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Theme 3: Business behaviour and the labour market
3.3 Revenues, costs, and profits
3.3.2 Costs
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The ATC curve is typically U-shaped due to economies and
diseconomies
of scale.
What are the two types of costs in economics?
Explicit and implicit costs
Explicit costs involve direct payments for factors of
production
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative use of
resources
.
What is the Total Cost (TC) the sum of?
TFC and TVC
The formula for TC is
TFC + TVC
Total Fixed Costs (TFC) do not change with
production
levels.
In economics, costs include all expenses incurred by a firm in producing goods or
services
What are fixed costs?
Costs that don't change
Variable costs remain constant regardless of production levels
False
The additional cost of producing one more unit is called
marginal
cost.
Match the economic concept with its description:
Opportunity Cost ↔️ Value of next best alternative
Accounting Cost ↔️ Direct payments for inputs
Economic Cost ↔️ Includes implicit costs
If a business owner invests £50,000 instead of earning 5% interest in a bank, the opportunity cost is
£2,500
What are explicit costs?
Direct payments for inputs
Total cost is the sum of total fixed costs and total variable
costs
Total fixed costs change with the level of production
False
What happens to total variable costs as production increases?
They increase
Arrange the following cost types from most general to most specific:
1️⃣ Total Cost
2️⃣ Fixed Costs
3️⃣ Average Fixed Costs
What are the fixed costs for a business paying £1,500 in rent and £500 for insurance?
£2,000
Variable costs are expenses that vary directly with the level of
production
Variable costs fluctuate with the
quantity
of goods or services produced
What is the formula for variable costs?
V
C
=
VC =
V
C
=
Cost per Unit
×
Quantity
\text{Cost per Unit} \times \text{Quantity}
Cost per Unit
×
Quantity
If a furniture company spends £25 on materials per chair and produces 200 chairs, the variable costs are
£5,000
What does average total cost (ATC) represent?
Cost per unit produced
The formula for calculating average total cost is ATC =
TC
/ Q.
The variable cost for producing 200 chairs at £25 per chair is
£5,000
Fixed costs remain constant regardless of
production
levels.
Average Total Cost (ATC) is the total cost of production divided by the quantity of
output
What is the formula for calculating Average Total Cost (ATC)?
A
T
C
=
ATC =
A
TC
=
T
C
Q
\frac{TC}{Q}
Q
TC
Average Total Cost (ATC) combines Average Fixed Cost (AFC) and Average Variable Cost (AVC) using the formula
A
T
C
=
ATC =
A
TC
=
A
F
C
+
AFC +
A
FC
+
A
V
C
AVC
A
V
C
Steps in the relationship between ATC and other cost concepts
1️⃣ ATC is derived from Total Cost (TC)
2️⃣ ATC includes Average Fixed Cost (AFC), which decreases as output increases
3️⃣ ATC includes Average Variable Cost (AVC), which may vary with production efficiency
Explicit costs involve direct payments for
factors of production
.
Opportunity cost is the value of the next best alternative use of
resources
Match the cost type with its definition:
Explicit Costs ↔️ Direct payments for factors of production
Implicit Costs ↔️ Opportunity costs of using firm's own resources
Total Cost (TC) is the sum of Total Fixed Costs (TFC) and Total Variable Costs (TVC), defined by the formula
TC = TFC + TVC</latex>
Total Fixed Costs (TFC) do not change with the level of
production
.
Fixed Costs (FC) are expenses that do not change with the level of
production
What are examples of fixed costs?
Rent, insurance, salaries
Fixed costs and variable costs together make up
total cost
.
Variable Costs (VC) are expenses that vary directly with the level of
production
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