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Supply, Elasticity and Costs Assistant Professor Chanin Yoopetch Learning outcomes By studying this chapter students will be able to:  understand and utilize the concept of elasticity of supply  identify the factors of production  distinguish between fixed and variable factors of production  analyse the relationship between costs and output in the short run and long run  understand the reasons for economies of scale Price elasticity of supply  Elasticity of supply measures   the responsiveness of supply to a change in price. This relationship may be expressed as a formula:  Percentage change in quantity supplied ÷ Percentage change in price  Where supply is inelastic it means  that supply cannot easily be changed, whereas elastic supply is more flexible.  Ways to increase supply  Expanding your factories?  Outsourcing ? Factors affecting price elasticity of supply     time period availability of stocks spare capacity flexibility of capacity / resource mobility Factors affecting price elasticity of supply  time period  The longer the period of time, the easier it is for supply to be changed.  Build more hotel rooms or invest in more capacity Factors affecting price elasticity of supply  availability of stocks   in the warehouse, enabling supply to be flexible and more elastic However, some leisure services, such as theatres and hotels, can’t be kept in stock, so supply is inelastic in the short run Factors affecting price elasticity of supply  spare capacity  Some hotels generally utilize only 90% of capacity to provide services.   Some airlines have spare aircraft available for deployment Making supply more elastic Factors affecting price elasticity of supply  flexibility of capacity / resource mobility  Flexibility of capacity      Resources can easily be shifted from provision of one good or service to another. Flexibility of the labour force is one of the key factors. Many organizations train staff to be multiskilled to enable them to shift from one task to another. Job rotation Organizations have to deal with training several skills Supply and costs  Leisure and tourism inputs  Land   Labour   This includes skilled and unskilled human effort. Capital   This includes natural resources such as minerals, and land itself. This includes buildings, machines and tools. Enterprise  This is the factor which brings together the other factors of production to produce goods and services. Supply and costs  Leisure and tourism inputs  We can also categorize factors of production into;   Fixed and variable factors Fixed factors  Those factors which cannot be easily varied in the short run  E.g. Actual building of hotels, airports  Variable factors  Can be changed in the short run and include unskilled labour, energy and readily available raw materials The Costs of Production Supply The Law of Supply: Firms are willing to produce and sell a greater quantity of a good when the price of a good is high, this results in a supply curve that slopes upward. Why Study Behavior of Firms?  Gain a better understanding of the decisions made by producers.  Study how the behavior of a firm depends on the structure of the market. Purpose Facing The Typical Firm The economic purpose of the firm is to maximize profits! Profit: The firm’s revenues minus its costs. An Individual Firm’s Profit: Revenue minus Cost  Revenues: The amount that the firm receives for the sale of its product. (Market Price x Amount Sold)= Revenues  Costs: The amount that the firm pays to buy inputs.  Profit is often referred to as Producer Surplus: the amount a seller is paid minus the cost of production. A measure of the benefits to sellers. Producer Surplus: Graphical S Producer Surplus PE Production Costs D QE Costs of Production  In general, three costs are often considered when making business strategy or supply decisions. Explicit Costs Implicit Costs Sunk Costs Costs as Opportunity Costs  The firm’s costs include Explicit Costs and Implicit Costs:  Explicit Costs: costs that involve a direct money outlay for factors of production. (cost for wages,materials)  Implicit Costs: costs that do not involve direct money outlay. (e.g. opportunity costs)   Both can include opportunity costs. Especially, for self-employed or self-owned business; one’s time or one’s opportunity to do something else. Costs as Opportunity Costs  Economists include all opportunity costs when measuring costs.  Accountants measure the explicit costs but often ignore the implicit costs.  When revenues exceed both explicit and implicit costs the firm earns economic profits. Costs as Opportunity Costs  A third, not so obvious implicit cost includes sunk costs.  Sunk costs are costs that have already been committed and cannot be recovered. Sunk Costs are . . .  an opportunity cost  often ignored when making decisions about business strategy  Cost for market research The Various Measures of Cost Costs of production may be divided into two specific categories:  Fixed Costs:   Those costs that do not vary with the amount of output produced.(Security services, full-time worker salary) Variable Costs:  Those costs that do vary with the amount of output produced.(cost of flour for producing cake) Fixed versus Variable Costs  The division of costs between fixed and variable often depends on the time horizon being considered.  Over a period of weeks, i.e. short-run, some costs are fixed (e.g. plant size.)  Over a period of years, i.e. long-run, many fixed costs become variable costs.  Allows greater ability to respond to changing circumstances in the long run. Family of Total Costs...  Total Fixed Costs (TFC)- costs that do not vary with the quantity of output produced  Total Variable Costs- (TVC)- Costs that do vary with the quantity of output produced  Total Costs (TC): TC = TFC + TVC Family of Average Costs. . .  Average Costs: Specific Cost / Output Level  Average Fixed Costs (AFC)- fixed costs divided by the quantity of output  Average Variable Costs (AVC)- variable costs divided by the quantity of output  Average Total Costs (ATC)- total costs divided by the quantity of output Marginal Cost: “How much does it cost to produce an additional unit of output?”  Marginal Cost (MC): “The extra or additional cost of producing one more unit of output.”  MC is the addition to the cost of production that must be covered by additional revenue for profit maximization Mathematical Definitions of Costs  Average Total Cost: ATC = TC / Q  Marginal Cost: MC = TC / Q Long run costs Long run  Economies of scale- Economies of scale arises from increases in the size of an organization.  Financial  Large firms tend to have bigger assets.  Large firms tend to get lower borrowing rates from banks??  buying and selling  Buying and selling economies arise from buying and selling in bulk.  Buying , leading to large purchase discounts  Selling, costs of advertising are spread out over a large number of sales  Managerial / specialization  Large travel agency chains, comparing to a small travel agency, will have the scope for employing experts in functional areas, such as accounting, marketing, and personnel. Long run costs Long run  Economies of scale- Economies of scale arises from increases in the size of an organization.  Technical  Relating to utilization of complex and expensive technology and machinery. Cost per guest per year will be relatively insignificant for large hotels when they buy an expensive accounting system software.  economies of increased dimensions  Cost of buying one big bus for 50 people is cheaper than cost of buying 5 vans( also for 50 people). Long run costs Long run  Economies of scale- Economies of scale arises from increases in the size of an organization.  risk-bearing  The ability of large organizations to stay viable in hard time.  Two factors  Diversified interests (demand falls in one area can be compensated for by business elsewhere.  Large organizations with more assets are able to sustain short-term losses from reserves. Long run costs Long run costs  Diseconomies of scale  are the forces that cause larger firms to produce goods and services at increased per-unit costs. Long run costs  Two types of diseconomies of scale  Internal diseconomies  For some firms, it is difficult to manage efficiently beyond a certain size and problems of control, delegation, and communications arise.  It may arise from the growth due to M&A.  External diseconomies  Can result from activities in a particular area which can be from high pollution costs.  External diseconomies can be restricted by prohibiting some polluting activities and taxing others How firms grow 1. internal growth  A slow process,  2. Firms slowly accumulate assets to grow. mergers and take-overs   A faster process of growth Including vertical and horizontal integration, and diversification Vertical integration   The degree to which a firm owns its upstream suppliers and its downstream buyers The concept of vertical integration can be visualized using the value chain. Vertical Integration Benefits of Vertical Integration Vertical integration potentially offers the following advantages: •Reduce transportation costs if common ownership results in closer geographic proximity. •Improve supply chain coordination. •Provide more opportunities to differentiate by means of increased control over inputs. •Capture upstream or downstream profit margins. Horizontal integration   Horizontal growth can be achieved by internal expansion or by external expansion through mergers and acquisitions of firms offering similar products and services. A firm may diversify by growing horizontally into unrelated businesses. Some examples of horizontal integration include:  The Standard Oil Company's acquisition of 40 refineries.  An automobile manufacturer's acquisition of a sport utility vehicle manufacturer.  A media company's ownership of radio, television, newspapers, books, and magazines. Benefits of Horizontal Integration     Economies of scale - achieved by selling more of the same product, for example, by geographic expansion. Economies of scope - achieved by sharing resources common to different products. Commonly referred to as "synergies." Increased market power (over suppliers and downstream channel members) Reduction in the cost of international trade by operating factories in foreign markets. Social and private costs  Private costs of production are those costs which an organization has to pay for its inputs.   They are also known as accounting costs since they appear in an organization’s accounts. Social costs do not appear in an organization’s accounts and do not affect its profitability, although they may well affect the well-being of society at large. Group assignment - Short and long run costs    What happens to average short run costs of a hotel as occupancy falls? How will the hotel respond to a long run fall in occupancy? How do hotels benefit from economies of scale? The End