EC260 Chapter Notes - Chapter 6: Price Discrimination, Diminishing Returns, Sunk Costs

35 views4 pages
School
Department
Course
Professor

Document Summary

To maximize profit, manager produces at output level where mr = mc. Thorough understanding of cost is necessary for variety of basic managerial decisions: pricing, output, transfer pricing, cost control, and planning for future production. Managerial consideration of costs include both short-run and long-run components. Producing a particular product as the revenue a manger could have received if she had used her resources to produce the next best alternative g/s. Opportunity costs are the revenues forgone if resources (inputs) are not optimally used. Opportunity cost doctrine: inputs" values (when used in their most productive way) together with production costs (the accounting costs of producing a product) determine the economic cost of production. Historical cost: money that managers actually paid for an input. Economists believe historical costs to be misleading. Explicit costs: ordinary items accountants include as the firm"s expense. Firm"s payroll, payments for raw materials, etc. Implicit costs: forgone value of resources that managers didn"t put to their best use.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers
Class+
$8 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
30 Verified Answers

Related Documents

Related Questions