Department of Business Administration FALL 2007-08 Cost Theory and Estimation by Asst. Prof. Sami...
Transcript of Department of Business Administration FALL 2007-08 Cost Theory and Estimation by Asst. Prof. Sami...
Department of Business Administration
FALL 2007-08
Cost Theory and Estimation
by
Asst. Prof. Sami Fethi
2 Managerial Economics © 2007/08, Sami Fethi, EMU, All Right Reserved.
Cost Theory The Nature of CostsThe Nature of Costs
Explicit Costs– Accounting Costs
Economic Costs– Implicit Costs– Alternative or Opportunity Costs
Relevant Costs– Incremental Costs– Sunk Costs are Irrelevant
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Cost Theory The Nature of CostsThe Nature of Costs
• Costs are incurred as a result of production.
• Economists define cost in terms of opportunities that are sacrificed when a choice is made. Therefore, economic costs are simply benefits lost .
• Accountants define cost in terms of resources consumed. Accounting costs reflect changes in stocks (reductions in good things, increases in bad things) over a fixed period of time.
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Cost Theory
Explicit CostsExplicit Costs
Explicit costs are actual expenditures of the firm to hire, rent, or purchase the inputs it requires in production. These includes the wages to hire labor, the rental price of capital, equipment, and buildings, and the purchase price of raw materials and semi finished products.
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Cost Theory Implicit CostsImplicit Costs
Implicit costs refers to the value of the inputs that are owned and used by the firm in its own production activity. These includes the highest salary that the entrepreneur could earn in his or her best alternative employment and the highest return that the firm could receive from investing its capital in the most rewarding alternative use or renting its land and buildings to the highest bidder.
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Cost Theory
Economic CostsEconomic Costs
Economic cost refers the sum of explicit and implicit costs. These costs must be distinguished from accounting costs, which refer only to the firm’s actual expenditures, or explicit cost, incurred for purchased or hired inputs.
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Cost Theory Alternative or Opportunity CostsAlternative or Opportunity Costs
The cost to the firm of using a purchased or owned input is equal to what the input could earn in its best alternative use.
• The firm must include the alternative or opportunity costs because the firm cannot retain a hired input if it pays a lower price for the input than another firm.
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Cost Theory Relevant and Irrelevant CostsRelevant and Irrelevant Costs
Relevant Costs: The costs that should be considered in making a managerial decision; economic or opportunity costs.
Incremental costs: the total increase in costs for implementing a particular managerial decision.
• Irrelevant or Sunk Costs: The cost that are not affected by a particular managerial decision.
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Cost Theory
Short-Run Cost FunctionsShort-Run Cost Functions
In short-run period, some of the firm’s inputs are fixed and some are variable, and this leads to fixed and variable costs.
Total costs is the cost of all the productive resources used by the firm. It can be divided into two separate costs in the short run.
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Cost Theory
Total fixed and variable costs
Total Fixed Costs: The total obligations of the firm per time period for all the fixed inputs the firm uses.
Total Variable Costs: The total obligations of the firm per time period for all the variable inputs the firm uses.
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Cost Theory
Short-Run Cost FunctionsShort-Run Cost Functions
Total Cost = TC = f(Q)
Total Fixed Cost = TFC
Total Variable Cost = TVC
TC = TFC + TVC
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Cost Theory Average Costs
Average total cost (also called average cost) equals total cost per unit of output produced
ATC = TC/Q Average fixed cost equals fixed cost divided
by quantity produced
AFC = FC/Q Average variable cost equals variable cost
divided by quantity produced
AVC = VC/Q
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Cost Theory
Average Costs and Marginal Cost
Average total cost is also the sum of average fixed cost and average variable cost.
ATC = AFC + AVC
Marginal (incremental) cost is the increase in total cost resulting from a one-unit increase in output. Marginal decisions are very important in determining profit levels.
MC = ΔTC/ΔQ
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Cost Theory
Average Costs and Marginal Cost
•The marginal cost curve, average variable cost curve and average total cost curves are generally U-shaped.
•The U-shape in the short run is attributed to increasing and diminishing returns from a fixed-size plant, because the size of the plant is not variable in the short run.
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Cost Theory
Average Costs and Marginal Cost
•The marginal cost and average cost curves are related
When MC exceeds AC, average cost must be rising
When MC is less than AC, average cost must be falling
•This relationship explains why marginal cost curves always intersect average cost curves at the minimum of the average cost curve.
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Cost Theory
Q
$MC
AVC
MC will intersect the AVC at theminimum of the AVC [always].
Q*At Q* output, the AVC is at a minimum AVC* [also max of APL].
AVC*
TVC = AVC* x Q*
ATC
Q**
ATC* MC will intersect the ATC at the minimum of the ATC.
TC = ATC* x Q**
At Q** the ATC is at a MINIMUM.
The vertical distance betweenATC and AVC at any output isthe AFC. At Q** AFC is RJ.
R
J
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Cost Theory Relationship Between Marginal and
Average Costs
If MC > ATC, then ATC is rising
If MC = ATC, then ATC is at its minimum
If MC < ATC, then ATC is falling
If MC > AVC, then AVC is rising
If MC = AVC, then AVC is at its minimum
If MC < AVC, then AVC is falling
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Cost Theory Short-Run Cost FunctionsShort-Run Cost Functions
Average Total Cost = ATC = TC/Q
Average Fixed Cost = AFC = TFC/Q
Average Variable Cost = AVC = TVC/Q
ATC = AFC + AVC
Marginal Cost = TC/Q = TVC/Q
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Cost Theory
Short-Run Cost Functions-ExampleQ TFC TVC TC AFC AVC ATC MC0 $60 $0 $60 - - - -1 60 20 80 $60 $20 $80 $202 60 30 90 30 15 45 103 60 45 105 20 15 35 154 60 80 140 15 20 35 355 60 135 195 12 27 39 55
Average Total Cost = ATC = TC/Q
Average Fixed Cost = AFC = TFC/Q
Average Variable Cost = AVC = TVC/Q
ATC = AFC + AVC
Marginal Cost = TC/Q = TVC/Q
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Cost Theory
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Cost Theory Average Cost Curves-Graphical meaning
• The average fixed cost curve slopes down continuously.
• The average total cost curve is the vertical summation of the average fixed cost curve and the average variable cost curve
The ATC curve is always higher than AFC and AVC curves
• While output gets big and AFC decline to zero, the AVC curve approaches the ATC curve.
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Cost Theory
Wage RateWage Rate
Average Variable Cost
AVC = TVC/Q = w/APL
Marginal Cost
TC/Q = TVC/Q = w/MPL
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Cost Theory
Long-Run Cost CurvesLong-Run Cost Curves
•The long run is the period of time during which:
Technology is constant
All inputs and costs are variable
The firm faces no fixed inputs or costs
The long run period is a series of short run periods. [For each short run period there is a set of TP, AP, MP, MC, AFC, AVC, ATC, TC, TVC & TFC for each possible scale of plant].
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Cost Theory Long-Run Cost CurvesLong-Run Cost Curves
Long-Run Total Cost = The minimum total costs of producing various levels of output when the firm can build any desired scale of plant: LTC = f(Q)
Long-Run Average Cost = The minimum per-unit cost of producing any level of output when the firm can build any desire scale of plant: LAC = LTC/Q
Long-Run Marginal Cost = The change in long-run total costs per unit change in output: LMC = LTC/Q
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Cost Theory
Long-Run Cost CurvesLong-Run Cost Curves
Long-Run Total Cost = LTC = f(Q)
Long-Run Average Cost = LAC = LTC/Q
Long-Run Marginal Cost = LMC = LTC/Q
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Cost Theory Derivation of Long-Run Cost Curves
From point A on the expansion path in the first panel with w=$ 10 and r=$ 10, the firm uses 4 units of labor 4L and 4 units of capital 4k and the minimum totalcost producing 1Q is $80. This is shown as point A’ and A’’ on the long-run total cost curve in the middle panel and bottom panel.
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Cost Theory
Relationship Between Long-Run and Short-Run Average Cost Curves
The top panel of the figure is based on the assumption that the firm can build only four scales of plant SAC1 etc.., while the bottom panel is based on the assumption that the firm can build many more or an infinite number of scales of plant. At A’’ min av cost of producing o/p is $80. At B* the firm can produce 1.5Q at an av cost of $70 by using either SAC1 or SAC2 and so on..
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Cost Theory
Possible Shapes of the LAC Curve
The left panel shows a U-shaped LAC curve which indicates first decreasing and then increasing returns to scale. The middle panel shows a nearly L-shaped LAC curve which shows that economies of scale quickly give way to constant returns to scale or gently rising LAC. The right panel shows an LAC curve that declines continuously, as in the case of natural monopolies.
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Cost Theory Learning CurvesLearning Curves
The learning curve shows the decline in the average input cost of production with rising cumulative total outputs over time. The learning curve also shows that the average cost is about $ 250 for producing the 100th unit at point F etc..
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Cost Theory Learning CurvesLearning Curves
Average Cost of Unit Q = C = aQb
Estimation Form: log C = log a + b Log Q
The Learning curve can be express algebraically as follows:
(C is cost of the Qth unit of output)
ln C = ln a + b ln Q Linearized version, can be easily estimated and interpreted.
ln C = 3 – 0.3 ln QIf Q increases by 1%, then unit (average) costs decrease by 0.3%.
Useful to make predictions for the future: how much does the average cost for the 100th unit:
lnC =3 – 0.3ln100 = 2.4 ==> C = antilog of (2.4) =$251.19
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Cost Theory
Minimizing Costs InternationallyMinimizing Costs Internationally
Foreign Sourcing of InputsNew International Economies of ScaleImmigration of Skilled LaborBrain Drain
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Cost Theory
Architecture of Ideal FirmArchitecture of Ideal Firm
Core CompetenciesOutsourcing of Non-Core TasksLearning OrganizationEfficiency and FlexibilityLocation Near MarketsAgility in Responding to Market Forces
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Cost Theory
Cost-Volume-Profit AnalysisCost-Volume-Profit Analysis
Cost-volume-profit or breakeven analysis examines the relationship among the TR, TC, and total profits of the firm at various levels of o/p. This technique is often used by business executives to determine the sales volume required for the firm to break even and the total profits and losses at other sales levels. The analysis uses a cost-volume-profit chart in which the TR and TC curves are represented by straight lines and the break-even o/p (QB) is determined at their intersection.
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Cost Theory
Cost-Volume-Profit AnalysisCost-Volume-Profit Analysis
The slope of the total revenue TR curve refers to the product price of $10 per unit. The vertical intercept of the total cost of (TC) curve refers TFC of $200, and the slope of the TC curve to the AVC of $5. The break-even with TR=TC $400 at the output (Q) of $40 units per time period at the point B.
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Cost Theory
Cost-Volume-Profit AnalysisCost-Volume-Profit Analysis
Total Revenue = TR = (P)(Q)
Total Cost = TC = TFC + (AVC)(Q)
Breakeven Volume TR = TC
(P)(Q) = TFC + (AVC)(Q)
QBE = TFC/(P - AVC)
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Cost Theory
Break-even o/pBreak-even o/p
QBE = TFC/(P - AVC)
P = 40
TFC = 200
AVC = 5
QBE = 40
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Cost Theory Operating Leverage and the other conceptsOperating Leverage and the other concepts
Operating leverage: The ratio of the firm’s total fixed costs to its total variable costs.
Contribution margin per unit: The excess of the selling price of the product over the average variable costs of the firm (i.e. P-AVC) that can be applied to cover the fixed costs of the firm and to provide profits.
Degree of operating leverage (DOL): The percentage change in the firm’s profits divided by the percentage change in output or sales; the sales elasticity of profits.
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Cost Theory
Operating LeverageOperating Leverage
Operating Leverage = TFC/TVC
Degree of Operating Leverage = DOL
% ( )
% ( )
Q P AVCDOL
Q Q P AVC TFC
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Cost Theory Operating LeverageOperating Leverage
The intersection of TR and TC defines the break even quantity of QB=40. With TC’, the break even quantity increases to QB’=45.
TC’ has a higher DOL than TC and therefore a higher QBE
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Cost Theory Empirical Estimation Data Collection Empirical Estimation Data Collection
IssuesIssues
Opportunity Costs Must be Extracted from Accounting Cost Data
Costs Must be Apportioned Among Products
Costs Must be Matched to Output Over Time
Costs Must be Corrected for Inflation
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Cost Theory
Empirical EstimationEmpirical Estimation
Functional Form for Short-Run Cost Functions
2 3TVC aQ bQ cQ
2TVCAVC a bQ cQ
Q
22 3MC a bQ cQ
Theoretical Form Linear Approximation
TVC a bQ
aAVC b
Q
MC b
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Cost Theory
Empirical EstimationEmpirical Estimation
Theoretical Form Linear Approximation
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Cost Theory
Empirical Estimation Long-Run Cost Empirical Estimation Long-Run Cost CurvesCurves
Cross-Sectional Regression AnalysisEngineering MethodSurvival Technique
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Cost Theory
Empirical EstimationEmpirical Estimation
Actual LAC versus empirically estimated LAC’
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Cost Theory
The EndThe End
Thanks