Microeconomics Final: Chapt’s 7-9 – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
a time period long enough for a firm to change the quantity of all its inputs. -> Over the ________ all the inputs the firm uses are viewed as variable inputs.
answer
Short Run versus Long Run decisions: Long Run-
question
input that can be adjusted up or down as the quantity of output changes
answer
Variable Input-
question
time period during which at least one of the firms inputs is fixed
answer
Short Run-
question
input whose quantity must remain constant
answer
Fixed Input-
question
Maximum quantity of output that can be produced from a given combination of inputs
answer
Production in the short run: Total Product-
question
Change in total product (change In Q) divided by the change in the number of workers employed (change in L) -> MPL= change in Q /change in L ---> MPL tells us the rise in output produced when one more worker is hired
answer
Marginal Product of Labor (MPL)-
question
When the marginal product of labor rises as more workers are hired -> each time a worker is hired total output rises by more than it did when the previous worker was hired
answer
Marginal Returns in Labor: When are there Increasing marginal returns to labor?
question
-Additional workers may allow production to become more specialized. ---> Output still rises when another worker is added, so marginal product is positive. But the rise in output is smaller and smaller with each successive worker.
answer
Why might increasing marginal returns of labor might happen?
question
-The marginal product of labor decreases as as more labor is hired. -> When the marginal product of labor is decreasing, we say that there are ________________. -Apply not just to labor but to any variable input -> In all kinds of production, if we keep increasing the quantity of any one input, while holding the others fixed __________________ will eventually set in.
answer
Diminishing marginal returns to labor-
question
states that as we continue to add more of any one inout (holding the others inputs constant), its marginal product will eventually decline.
answer
Law of diminishing (marginal) returns-
question
the marginal product of labor will- begin to come down
answer
EX: If a farmer keeps adding additional pounds of fertilizer to a fixed amount of land, the yield may continue to increase, but eventually the size of the increase-
question
cost that has been paid or or must be paid, regardless of any future action being considered - sunk costs should not be considered when making decisions
answer
Costs: Sunk Cost
question
total costs of producing a given level of output -> everything they must give up in order to produce that amount of input
answer
Opportunity costs:
question
Implicit and Explicit costs
answer
Types of Opportunity Costs:
question
involve actual money payments
answer
Explicit Costs
question
no money changes hands
answer
Implicit Costs
question
Explicit Costs
answer
Rent Paid out, Interest On Loans, Managers salaries, Workers Wages, and Costs of raw materials are examples of?
question
Implicit costs
answer
The OPPORTUNITY costs of Owners land and buildings (rent foregone), Owners Money (investment income foregone), and Owners time (labor income foregone) are all examples of?
question
lease payments for the land on which a firm's factory stands
answer
An example of an explicit cost of production would be
question
The costs of a firm's fixed inputs -> Rent and interest -whether explicit or implicit- are treated as _________, since producing more or less output in the short run will not cause any of these costs to change.
answer
Costs in the short Run: Fixed Costs-
question
The costs of obtaining the firm's variable inputs -> These costs will rise as output increases. EX: Wages and the costs of raw materials.
answer
Variable Costs
question
The cost of all inputs that are fixed in the short run. Like the quantity of fixed inputs themselves, fixed costs remain the same no matter what the level of output.
answer
Three measures of costs: Total Fixed Costs(TFC)-
question
The cost of all variable inputs.
answer
Total Variable cost (TVC)-
question
the sum of all fixed and variable costs: TC= TFC+ TVC
answer
Total cost (TC)-
question
firms cost per unit of output
answer
Averages Costs:
question
total cost divided by the quantity (Q) of output: -> AFC= TFC/Q ... Fall as input rises.
answer
Three measures of Average Costs: Average fixed Costs (AFC)- AFC will always_______...
question
cost of the variable inputs per unit of output: -> AVC=TVC/Q - The AVC first decreases then increases.
answer
Average Variable Costs (AVC)- What happens to AVC as output rises ?
question
total costs per unit of output: ATC= TC/Q
answer
Average total costs (ATC)-
question
change in total cost (change in TC) divided by the change in output (change in Q): MC= change in TC/ change in Q -tells us how much costs rises per unit increase in output
answer
Marginal Costs:
question
MC falls
answer
When MPL rises...
question
MC rises
answer
When MPL falls...
question
It will fall and then rise. Thus, the MC curve is U-Shaped
answer
Since MPL ordinarily rises and then falls, MC will do the opposite:
question
In the long run, there are not fixed inputs or fixed costs; all inputs and all costs are variable. The firm must decide what combination of inputs to use in producing any level of output. ->To produce any given level of output, the firm will choose the input mix with the lowest cost.
answer
Production and Cost in the Long Run
question
The cost of producing each quantity of output when all inputs are variable and the least-cost input mix is chosen.
answer
Long-run total cost (LRTC)
question
The cost per unit of producing each quantity of output in the long run, when all inputs are variable. -> LRATC= LRTC/Q
answer
Long-run average total cost (LRATC)
question
LRTC is less than or equal to TC
answer
Relationship between long and short run costs: The long-run total cost of producing a given level of output can be less than or equal to, but not greater than, the short-run total cost.
question
LRATC is less than or equal to ATC
answer
The long-run average cost of producing a given level of output can be less than or equal to, but not greater than, the short-run average total cost.
question
the firm can change the size of its plant
answer
In the long run
question
the firm is stuck with its current plant
answer
In the Short run
question
Long run average total cost decreases as output increases. ->When long run total cost rises proportionately less than output, production is characterized by economies of scale, and the LRATC curve slopes downward.
answer
Economies of scale
question
hen long run total cost rises more than in proportion to output, there are diseconomies of scale, and the LRATC curve slopes upward.
answer
Diseconomies of scale
question
When both output and long run total cost rise by the same proportion, production is characterized by constant returns to scale, and the LRATC curve is flat (the long run average total cost is unchanged as output increases).
answer
Constant Returns to Scale
question
all the characteristics of a market that influence the behavior of buyers and sellers when they come together to trade.
answer
market structure
question
1. How many buyers and sellers are there in the market? 2. Is each seller offering a homogeneous product, more or less indistinguishable from that offered by other sellers, or are there significant differences among the products of different firms? 3. Are there any barriers to entry or exit, or can outsiders easily enter and leave this market?
answer
To determine the structure of any particular market, we begin by asking three simple questions:
question
Market structure with 3 important characteristics: 1. There are large numbers of buyers and sellers, and each buys or sells only a tiny fraction of the total quantity in the market. 2. Sellers offer a standardized product. 3. Sellers can easily enter into or exit from the market.
answer
What is perfect competition?
question
it treats the price of its output as given.
answer
In perfect competition, the firm is a price taker:
question
Total Revenue minus accounting costs
answer
Accounting Profit
question
The proper measure of profit for understanding and predicting the behavior of firms ->recognizes all the opportunity costs of productions -both explicit costs and implicit costs.
answer
Economic Profit
question
Tells us the quantity demanded by all consumers from all firms in a market.
answer
Market demand curve
question
tells us, for different prices, the quantity of output that customers will choose to purchase from that firm.
answer
demand curve facing the firm
question
The total inflow of receipts from selling a given amount of output =PxQ
answer
Total revenue
question
Total revenue divided by the amount of output. ___________ tells us how much revenue a firm receives for the typical unit sold. -> AR=TR/Q=Px Q/Q=P
answer
Average Revenue
question
The change in total revenue from the sale of each additional unit of output -> For competitive firms, __________ equals the price of the good. -> MR=Change in TC/ Change in Q = P x Change in Q/ Change in Q = P
answer
Marginal revenue
question
Two things to notice... When MR is positive, and increase in output causes total revenue to rise. Each time output increases, MR is smaller than the price the firm charges at the new output level. The answer for this lies in the firm's downward-sloping demand curve, which tells us that to sell more output, the firm must cut its price. ->Marginal revenue is therefore less than the price of the last unit of output. -> not the case for a perfectively competitive firm
answer
The Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost Approach
question
-An increase in output will always raise profit as long as marginal revenue is greater than marginal cost (MR > MC). -An increase in output will always lower profit whenever marginal revenue is less than marginal cost (MR MC, and decrease output when MR To maximize profit, the firm should produce the quantity of output where MR= MC.
answer
Using MR and MC to Maximize Profits
question
states that a firm should take any action that adds more to its revenue than to its costs.
answer
marginal approach to profit
question
In the short run, the firm must pay for its fixed inputs. But the firm can still make decisions about production. And one of its options is to shut down.
answer
The short-run and the shutdown rule
question
In the short run, the firm should continue to produce if the total revenue exceeds total variable costs; otherwise, it should shut down
answer
Shutdown Rule:
question
The answer is yes -if the firm would lose even more if it stopped producing and shut down its operation.
answer
Imagine a firm for which the TC curve lies above the TR curve at all levels of output. No matter what output level the firm produces, the firm suffers a loss -a negative profit. For this firm, the goal is still profit maximization. But now the highest profit will be the one with the least negative value. Profit maximization becomes loss minimization. Should this firm produce the output level with the smallest possible loss and suffer a loss?
question
firm's operating cost, since the firm only pays these variable costs when it continues to operate.
answer
TVC
question
Operating Profit (TR>TVC) -> It should not shut down because its operating profit can be used to help pay its fixed costs.
answer
If a firm, by staying open, can earn more than enough revenue to cover its operating costs, then it is making an...?
question
Operating Loss (TRContinuing to operate only adds to the firm's loss, increasing the total loss beyond fixed costs. Therefore the firm should shut down.
answer
If the firm cannot even cover its operating cost when it stays open -that is, if it would suffer an..?
question
a) A firm's total profit is graphically represented by the vertical distance between the TR and TC curves. b) Profit per unit: the revenue the firm gets on each unit minus the cost per unit. -> Profit per unit = P-ATC
answer
Measuring total profit
question
As the price of output changes, the firm will slide along its MC curve in deciding how much to produce.
answer
The firm's short-run supply curve
question
The price at which a firm is indifferent between producing and shutting down.
answer
The shutdown price
question
A curve showing the quantity of output a competitive firm chooses optimally to produce at various possible prices.
answer
Firm's supply curve.
question
A curve indicating the quantity of output that all sellers in a market will produce at different prices in the short run.
answer
Market supply
question
competitive firms can earn an economic profit or suffer and economic loss. In perfect competition, the market sums up the buying and selling preferences of individual consumers and producers, and determines the market price. Each buyer and seller then takes the market price as given, and each is able to buy or sell the desired quantity.
answer
Short run equilibrium
question
In the long run, new firms can enter a competitive market, and existing firms can exit the market.
answer
The long run Equilibrium
question
Shows the relationship between market price and market quantity produced after all long-run adjustments have taken place.
answer
Long-run supply curve
question
An industry in which the long-run supply curve is horizontal because each firm's costs are unaffected by changes in industry output.
answer
Constant cost industry
question
An industry in which the long run supply curve slopes upward because each firm's LRATC curve shifts upward as industry output increases.
answer
Increasing cost industry
question
An industry in which the long-run supply curve slopes downward because each firm's LRATC curve shifts downward as industry output increases.
answer
Decreasing cost industry
question
Price changes that cause changes in production to match changes in consumer demand.
answer
Market signals
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New