning of Costs  Opportunity costs meaning of opportunity cost examples Measuring a firm’s opportunity costs factors not owned by the firm: explicit costs factors already owned by the firm: implicit costs
  • 3. Costs  Short run – Diminishing marginal returns results from adding successive quantities of variable factors to a fixed factor  Long run – Increases in capacity can lead to increasing, decreasing or constant returns to scale
  • 4. Costs  In buying factor inputs, the firm will incur costs  Costs are classified as:  Fixed costs – costs that are not related directly to production – rent, rates, insurance costs, admin costs. They can change but not in relation to output  Variable Costs – costs directly related to variations in output. Raw materials, labour, fuel, etc
  • 5. Costs  Total Cost - the sum of all costs incurred in production  TC = FC + VC  Average Cost – the cost per unit of output  AC = TC/Output Marginal Cost – the cost of one more or one fewer units of production MC = TCn – TCn-1 units
  • 6. Marginal Product and Costs Suppose a firm pays each worker $50 a day. Units of Total Labor Product MP VC MC 0 0 10 0 5 1 10 15 50 3.33 2 25 20 100 2.5 3 45 15 150 3.33 4 60 10 200 5 5 70 5 250 10 6 75 300
  • 7. A Firm’s Short Run Costs
  • 8. Average Costs Average Total cost – firm’s total cost divided by its level of output (average cost per unit of output) ATC=AC=TC/Q Average Fixed cost – fixed cost divided by level of output (fixed cost per unit of output) AFC=FC/Q Average variable cost – variable cost divided by the level of output. AVC=VC/Q
  • 9. Marginal Cost – change (increase) in cost resulting from the production of one extra unit of output Denote “Δ” - change. For example ΔTC - change in total cost MC=ΔTC/ΔQ Example: when 4 units of output are produced, the cost is 80, when 5 units are produced, the cost is 90. MC=(90-80)/1=10 MC=ΔVC/ΔQ since TC=(FC+VC) and FC does not change with Q
  • 10. Cost Curves for a Firm Fixed cost does not vary with output 50 FC Output Cost ($ per year) 400 300 200 100 TC VC Variable cost increases with production and the rate varies with increasing & decreasing returns. Total cost is the vertical sum of FC and VC. 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
  • 11. Average total cost curve (ATC) The average fixed cost curve is a rectangular hyperbola as the curve becomes asymptotes to the axes. The average variable cost is a mirror image of the average product curve . The average total cost curve is the sum of AFC and the AVC.
  • 12. When both the curves are falling, the ATC which is the sum of both is also falling. When AVC starts to rise, the average fixed cost curve falls faster and hence the sum falls. Beyond a point, the rise in AVC is more than the fall in AFC and their sum rises.  Hence the ATC is an U shaped curve
  • 13.  AVC = W.L/Q = W/AP = W. 1/AP Hence AP and AVC are inversely related. Thus AVC is an inverted U shaped curve  MC = Change in TC = d (WL)/dQ = WdL/dQ = W(1/MP) Hence The Marginal cost is the inverse of the MP curve.
  • 14. Short-run Costs and Marginal Product  production with one input L – labor; (capital is fixed)  Assume the wage rate (w) is fixed  Variable costs is the per unit cost of extra labor times the amount of extra labor: VC=wL Denote “Δ” - change. For example ΔVC is change in variable cost. MC=ΔVC/ΔQ ; MC =w/MPL, where MPL=ΔQ/ΔL With diminishing marginal returns: marginal cost increases as output increases.
  • 15. Average and marginal costs Diminishing marginal returns set in here fig Output (Q) Costs (£) MC x
  • 16. The Relationship Between MP, AP, MC, and AVC
  • 17. Average and marginal costs fig Output (Q) Costs (£) AVC AFC MC x AC z y
  • 18. Shift of the curves TC’ 150 FC’ 50 FC Output Cost ($ per year) 400 300 200 100 TC VC 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
  • 19. Summary In the short run, the total cost of any level of output is the sum of fixed and variable costs: TC=FC+VC Average fixed (AFC), average variable (AVC), and average total costs (ATC) are fixed, variable, and total costs per unit of output; marginal cost is the extra cost of producing 1 more unit of output. AFC is decreasing AVC and ATC are U-shaped, reflecting increasing and then diminishing returns. Marginal cost curve (MC) falls and then rises, intersecting both AVC and ATC at their minimum points.
  • 20. The Envelope Relationship  In the long run all inputs are flexible, while in the short run some inputs are not flexible.  As a result, long-run cost will always be less than or equal to short-run cost.
  • 21. The Long-Run Cost Function  LRAC is made up for SRACs  SRAC curves represent various plant sizes  Once a plant size is chosen, per-unit production costs are found by moving along that particular SRAC curve
  • 22. The Long-Run Cost Function  The LRAC is the lower envelope of all of the SRAC curves. Minimum efficient scale is the lowest output level for which LRAC is minimized Is LRAC a function of market size? What are implications?
  • 23. The Envelope Relationship  The envelope relationship explains that: At the planned output level, short-run average total cost equals long-run average total cost. At all other levels of output, short-run average total cost is higher than long-run average total cost.
  • 24. Deriving long-run average cost curves: factories of fixed size fig SRAC3 Costs Output O SRAC5 SRAC4 5 factories 4 factories 2 factories 3 factories 1 factory SRAC1 SRAC2
  • 25. Deriving long-run average cost curves: factories of fixed size SRAC1 fig SRAC2 SRAC4 SRAC3 SRAC5 LRAC Costs Output O
  • 26. Envelope of Short-Run Average Total Cost Curves Costs per unit SRMC4 SRATC2 SRATC3 LRATC SRATC4 SRATC1 SRMC1 SRMC2 SRMC3 0 Quantity Q2 Q3
  • 27. Envelope of Short-Run Average Total Cost Curves Costs per unit SRMC4 SRATC2 SRATC3 LRATC SRATC4 SRATC1 SRMC1 SRMC2 SRMC3 0 Quantity Q2 Q3
  • 28. The Learning Curve  Measures the percentage decrease in additional labor cost each time output doubles.  An “80 percent” learning curve implies that the labor costs associated with the incremental output will decrease to 80% of their previous level.
  • 29. The LR Relationship Between Production and Cost  In the long run, all inputs are variable.  What makes up LRAC?
  • 30. Production in the Long run  Economies of scale specialisation & division of labour indivisibilities container principle greater efficiency of large machines by-products multi-stage production organisational & administrative economies financial economies
  • 31. Production in the Long run  Diseconomies of scale managerial diseconomies effects of workers and industrial relations risks of interdependencies  External economies of scale  Location balancing the distance from suppliers and consumers importance of transport costs Ancillary industries-by products
  • 32.  Internal economies and diseconomies affect the shape of the LAC  External Economies affect the position of the LAC  External Diseconomies may cause increase in prices of the factors of production
  • 33. Economies of Scope  There are economies of scope when the costs of producing goods are interdependent so that it is less costly for a firm to produce one good when it is already producing another.  S = TC(QA)+TC(QB )- TC(QA QB) TC(Q A,QB )
  • 34. Economies of Scope  Firms look for both economies of scope and economies of scale.  Economies of scope play an important role in firms’ decisions of what combination of goods to produce.
  • 35. Summary  An economically efficient production process must be technically efficient, but a technically efficient process may not be economically efficient.  The long-run average total cost curve is U-shaped because economies of scale cause average total cost to decrease; diseconomies of scale eventually cause average total cost to increase.
  • 36. Summary  Marginal cost and short-run average cost curves slope upward because of diminishing marginal productivity.  The long-run average cost curve slopes upward because of diseconomies of scale.  The envelope relationship between short-run and long-run average cost curves shows that the short-run average cost curves are always above the long-run average cost curve.
  • 37. Summary  Marginal cost and short-run average cost curves slope upward because of diminishing marginal productivity.  The long-run average cost curve slopes upward because of diseconomies of scale.  The envelope relationship between short-run and long-run average cost curves shows that the short-run average cost curves are always above the long-run average cost curve.
  • 38. Summary  Marginal cost and short-run average cost curves slope upward because of diminishing marginal productivity.  The long-run average cost curve slopes upward because of diseconomies of scale.  The envelope relationship between short-run and long-run average cost curves shows that the short-run average cost curves are always above the long-run average cost curve.
  • 39. Revenue  Total revenue – the total amount received from selling a given output  TR = P x Q  Average Revenue – the average amount received from selling each unit  AR = TR / Q  Marginal revenue – the amount received from selling one extra unit of output  MR = TRn – TR n-1 units