ECON 200. Introduction to Microeconomics Homework 5 Part I Name:________________________________________ [Multiple Choice] 1. Diminishing marginal product explains why, as a firm’s output increases, (d) a. the production function and total-cost curve both get steeper. b. the production function and total-cost curve both get flatter c. the production function gets steeper, while the total-cost curve gets flatter. d. the production function gets flatter, while the total-cost curve gets steeper. 2. A firm is producing 1,000 units at a total cost of $5,000. If it were to increase production to 1,001 units, its total cost would rise to $5,008. What does this information tell you about the firm? (d) a. Marginal cost is $5, and average variable cost is $8. b. Marginal cost is $8, and average variable cost is $5. c. Marginal cost is $5, and average total cost is $8. d. Marginal cost is $8, and average total cost is $5. 3. A firm is producing 20 units with an average total cost of $25 and marginal cost of $15. If it were to increase production to 21 units, which of the following must occur? (c) a. Marginal cost would decrease. b. Marginal cost would increase. c. Average total cost would decrease. d. Average total cost would increase 4. The government imposes a $1,000 per year license fee on all pizza restaurants. Which cost curves shift as a result? (b) a. average total cost and marginal cost b. average total cost and average fixed cost c. average variable cost and marginal cost d. average variable cost and average fixed cost 5. If a higher level of production allows workers to specialize in particular tasks, a firm will likely exhibit ________ of scale and ________ average total cost. (a) a. economies, falling b. economies, rising c. diseconomies, falling d. diseconomies, rising 6. A perfectly competitive firm (c) a. chooses its price to maximize profits. b. sets its price to undercut other firms selling similar products. c. takes its price as given by market conditions. d. picks the price that yields the largest market share. 7. A competitive firm maximizes profit by choosing the quantity at which (b) a. average total cost is at its minimum. b. marginal cost equals the price. c. average total cost equals the price. d. marginal cost equals average total cost. 8. If profit-maximizing, competitive firm is producing a quantity at which marginal cost is between average variable cost and average total cost, it will (a) a. keep producing in the short run but exit the market in the long run. b. shut down in the short run but return to production in the long run. c. shut down in the short run and exit the market in the long run. d. keep producing both in the short run and in the long run. 9. In the long-run equilibrium of a competitive market with identical firms, what is the relationship between price P, marginal cost MC, and average total cost ATC? (d) a. P > MC and P > ATC. b. P > MC and P = ATC. c. P = MC and P > ATC. d. P = MC and P = ATC. [Short Answer] 1. Draw the marginal-cost and average-total-cost curves for a typical firm. Explain why the curves have the shapes that they do and why they cross where they do. The figure shows the marginal-cost curve and the average-total-cost curve for a typical firm. There are three main features of these curves: (1) marginal cost is U-shaped but rises sharply as output increases; (2) average total cost is U-shaped; and (3) whenever marginal cost is less than average total cost, average total cost is declining; whenever marginal cost is greater than average total cost, average total cost is rising. Marginal cost is increasing for output greater than a certain quantity because of diminishing returns. The average-total-cost curve is downward-sloping initially because the firm is able to spread out fixed costs over additional units. The average-total-cost curve is increasing beyond some output level because as quantity increases, the demand for important variable inputs increases; therefore, the cost of these inputs increases. The marginal-cost and average-total-cost curves intersect at the minimum of average total cost; that quantity is the efficient scale. 2. Define economies of scale and explain why they might arise. Define diseconomies of scale and explain why they might arise. Economies of scale exist when long-run average total cost decreases as the quantity of output increases, which occurs because of specialization among workers. Diseconomies of scale exist when long-run average total cost rises as the quantity of output increases, which occurs because of the coordination problems inherent in a large organization 3. There are many types of costs: opportunity cost, total cost, fixed cost, variable cost, average total cost, and marginal cost. Fill in the type of cost that best completes each sentence: a. What you give up for taking some action is called the ______. opportunity cost b. _____ is falling when marginal cost is below it and rising when marginal cost is above it. average total cost c. A cost that does not depend on the quantity produced is a(n) ______. fixed cost d. In the ice-cream industry in the short run, ______ includes the cost of cream and sugar but not the cost of the factory. variable cost e. Profits equal total revenue minus ______. total cost f. The cost of producing an extra unit of output is the ______. marginal cost 4. Nimbus, Inc., makes brooms and then sells them door-to-door. Here is the relationship between the number of workers and Nimbus’s output in a given day: Workers 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Output 0 20 50 90 120 140 150 155 Marginal Product Total cost 20 30 40 30 20 10 5 $200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 Average Total cost Marginal cost $15.00 8.00 5.56 5.00 5.00 5.33 5.81 $5.00 3.33 2.50 3.33 5.00 10.00 20.00 a. Fill in the column of marginal products. What pattern do you see? How might you explain it? Marginal product rises at first, then declines because of diminishing marginal product. b. A worker costs $100 a day, and the firm has fixed costs of $200. Use this information to fill in the column for total cost. c. Fill in the column for average total cost. (Recall that ATC=TC/Q.) What pattern do you see? Average total cost is U-shaped. When quantity is low, average total cost declines as quantity rises; when quantity is high, average total cost rises as quantity rises d. Now fill in the column for marginal cost. (Recall that MC=dTC/dQ.) What pattern do you see? Marginal cost is also U-shaped, but rises steeply as output increases. This is due to diminishing marginal product e. Compare the column for marginal product and the column for marginal cost. Explain the relationship. When marginal product is rising, marginal cost is falling, and vice versa f. Compare the column for average total cost and the column for marginal cost. Explain the relationship. When marginal cost is less than average total cost, average total cost is falling; the cost of the last unit produced pulls the average down. When marginal cost is greater than average total cost, average total cost is rising; the cost of the last unit produced pushes the average up 5. You are the chief financial officer for a firm that sells digital music players. Your firm has the following average-total-cost schedule: Quantity 600 players 601 Average Total Cost $300 301 Your current level of production is 600 devices, all of which have been sold. Someone calls, desperate to buy one of your music players. The caller offers you $550 for it. Should you accept the offer? Why or why not? At an output level of 600 players, total cost is $180,000 (600 × $300). The total cost of producing 601 players is $180,901. Therefore, you should not accept the offer of $550, because the marginal cost of the 601st player is $901 6. Consider the following cost information for a pizzeria: Quantity 0 dozen pizzas 1 2 3 4 5 6 TotalCost $300 350 390 420 450 490 540 Variable Cost $0 50 90 120 150 190 240 a. What is the pizzeria’s fixed cost? The fixed cost is $300, because fixed cost equals total cost minus variable cost. At an output of zero, the only costs are fixed cost b. Construct a table in which you calculate the marginal cost per dozen pizzas using the information on total cost. Also, calculate the marginal cost per dozen pizzas using the information on variable cost. What is the relationship between these sets of numbers? Comment Quantity 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Total Cost $300 350 390 420 450 490 540 Variable Cost $0 50 90 120 150 190 240 Marginal Cost (using total cost) --$50 40 30 30 40 50 Marginal Cost (using variable cost) --$50 40 30 30 40 50 Marginal cost equals the change in total cost for each additional unit of output. It is also equal to the change in variable cost for each additional unit of output. This relationship occurs because total cost equals the sum of variable cost and fixed cost and fixed cost does not change as the quantity changes. Thus, as quantity increases, the increase in total cost equals the increase in variable cost 7. Your cousin Vinnie owns a painting company with fixed costs of $200 and the following schedule for variable costs: Quantity of Houses painted per month Variable costs 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 $10 $20 $40 $80 $160 $320 $640 Calculate average fixed cost, average variable cost, and average total cost for each quantity. What is the efficient scale of the painting company? The following table illustrates average fixed cost (AFC), average variable cost (AVC), and average total cost (ATC) for each quantity. The efficient scale is 4 houses per month, because that minimizes average total cost Quantity Variable Cost $0.00 10.00 20.00 40.00 80.00 160.00 320.00 640.00 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Fixed Cost $200.00 200.00 200.00 200.00 200.00 200.00 200.00 200.00 Total Cost $200.00 210.00 220.00 240.00 280.00 360.00 520.00 840.00 Average Fixed Cost --$200.00 100.00 66.67 50.00 40.00 33.33 28.57 Average Variable Cost --$10.00 10.00 13.33 20.00 32.00 53.33 91.43 Average Total Cost --$210.00 110.00 80.00 70.00 72.00 86.67 120.00 8. Jane’s Juice Bar has the following cost schedules: Quantity 0 vats of juice 1 2 3 4 5 6 Variable cost $0 10 25 45 70 100 135 Total cost $30 40 55 75 100 130 165 a. Calculate average variable cost, average total cost, and marginal cost for each quantity. The following table shows average variable cost (AVC), average total cost (ATC), and marginal cost (MC) for each quantity Quantity 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Variable Cost $0.00 10.00 25.00 45.00 70.00 100.00 135.00 Total Cost $30.00 40.00 55.00 75.00 100.00 130.00 165.00 Average Variable Cost --$10.00 12.50 15.00 17.50 20.00 22.50 Average Total Cost --$40.00 27.50 25.00 25.00 26.00 27.50 Marginal Cost --$10.00 15.00 20.00 25.00 30.00 35.00 b. Graph all three curves. What is the relationship between the marginal-cost curve and the averagetotal-cost curve? Between the marginal-cost curve and the average-variable-cost curve? Explain The figure shows the three curves. The marginal-cost curve is below the average-total-cost curve when output is less than four and average total cost is declining. The marginal-cost curve is above the average-total-cost curve when output is above four and average total cost is rising. The marginal-cost curve lies above the average-variable-cost curve. 9. Consider the following table of long-run total costs for three different firms: Quantity Firm A Firm B Firm C 1 $60 11 21 2 $70 24 34 3 $80 39 49 4 $90 56 66 5 $100 75 85 6 $110 96 106 7 $120 119 129 Does each of these firms experience economies of scale or diseconomies of scale? The following table shows quantity (Q), total cost (TC), and average total cost (ATC) for the three firms: Firm A Quantity 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Firm B Firm C TC ATC TC ATC TC ATC $60.00 70.00 80.00 90.00 100.00 110.00 120.00 $60.00 35.00 26.67 22.50 20.00 18.33 17.14 $11.00 24.00 39.00 56.00 75.00 96.00 119.00 $11.00 12.00 13.00 14.00 15.00 16.00 17.00 $21.00 34.00 49.00 66.00 85.00 106.00 129.00 $21.00 17.00 16.33 16.50 17.00 17.67 18.43 Firm A has economies of scale because average total cost declines as output increases. Firm B has diseconomies of scale because average total cost rises as output rises. Firm C has economies of scale from one to three units of output and diseconomies of scale for levels of output beyond three units. 10. Under what conditions will a firm shut down temporarily? Explain. A firm will shut down temporarily if the revenue it would get from producing is lower than the variable costs of production. This occurs if price is less than average variable cost 11. Under what conditions will a firm exit a market? Explain. A firm will exit a market if the revenue it would get from remaining in business is less than its total cost. This occurs if price is less than average total cost 12. Does a competitive firm’s price equal the minimum of its average total cost in the short run, in the long run, or both? Explain. The competitive firm's price must equal the minimum of its average total cost only in the long run. In the short run, price may be greater than average total cost (in which case the firm is earning a profit), price may be less than average total cost (in which case the firm is incurring a loss), or price may be equal to average total cost (in which case the firm is breaking even). In the long run, if firms are earning profits, other firms will enter the industry, which will lower the price of the good. In the long run, if firms are incurring losses, they will exit the industry, which will raise the price of the good. Entry or exit continues until firms are making neither profits nor losses. At that point, price equals average total cost 13. Bob’s lawn-mowing service is a profit-maximizing, competitive firm. Bob mows lawns for $27 each. His total cost each day is $280, of which $30 is a fixed cost. He mows 10 lawns a day. What can you say about Bob’s short-run decision regarding shutdown and his long-run decision regarding exit? Bob' total variable cost is his total cost each day less his fixed cost ($280 - $30 = $250). His average variable cost is his total variable cost each day divided by the number of lawns he mows each day ($250/10 = $25). Because his average variable cost is less than his price, he will not shut down in the short run. Bob's average total cost is his total cost each day divided by the number of lawns he mows each day ($280/10 = $28). Because his average total cost is greater than his price, he will exit the industry in the long run 14. Ball Bearings, Inc. faces costs of production as follows: Quantity 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Total Fixed Costs $100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Total Variable Costs $0 50 70 90 140 200 360 a. Calculate the company’s average fixed costs, average variable costs, average total costs, and marginal costs at each level of production. Costs are shown in the following table: Q TFC TVC AFC AVC ATC MC 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 $100 100 100 100 100 100 100 $0 50 70 90 140 200 360 ---$100 50 33.3 25 20 16.7 ---$50 35 30 35 40 60 ---150 85 63.3 60 60 76.7 ---50 20 20 50 60 160 b. The price of a case of ball bearings is $50. Seeing that he can’t make a profit, the chief executive officer (CEO) decides to shut down operations. What is the firm’s profit/loss? Was this a wise decision? Explain. If the price is $50, the firm will minimize its loss by producing 4 units, where price is equal to marginal cost. When the firm produces 4 units, its total revenue is $200 ($50 x 4 = $200) and its total cost is $240 ($100 + $140). This would give the firm a loss of $40. If the firm shuts down, it will earn a loss equal to its fixed cost ($100). The CEO did not make a wise decision c. Vaguely remembering his introductory economics course, the chief financial officer tells the CEO it is better to produce 1 case of ball bearings, because marginal revenue equals marginal cost at that quantity. What is the firm’s profit/loss at that level of production? Was this the best decision? Explain If the firm produces 1 unit, its total revenue is $50 and its total cost is $150 ($100 + $50), so its loss will still be $100. This was also not the best decision. The firm could have reduced its loss by producing more units because the marginal costs of the second and third unit are lower than the price 15. Suppose the book-printing industry is competitive and begins in a long-run equilibrium. a. Draw a diagram showing the average total cost, marginal cost, marginal revenue, and supply curve of the typical firm in the industry. The figure shows the curves of a typical firm in the industry, with average total cost ATC1, marginal cost MC1, and marginal revenue equal to price P1. The long-run-supply curve is the marginal cost curve above the minimum point of ATC1 b. Hi-Tech Printing Company invents a new process that sharply reduces the cost of printing books. What happens to Hi-Tech’s profits and the price of books in the short run when Hi-Tech’s patent prevents other firms from using the new technology? The new process reduces Hi-Tech’s marginal cost to MC2 and its average total cost to ATC2, but the price remains at P1 because other firms cannot use the new process. Thus Hi-Tech produces Q2 units and earns positive profits c. What happens in the long run when the patent expires and other firms are free to use the technology? When the patent expires and other firms are free to use the technology, all firms’ average-totalcost curves decline to ATC2, so the market price falls to P3 and firms earn zero profit 16. A profit-maximizing firm in a competitive market is currently producing 100 units of output. It has average revenue of $10, average total cost of $8, and fixed costs of $200. a. What is its profit? Profit is equal to (P – ATC) × Q. Price is equal to AR. Therefore, profit is ($10 – $8) × 100 = $200 b. What is its marginal cost? For firms in perfect competition, marginal revenue and average revenue are equal. Since profit maximization also implies that marginal revenue is equal to marginal cost, marginal cost must be $10 c. What is its average variable cost? Average fixed cost is equal to AFC /Q which is $200/100 = $2. Since average variable cost is equal to average total cost minus average fixed cost, AVC = $8 − $2 = $6. d. Is the efficient scale of the firm more than, less than, or exactly 100 units? Since average total cost is less than marginal cost, average total cost must be rising. Therefore, the efficient scale must occur at an output level less than 100 17. The market for fertilizer is perfectly competitive. Firms in the market are producing output but are currently incurring economic losses. a. How does the price of fertilizer compare to the average total cost, the average variable cost, and the marginal cost of producing fertilizer? If firms are currently incurring losses, price must be less than average total cost. However, because firms in the industry are currently producing output, price must be greater than average variable cost. If firms are maximizing profits, price must be equal to marginal cost b. Draw two graphs, side by side, illustrating the present situation for the typical firm and for the market. The present situation is depicted in the figure. The firm is currently producing q1 units of output at a price of P1 c. Assuming there is no change in either demand or the firms’ cost curves, explain what will happen in the long run to the price of fertilizer, marginal cost, average total cost, the quantity supplied by each firm, and the total quantity supplied to the market. The figure also shows how the market will adjust in the long run. Because firms are incurring losses, there will be exit in this industry. This means that the market supply curve will shift to the left, increasing the price of the product. As the price rises, the remaining firms will increase quantity supplied; marginal cost will increase. Exit will continue until price is equal to minimum average total cost. Average total cost will be lower in the long run than in the short run. The total quantity supplied in the market will fall 18. The market for apple pies in the city of Ectenia is competitive and has the following demand schedule: Price 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Quantity Demanded 1200 pies 1100 1000 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 Each producer in the market has fixed costs of $9 and the following marginal cost: Quantity 1 pie 2 3 4 5 6 Marginal Cost $2 4 6 8 10 12 a. Compute each producer’s total cost and average total cost for 1 to 6 pies. Q TC ATC 1 2 3 4 5 6 11 15 21 29 39 51 11 7.5 7 7.25 7.8 8.5 b. The price of a pie is now $11. How many pies are sold? How many pies does each producer make? How many producers are there? How much profit does each producer earn? At a price of $11, quantity demanded is 200. With marginal revenue of $11, each firm will choose to produce 5 pies where their marginal cost is closest to the marginal revenue without exceeding marginal revenue. Therefore, there will be 40 firms (= 200/5). Each producer will earn total revenue of $55 ($11 5), total cost is $39, so profit is $16 c. Is the situation described in part (b) a long-run equilibrium? Why or why not? The market is not in long-run equilibrium because firms are earning positive economic profit. Firms will want to enter the market d. Suppose that in the long run there is free entry and exit. How much profit does each producer earn in the long-run equilibrium? What is the market price and number of pies each producer makes? How many pies are sold? How many pie producers are operating? With free entry and exit, each producer will earn zero profit in the long run. Long-run equilibrium will occur when price is equal to minimum average total cost ($7). At that price, 600 pies are demanded. Each firm will only produce 3 pies (the quantity at which, MC is closest to MR without exceeding MR) meaning that there will be 200 pie producers in the market