Cost Minimisation Flashcards

1
Q

The firm’s profit maximisation problem can be split into 2 parts:

A

Must operate at lowest cost for any output

Must choose profit maximising quantity

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2
Q

Firm has inputs X₁ X₂, with their factor prices W₁ W₂.

What would the cost minisation expression look like?

A

Min w₁x₁+w₂x₂

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3
Q

Cost minimisation function expression

A

C(w₁,w₂,y)

Shows minimum cost of producing output y given factor prices W.

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4
Q

2 components to illustrate this cost minimisation problem

A

Isocosts and isoquants

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5
Q

Isocosts

A

Shows all combinations of inputs that have the same given cost (budget constraints essentially)

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6
Q

Isocosts equation

A

w₁x₁ + w₂x₂ = C

Rearrange to make it suitable in graph form (x₂ on y axis)
x₂ = c/w₂ -w₁/w₂ x₁

So isocosts are straight lines with slope -w₁/w₂.

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7
Q

How to solve cost minimisation algebraically

(Remember final equation)

A

Lagrange method.

And we will end up with
w₁/w₂ = MP₁/MP₂

Which is factor price ratio (slope of isocost) = TRS (slope of isoquant) , which is the tangency between isocost and isoquant

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8
Q

Fixed proportion for cost minimisation

A

Recall fixed proportion isoquant:
f(x₁,x₂) = min{x₁,x₂}

Cost minimising way of producing y units is to use y units of each input. (I.e Y labour and Y machines needed)

So:
c(w₁,w₂,y) = (w₁ + w₂)y
LHS just means cost minimisation for y amount of output.

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9
Q

What does perfect substitutes isocost look like graphically (pg 11)

A

Isocot has to touch the isoquant once at the y or x intercept. (They meet at either these points because its means that only one F.O.P is used to produce the output) (similar to green line in cournot duopoly

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10
Q

So what is the cost function for perfect substitutes

A

c(w₁,w₂,y) = min {w₁x₁,w₂x₂} = min {w₁,w₂}y

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11
Q

Cost minimisation for Cobb Douglas technology : how do we solve (2 methods)

A

Min w₁x₁ + w₂x₂ such that
y = x₁ to power a x₂ to power b

  1. Solve by TRS=Price ratio (which is tangency between isoquant and isocost)
  2. Solve by lagrangean
    Structure should look like this, in order to do F.O.C
    L=w₁x₁ + w₂x₂ - λ(x₁ to the a x₂ to the b - y)
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12
Q

method 1: TRS = Price ratio example on slides is simple.

Method 2: lagrane is also a good example work through.

A
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13
Q

So what were the 3 types of cost minimisation

A

Fixed proportions
Perfect substitutes
Cobb douglas

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14
Q

Recall short run costs assumption

A

One factor is fixed (we let X₂ be fixed so Xbar₂) , so a firm can only choose to adjust the quantity of X₁.

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15
Q

Short run cost minimisation expression?

A

Min w₁x₁ +w₂xbar₂

Such that f(x₁,xbar₂)=y

So w₂Xbar₂ is fixed cost. w₁x₁ is variable cost

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16
Q

What is the fixed and variable cost in this expression

A

So w₂Xbar₂ is fixed cost. w₁x₁ is variable cost

17
Q

Short run cost function (hint: factor demand- not that important )

A

We look for the smallest quantity of x₁ to produce y.
X₁=Xs₁ (w₁,w₂,Xbar₂,y)

Factor demand depends on factor prices, output, and the fixed amount of the other factor

Cs (y,Xbar₂) =w₁xs₁ (w₁,w₂,Xbar₂,y) +w₂Xbar₂

18
Q

Now move on to cost curves. What assumptions do we make now?

A

W1 and W2 are fixed, and rewrite cost function as c(y)

19
Q

Total cost expression

A

c(y) = cv(y) + F

Cv(y) is variable costs
F is fixed cost.

20
Q

What happens to AFC as output increases

A

Falls as spreads across more units.

21
Q

What happens to AVC as output rises

A

Could fall initially as more productive, but then diminishing marginal product (gets crowded etc less productive)

22
Q

Marginal cost formulas (2)

A

Differentiate cost

Or differentiate variable cost (since fixed cost is a parameter which will disappear when differentiated so essentially it is just differentiating only variable costs!)

23
Q
  1. Relationship between VC and MC,
  2. Relationship between AVC and MC
  3. relationship between AC and mC
A

1.Variable cost is the sum of marginal costs of all units.

2 and 3.
If MC>AVC AVC is increasing (since average goes up)
If MC<AVC AVC is falling (since average goes down)
(Same logic for AC)

MC touches through bottom of AVC and AC curve

24
Q

What happens to costs in long run

A

All costs are variable in LR so fixed costs dont exist.

25
Q

How does LRAC curve look

A

Envelope of SR AC curves

Could correspond to a firm choosing a diff number of factories. We pick the curve (optimal factory size) that produces the desired quantity at the lowest AC. (Pg18)

26
Q

Relationship between LRAC and SAC

A

For any level of output we can find an optimal factor size - corresponding to one SAC curve. (As mentioned last card)

Everywhere else on that same SAC curve corresponds to a different level of output, where a different factory size will be chosen, so each SAC curve only touches LAC once.

27
Q

Can the LRAC join at the lowest point of other SAC curves?

A

No, it must be at tangency.

Only exception if there is CRS so LRAC would be a straight horizontal line where it touches the lowest points of the SAC’s

28
Q

Draw short run and long run diagram.

A