ECON-200 Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: Opportunity Cost, Savings Account, Fixed Cost

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21 Jun 2020
Department
Course
Professor
Econ 200
Intro to Economics
Fall 2017
The Costs of Production
Introduction
This chapter we will present the theory of the firm
We will use the following two chapters to explain what happens in competitive
and monopolistic markets.
Opportunity Costs vs. Accounting Costs (Understanding Costs)
In this class, costs will refer to opportunity costs, not accounting costs.
Opportunity Costs (what is given up) = Explicit Costs + Implicit Costs
Implicit costs do not involve a cash outlay.
Examples of implicit costs:
The foregone interest from owned machinery (see Cost of Capital,
below).
The foregone wage of the firm’s owner.
The Cost of Capital as an Opportunity Cost
Opportunity cost of owned capital = r, where r is the foregone
interest in the period the capital is used. That is, it is the interest
that could have been earned if the capital (machine/tool) was sold
off and the money deposited into a savings account.
Note that we assume the firm can sell the machine at the
end of period.
Accounting Costs
Accounting costs are exclusively explicit costs.
Economic Profit vs. Accounting Profit
In this class, profits will refer to economic profits, not accounting profits.
Profit = Total Revenue Total Cost
Accounting Profit = Total Revenue Accounting Costs
= Total Revenue Explicit Costs
Economic Profit = Total Revenue Opportunity Costs
= Total Revenue Explicit Costs Implicit Costs
Implications & Advantages of using Economic Profit
Economic profit is the amount an owner of a firm is making compared to
the next best alternative.
Assume the following: total revenue is 70,000, material costs are 20,000,
foregone earnings are 40,000, value of an owned machine is $100,000,
saving account interest is 10%.
Econ Profit = 70,000 20,000 (40,000 10,000)
If economic profit > 0, then stay in (or go into) the business.
If economic profit < 0, then get out of (or don’t go into) the business.
If economic profit = 0, then the firm owner is indifferent between staying
in business and doing the next best alternative.
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Document Summary

This chapter we will present the theory of the firm. We will use the following two chapters to explain what happens in competitive and monopolistic markets. Opportunity costs vs. accounting costs (understanding costs) In this class, costs will refer to opportunity costs, not accounting costs. Opportunity costs (what is given up) = explicit costs + implicit costs. Implicit costs do not involve a cash outlay. The foregone interest from owned machinery (see cost of capital, below). The foregone wage of the firm"s owner. The cost of capital as an opportunity cost. Opportunity cost of owned capital = r, where r is the foregone interest in the period the capital is used. That is, it is the interest that could have been earned if the capital (machine/tool) was sold off and the money deposited into a savings account. Note that we assume the firm can sell the machine at the.

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