Production, Costs, Revenue, and Profit (copy)

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57 Terms

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Production

The process of converting inputs (factors of production) into outputs (goods and services).

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Factors of Production

Resources including land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship used in the production process.

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Land

Natural resources used in production (e.g., minerals, forests, water).

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Labor

Human effort, both physical and mental, is used in production.

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Capital

Man-made resources (e.g., machinery, buildings) used in production.

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Entrepreneurship

The initiative to combine the other production factors and bear the business risks

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Types of Production

Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary categorize activities based on the nature of goods and services produced.

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Primary Production

Extraction of natural resources (e.g., farming, fishing, mining).

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Secondary Production

Manufacturing and construction (e.g., car production, building houses).

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Tertiary Production

Services (e.g., education, healthcare, retail).

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Production Processes

Job, Batch, and Flow production methods define how goods are manufactured.

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Job Production

Producing unique items tailored to customer requirements.

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Batch Production

Producing a limited number of identical items in groups or batches.

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Flow Production

Continuous production of identical items on an assembly line.

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Productivity

Measure of efficiency, output per unit of input, influenced by technology, skills, management, and economies of scale.

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productivity

Factors affecting _______:

  • Technology advancements

  • Worker skills and training

  • Management practices

  • Economies of scale

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Costs

Fixed, Variable, Total, Average Fixed, Average Variable, Average Total, and Marginal Costs are key concepts in ____ analysis.

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Fixed Costs (FC)

Costs that do not vary with output (e.g., rent, salaries).

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Variable Costs (VC)

Costs that vary directly with output (e.g., raw materials)

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Total Costs (TC)

The sum of fixed and variable costs: TC = FC + VC

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Average Fixed Costs (AFC)

Fixed cost per unit of output:  AFC = FC/Q

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Average Variable Costs (AVC)

Variable cost per unit of output: AVC = VC/Q

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Average Total Costs (ATC)

Total cost per unit of output: ATC = TC/Q

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Marginal Costs (MC)

The additional cost of producing one more unit of output: MC = ΔTC/ΔQ

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Short-Run Costs

The period in which at least one factor of production is fixed.

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Long-Run Costs

The period in which all factors of production can be varied.

Firms experience economies and diseconomies of scale.

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Total Revenue (TR)

Total income from sales: TR = P × Q  (Price x Quantity)

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Average Revenue (AR)

Revenue per unit sold: AR = TR/Q

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Marginal Revenue (MR)

Additional revenue from selling one more unit: MR = ΔTR/ΔQ

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Perfect Competition

Firms are price takers, AR = MR = Price.

Example: Agricultural products like wheat.

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Monopoly

Single seller, AR and MR diverge, MR < AR.

Example: A local utility company.

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Oligopoly

Few firms, kinked demand curve, interdependent pricing.

Example: Automobile industry

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Monopolistic Competition

Many firms, product differentiation, and some pricing power.

Example: Restaurants

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  1. Normal Profit

  2. Supernormal (Economic) Profit

2 types of profit

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Normal Profit

Minimum profit necessary to keep a firm in business.Occurs when TR = TC.

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Supernormal (Economic) Profit

Profit over and above normal profit.

Occurs when TR > TC

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Profit Maximization

Objective: Firms aim to maximize the difference between total revenue and total costs.

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Marginal Cost (MC) = Marginal Revenue (MR)

Condition for Profit Maximization

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Accounting Profit

Total revenue minus explicit costs.

Example: TR is £1,000, explicit costs are £600, accounting profit is £400

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Economic Profit

Total revenue minus both explicit and implicit costs (opportunity costs).

Example: TR is £1,000, explicit costs are £600, implicit costs are £200, economic profit is £200

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Break-Even Analysis

Determines the level of output where total revenue equals total costs, indicating no profit or loss.

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Break-Even Point

Level of output where total revenue equals total costs (no profit or loss)

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Break-Even Formula

Break-even output = Fixed Costs / (Price - Variable Cost per unit)

what formula?

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Impact of Changes in Costs and Revenue

Cost Increases, Revenue Increases, Efficiency Improvements

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Cost Increases

Higher fixed or variable costs reduce profit.

Example: Increase in raw material prices

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Revenue Increases

Higher prices or greater sales volume increase profit.

Example: Launching a successful advertising campaign

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Efficiency Improvements

Lower costs, and increase productivity, leading to higher profit margins.

Example: Implementing a new production technology

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Cost Curves

What type of curve?

MC Curve

ATC and AVC Curves

AFC Curve

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MC Curve

Typically U-shaped due to initially decreasing and then increasing marginal costs

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ATC and AVC Curves

U-shaped, with AVC lying below ATC.

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AFC Curve

Downward sloping as fixed costs are spread over more units

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Revenue Curves

what type of curve?

TR Curve

AR and MR Curves

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TR Curve

Upward sloping, but slope varies by market structure

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AR and MR Curves

In perfect competition, ______________ at the market price.

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AR, MR

In monopoly and imperfect competition, ___ is downward sloping, and ___ lies below AR

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profit-maximizing

The intersection of MR and MC curves determines ____________ output

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profit

The difference between TR and TC at this output indicates the level of ____