Tutorial Cost of Poduction Part II
Tutorial Cost of Poduction Part II
Quantity of Houses 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Painted per month
Calculate the average fixed cost, average variable cost, and average total cost for each quantity.
What is the efficient scale of the painting company?
5. Consider the following table of long-run total cost for three different firms:
Quantity 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Firm A 60 70 80 90 100 110 120
Firm B 11 24 39 56 75 96 119
Firm C 21 34 49 66 85 106 129
b. Figure 1 graphs the fisherman’s production function. The production function becomes
flatter as the number of hours spent fishing increases, illustrating diminishing marginal
product.
Figure 1.
c. The table shows the fixed cost, variable cost, and total cost of fishing. Figure 2 shows the
fisherman’s total-cost curve. It has an upward slope because catching additional fish
takes additional time. The curve is convex because there are diminishing returns to
fishing time because each additional hour spent fishing yields fewer additional fish.
Figure 2.
4. The following table illustrates average fixed cost (AFC), average variable cost (AVC), and average
total cost (ATC) for each quantity. The efficient scale is four houses per month, because that
minimizes average total cost.
5. The following table shows quantity (Q), total cost (TC), and average total cost (ATC) for the
three firms:
Firm A Firm B Firm C
Quantity TC ATC TC ATC TC ATC
1 60 60 11 11 21 21
2 70 35 24 12 34 17
3 80 26.7 39 13 49 16.3
4 90 22.5 56 14 66 16.5
5 100 20 75 15 85 17
6 110 18.3 96 16 106 17.7
7 120 17.1 119 17 129 18.4
Firm A has economies of scale because average total cost declines as output increases. Firm B
has diseconomies of scale because average total cost rises as output rises. Firm C has economies
of scale for output from one to three and diseconomies of scale for levels of output beyond three
units.