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Explicit costs of production Implicit costs Profits Accounting profit and pure economic profits Fixed inputs Variable inputs Marginal physical product Law of diminishing returns Economies of scale Diseconomies of scale
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Profit Profit means the difference between a firm's total revenues and its total costs (implicit as well as explicit costs). Business: Total revenue minus total costs during a specified time period Economics: Excess over returns to capital, land and labour Excess over interest, rent and wages. Accounting profit: total revenue minus explicit costs Pure economic profit: accounting profit minus implicit costs.
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Profit is mistaken as the sum of implicit wages of managers/owners, rent on land owned by the firm and interest on the capital invested by the owners of the firm. In conditions of competitive equilibrium, pure profit would not exist. Any profit will lead to an increase in output that will lead to a fall in price and the profit will be squeezed out. Entrepreneurial profit, windfall profit, monopoly profit.
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Fixed inputs: that can not be changed in a short time. Variable inputs: that can easily be varied in a short
time in order to increase or decrease the output. Marginal physical product: the amount of output expressed in physical units produced by each added input of one variable input, other things being equal. Law of diminishing returns: The principle that as one variable input is increased, with all others remaining fixed, a point will be reached beyond which the marginal physical product of the variable input begins to decrease. Marginal cost: the increase in cost required to increase the output of some good or service by one unit.
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Economies of scale
average cost decreases as output increases. Diseconomies of scale: a phenomenon said to occur whenever long run average cost increases as output increases. Constant returns to scale: no economies of scale or diseconomies of scale.
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Opportunity or social costs The social cost of a factor of production is its cost in the best alternative use. It is the opportunity foregone Cost to the individual Cost to the society as a whole Private good vs. social/public good By definition, a public good can be enjoyed without diminishing its supply. Others cannot be excluded from its use and it is not traded. As a result of being non-rivalry, demand for public good is collective; it is the sum of the separate demands of individuals for the good.
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Market Failure
allocation, they are unable to do so. They fail to lead the economic process towards the social optimum. This is described as market failure. It can occur when markets do not exist or when they fail to communicate information. It can also occur due to restrictions in the market operation and lack of institutions or regulations. Activities can impose losses or gains on the welfare of the people other than those engaged in the activities. If these losses or gains go uncompensated or unpaid for, they are described as externalities. It is not easy to value them and enter into market prices. As a result, they are not accounted for in market-based allocation. This leads to a resource allocation, which is less than the social optimum. This is also a cause of market failure.
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Internal and external economics and urban growth Internal economics Efficient production system Equitable distribution Convergence of private goods and public goods Ability to satisfy needs over time. External economics Competitive markets Capital stock Labour deployment Urban growth Use of resources outside the urban boundary Primacy and economic domination Economic base 5/8/2013 Competitiveness
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Supply The amount of a commodity that a firm wishes to sell is called the quantity supplied. It is a flow expressed as so much per period of time. It depends on: Commoditys own price The prices of other commodities The costs of factors of production The goals of the firm The state of technology It increases if the price of the commodity increases. Quantity supplied is assumed to increase as the price of the commodity increases, ceteris paribus, a movement along a supply curve indicates a change in the quantity supplied in 5/8/2013 13 response to a change in price.
Demand The amount of a commodity that households wish to purchase is called the quantity demanded. It is a flow expressed as so much per period of time. This quantity is determined by the commoditys own price. The prices of related commodities, average household income, tastes, the distribution of income among households and the size of the population. The quantity of demand is determined by: The commoditys own price The price of the related commodities Average household income Tastes The distribution of income among households The size of the population
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Quantity demanded is assumed to increase as the price of the commodity falls, ceteris paribus. The relationship between quantity demanded and price is presented graphically by a demand curve that shows how much will be demanded at each market price. A movement along a demand curve indicates a change in the quantity demanded in response to a change in the price of the commodity. A rise in demand raises both equilibrium price and quantity; a fall in demand lowers equilibrium quantity but raises equilibrium price.
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The supply curve shifts to the right (an increase in supply) if the prices of other commodities fall The costs of producing the commodity fall Producers become more willing to produce the commodity The opposite changes shift the supply curve to the left. A shift of a supply curve represents a change in the quantity supplied in each price and is referred to as a change in supply.
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Price determination
Price theory is most simply explained against a backdrop of a constant price level. Price changes discussed in the theory are changes relative to the average level of all prices. In an inflationary period, a rise in the relative price of one commodity means that its price rises more than does the price level. A fall in its relative price means that its price rises by less than does the price level. Price is assumed to rise when there is a shortage and to fall when there is a surplus. Thus the actual market price will be pushed toward the equilibrium price, and when it is reached, there will be neither shortage nor surplus and price will not change until either the supply curve or the demand curve shifts.
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Equilibrium Price
quantity supplied. At any price below the equilibrium there will be excess demand while at any price above the equilibrium there will be excess supply. Graphically equilibrium occurs where demand and supply curves intersect. Price is assumed to rise when there is a shortage and to fall when there is a surplus. Actual market price will be pushed towards the equilibrium. When it is reached there will be neither shortage nor surplus. Price will not change until the supply or the demand curve changes A rise in demand raises both e-price and quantity and a fall lowers both. A rise in supply raises e-quantity and lowers e- price. A fall in supply lowers e-quantity and raises e- price. These are the laws of supply and demand.
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Price (Rs.) 14 10 7 5 3 2
Quantity of
Demand 1 2
3 4 5 6
Supply 6 5
4 3 3 1
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Price (Rs.)
Supply Demand
6
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Demand/Supply