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Bellringer Mankiw Ch 13 1. Consider some of your short term goals (within 1 year) 2. Consider some of your long term goals (when you get to be old like Klein)

Economies of scale

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Page 1: Economies of scale

Bellringer Mankiw Ch 13

1. Consider some of your short term goals (within 1 year)

2. Consider some of your long term goals (when you get to be old like Klein)

Page 2: Economies of scale

Which curves are MR, AFC, AVC, ATC?

Page 3: Economies of scale

Short run Fixed costs

• Factory in long run?

• Over years, all costs are variable

Page 4: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 4

Costs in the Short Run & Long Run

• Short run: Some inputs are fixed (e.g., factories, land). The costs of these inputs are FC.

• Long run: All inputs are variable (e.g., firms can build more factories, or sell existing ones).

• In the long run, ATC at any Q is cost per unit using the most efficient mix of inputs for that Q (e.g., the factory size with the lowest ATC).

Page 5: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 5

EXAMPLE 3: LRATC with 3 factory Sizes

ATCSATCM ATCL

Q

AvgTotalCost

Firm can choose from 3 factory sizes: S, M, L.

Each size has its own SRATC curve.

The firm can change to a different factory size in the long run, but not in the short run.

Page 6: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 6

EXAMPLE 3: LRATC with 3 factory Sizes

ATCSATCM ATCL

Q

AvgTotalCost

QA QB

LRATC

To produce less than QA, firm will

choose size S in the long run.

To produce between QA

and QB, firm will

choose size M in the long run.

To produce more than QB, firm will

choose size L in the long run.

Page 7: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 7

A Typical LRATC Curve

Q

ATCIn the real world, factories come in many sizes, each with its own SRATC curve.

So a typical LRATC curve looks like this:

LRATC

Page 8: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 8

How ATC Changes as the Scale of Production Changes

Economies of scale: ATC falls as Q increases.

Constant returns to scale: ATC stays the same as Q increases.

Diseconomies of scale: ATC rises as Q increases.

LRATC

Q

ATC

Page 9: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 9

Economies of Scale Causes• Economies of scale occur when increasing production

allows greater specialization• More common when Q is low. • Capital goods (machinery)• Specialization of labor (& movement of labor)• Transportation or research network

Page 10: Economies of scale
Page 11: Economies of scale

Are economies of scale positive for consumers?

• In your groups, brainstorm 2 reasons why they are positive

• 2 reasons why they are negative (think about small business competition)

Page 12: Economies of scale

THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION 12

Diseconomies of Scale Causes

Diseconomies of scale are due to coordination problems in large organizations. More common when Q is high.

Page 13: Economies of scale

According to the figure, suppose the firm currently operates on the minimum of ATCB. If it increases production, but not all the way to N,

then short-run average total costa. and long-run average total cost increase.b. and long-run average total cost decrease.c. rises and long-run average total cost is unchanged.d. is unchanged and long-run average total cost increases.

Page 14: Economies of scale

According to the figure, suppose the firm currently operates on the minimum of ATCA, if the firm continues to produce until M, they would

benefit from:a. diseconomies of scaleb. economies of scalec. constant returns to scaled. short run cost increases

Page 15: Economies of scale

Mankiw Page 276-277

• #12, #7, #5