3.3- Revenues, costs and profits Flashcards

1
Q

What is revenue?

A

The money earned from the sale of goods and services.

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2
Q

How do you calculate total revenue?

A

Quantity x price

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3
Q

How do you calculate average revnue?

A

AR= demand
total revenue/ output

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4
Q

What is marginal revenue?

A

The extra revenue that the firm earns from selling one more unit of production.
change in total revenue/ change in output
OR:
total revenue from N goods- total revenue from (N-1) goods

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5
Q

Why do some firms experience a perfectly elastic demand curve?

A
  • perfect competition.
  • no price setting power.
  • the price received by the firm for the good is constant so MR=AR=D. (horizontal)
  • The TR curve is upward sloping because prices are constant and so more goods sold, higher revenue made.
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6
Q

Why do most firms have a downward sloping demand curve?

A
  • price decreases as output increases and therefore downward AR curve.
  • Firms with a downward sloping demand curve are firms that are in imperfect competition and have price setting power.
  • AR curve indicates the price that consumers are willing to pay for each quantity sold.
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7
Q

How is the elasticity of the demand curve linked with marginal revenue?

A
  • If MR is positive, when the firm sells the product at a lower price, total revenue still grows and so the demand curve is elastic.
  • If MR is negative, TR decreases as price decreases and so demand curve is inelastic.
    -When MR=0 , TR is maximised and the demand curve is unitary elastic.
  • TR curve is a U shape, rises with output( when MR is positive) but then declines (when MR is negative.
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8
Q

What is the economic cost of production?

A
  • the opportunity cost.
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9
Q

Why are some costs fixed and some variable?

A
  • short run at least one factor of production is fixed, therefore some costs are fixed.
  • In the long run, all costs are variable
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10
Q

How do you work out total cost?

A

fixed + variable costs

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11
Q

What is a total fixed cost?

A

Costs that do not change with output and remain constant.
Example= rent, machinery

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12
Q

What is a total variable cost?

A

costs that change directly with output.
Example= materials.

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13
Q

How do you work out average total cost?

A

total costs/ output

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14
Q

How do you work out average fixed cost?

A

total fixed cost/ output

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15
Q

How do you work out average variable cost?

A

total variable cost/ output

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16
Q

How do you work out marginal cost?

A
  • The extra cost of producing one extra unit.

change in total cost/ change in output.

17
Q

What is diminishing marginal productivity/ law of diminishing returns?

A
  • More workers can be added relatively easily and this will see an increase in production as machinery is used more efficiently.
  • However, adding more labour will mean they have less and less impact on the amount produced as they get in the way and have no machines left to use.
  • If a variable factor is increased when another factor is fixed, there will come to a point when each extra unit of the variable factor will produce less extra output than the previous.
18
Q

How is a cost curve diagram drawn?

A
  • AFC starts high because the whole fixed costs are being divided by a small output.
  • ATC is a U shape due to law of diminishing marginal productivity.
  • AVC also a U shape
  • MC is also a U shape due to diminishing marginal productivity.
19
Q

Where does the MC curve cut the AC/ ATC curve?

A
  • MC will cut the AC line at the lowest point on AC curve.
20
Q

Why are SRAC and LRAC both U shaped?

A
  • SRAC because of diminishing marginal returns.
  • LRAC because of economies of scale.
21
Q

What are economies of scale?

A
  • the advantages of large scale production that enable a large business to produce at a lower average cost.
22
Q

What are diseconomies of scale?

A

the disadvantages that arise in large businesses that reduce efficiency and cause average costs to rise.

23
Q

What is the minimum efficient scale?

A

The minimum level of output needed for a business to fully exploit economies of scale.

24
Q

What is an internal economy of scale? NAME 6

A

An advantage that a firm is able to enjoy because of a growth in the firm.
Risk bearing
Financial
Managerial
Technical
Marketing
Purchasing

25
Q

What is risk bearing economies?

A
  • Large companies are able to operate in a range of different markets.
  • if one area of the business fails, their whole business will not collapse.
26
Q

What is financial economies?

A
  • Larger firms have greater security because thy have more assets.
  • Easier for them to obtain finance and interest rates will be lower due to lower risk.
  • makes investment more accessible.
27
Q

What is managerial economies?

A
  • Large companies can afford to appoint specialist managers in every field.
  • This can increase productivity and efficiency.
28
Q

What is technical economies?

A
  • able to buy specialist machines which will be able to do jobs quickly.
  • large firms can buy a number of every kind of machine for each stage of production.
  • only large firms can afford to carry out large scale research and development (gain advantage over competitor)
29
Q

What is marketing economies of scale?

A
  • reduce advertising and branding costs as it will be distributed over a larger firm.
  • transporting in large batches and so is cheaper.
30
Q

What is purchasing economies of scale?

A

Larger firms are able to buy in large numbers so may be able to buy their raw materials at a cheaper price than competitors.

31
Q

What is an external economy of scale?

A

An advantage which arises from the growth of the industry within which the firms operates.

32
Q

Examples of external economies of scale?

A
  • local education and training providers are more likely to develop courses to prepare people to take up jobs in these businesses.
  • local roads might be improved, so transport costs for the local industries might be improved.
33
Q

Examples of diseconomies of scale?

A
  • In a large business, people can think their efforts go unnoticed and so lose motivation and work less hard.
  • Parts of the business may be miles away.
  • It takes longer for a large firm to respond to change.
    coordination and control can be difficult, this can lead to poorer quality to work.
    communication can b slow and lose accuracy because of the number of people it ha to be passed through.
34
Q

When is profit maximised?

A

when TR and TC are furthest apart.
When MC=MR

35
Q

What is normal profit?

A

The return that is sufficient to keep the factors of production commited to the business. The level of profit needed to keep the producer in the market and to cover opportunity cost.

36
Q

What point is normal profit?

A

AC=AR
TC=AR

37
Q

When does supernormal profit occur?

A

AR>AC or TR>TC.

38
Q

When does a loss occur?

A

firm fails to cover its costs.
AR<AC OR TR<TC

39
Q

When should a firm shut down?

A
  • depends on average variable costs.
  • If AVC<AR then firms should continue production.
  • if AVC>AR then producing more goods will increase the loss. Firms should leave the industry immediately.
  • In the long run, firm needs to make at least normal profit to stay in the industry.
  • However, in the short run they should produce as long as their revenue covers their variable costs.
  • Short run shut down point is where AVC=AR.