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Course Course Number University or College Professor’s Name Student Name: ____________________________ Section: __________________________________ CostMin Exercise #4 Answers ( points) Please limit your answers to the spaces provided. If necessary, write on the back of the page. Do not attach printout or additional pages. All questions pertain to the CostMin module in the SimEcon® software package. Make sure that you have read the “CostMin Manual” and “SimEcon® Operation Instructions”. These materials may be found at the Class Web site prior to beginning the exercise. For many of the exercise’s questions, it will be necessary to refer to those instructions. For many of the exercise’s questions, it will be necessary to refer to your text. Open the CostMin module. You will be asked how many inputs you want to control. Select the button for three inputs. You will then be asked about technology usage. Select “Set Technology”. You will then be asked to set the production function parameters. Enter the following amounts: (1) a = 0.10; (2) b = 0.50; (3) c = 0.40; and (4) d = 0.10. Click “Continue”. At this point, you will be asked to set input levels. Enter the following amounts: 900 units of labor, 200 units of materials and 5 units of capital. Click “Results”. You will arrive at the table entitled, “”Teddy Bear Production Results”. Fill in the table below: Output Produced: Total Cost: Average Cost: 32,672.44 units $ 8,080.00___ __ $ 0.25 per unit_ MCL: __0.40__ MRTSL,M: __0.32__ P-RatioL,M: __2.00__ MCM: MRTSL,K: P-RatioL,K: __0.06__ __0.05 _ __0.50__ MCK: __0.04__ MRTSK,M __6.92__ P-RatioK,M: __4.00__ Was this combination the best choice, considering the technology being used? ____No____ (Yes, No). Why or why not? The producer can increase his/her output and/or lower his/her costs by using less labor and more capital and materials. Since the marginal cost of increasing output with capital and materials is significantly less than the marginal cost of increasing output with labor, the producer could approach a more optimal combination by using relatively ___less____ (more, less, the same amount of) labor, and relatively ___more___ (more, less, the same amount of) capital and materials. At the optimal point, the respective marginal rates of technical substitution (MRTSs) should be equal to (greater than, less than, equal to) their respective price ratios. At the optimal point, the marginal costs of increasing output with each of the three inputs should be equal . Click “See Graph” and draw the resulting graph showing the isoquants and the isocost line for Materials versus Labor. Do this on the next page. Course CostMin Exercise #4 Answers Page 2 Materials 200 900 Labor On the graph above, does the combination of labor and materials chosen for the firm lead to a tangency between an isocost line and an isoquant? ____No____ (Yes, No). What does this graph indicate the firm should do to reduce it cost per unit? The graph indicates that the firm should produce using less labor and more materials and that this would raise production (for a given cost) or reduce cost (for a given output). Does this agree with the recommendation obtained from the numerical table, using the MRTS and the price ratio, or the marginal cost information? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Click on “Capital Graph” and draw the graph that you see. Capital 5 900 Labor Course CostMin Exercise #4 Answers Page 3 On the graph above, does the combination of labor and capital chosen for the firm lead to a tangency between an isocost line and an isoquant? ____No____ (Yes, No). What does this graph indicate the firm should do to reduce it cost per unit? The graph indicates that the firm should produce using less labor and more capital and that this would raise production (for a given cost) or reduce cost (for a given output). Does this agree with the recommendation obtained from the numerical table, using the MRTS and the price ratio, or the marginal cost information? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Given the results generated above, if you are trying to keep total cost constant while reducing the cost per unit, how would you tell how much to decrease (increase, decrease) the use of labor and how much to increase (increase, decrease) the use of capital and materials? (Note that the price of labor is $8 per unit (hour) and the price of materials is $4 per unit and the price of capital is $16 per unit.) Total cost is the price of capital times the amount of capital used, plus the price of labor times the amount of labor used, plus the price of materials times the amount of materials used. Reducing the use of labor reduces cost by $8 per unit (hour), so if the firm used 10 hours less labor it could increase the use of materials by spending the $80 not being used for labor. Since the price of materials is $4 per unit, that means it could acquire another 20 units of materials while keeping total cost constant. Similarly, at a price of capital of $16, the use of 10 fewer hours of labor would allow acquiring 5 more units of capital with no increase in total cost. Click “Back” two times and then click “Reset”. Enter the following values: 880 units of labor, 220 units of materials and 10 units of capital. Where did these values come from? The amount of capital increased by 5 units, which costs just as much as 10 units less labor. The amount of materials increased by 20 units, which also costs as much as 10 units less labor. Using 20 units less labor and the given increases in the other two inputs should keep total cost the same. Click “Results”. You will arrive at the table entitled, “Teddy Bear Production Results”. Fill in the table below: Output Produced: Total Cost: Average Cost: 35,078.35 units $ 8,080.00____ _ $ 0.23 per unit_ MCL: __0.37 _ MRTS L,M: __0.36__ P-RatioL,M: __2.00__ MCM: MRTSL,K: P-RatioL,K: __0.07__ __0.09 _ __0.50_ MCK: __0.07__ MRTSK,M: __4.04__ P-RatioK,M: __4.00__ Are total costs the same as what they were in the previous example? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Has output increased? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Have these changes moved the firm closer to the optimum? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). How can you justify this last answer in terms of the MRTS and the price ratio for each input? (Answer on next page.) Course CostMin Exercise #4 Answers Page 4 Comparing the first example to this example, for all three inputs the MRTS is now closer to the respective price ratio. Thus, this proves that the current example is closer to the optimum. How can you get even closer to the optimal point? In this example, the marginal cost of labor is greater than the marginal costs of capital or materials. Thus, the producer could reduce average costs by using less labor and more materials and capital. Suppose that the firm is trying to keep total cost constant while reducing the cost per unit. Click “Back” and then click “Reset”. Enter the following values: 820 units of labor, 280 units of materials and 25 units of capital. Where did these values come from? (Note that the price of labor is $8 per unit (hour) and the price of materials is $4 per unit and the price of capital is $16 per unit.) The amount of capital increased by 15 units, which costs just as much as 30 units less labor. The amount of materials increased by 60 units, which also costs as much as 30 units less labor. Using 60 units less labor and the given increases in the other two inputs should keep total cost the same. Click “Results”. You will arrive at the table entitled, “Teddy Bear Production Results”. Fill in the table below: Output Produced: Total Cost: Average Cost: 39,594.61 units $ 8,080.00____ _ $ 0.20 per unit_ MCL: _0.31__ MRTSL,M: __0.48__ P-RatioL,M: __2.00__ MCM: MRTSL,K: P-RatioL,K: __0.07__ __0.22 _ __0.50__ MCK: MRTSK,M: P-RatioK,M: __0.13__ __2.20__ __4.00__ Are total costs the same as what they were in the previous example? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Has output increased? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Has the cost per unit gone down? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Have these changes moved the firm closer to the optimum? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Look at the MRTS in this example and compare each MRTS with its respective price ratio. Also look at the marginal costs in this example. How are these results different from the previous cases? While output has gone up again for the same total cost, now the MRTS between capital and materials is less than its price ratio, and the marginal cost of increasing output using capital is now more than the marginal cost of raising output using materials. What conclusion about what the firm should do can you draw from these differences? The firm would be better off continuing to cut the use of labor, but replace the labor with materials without increasing the use of capital any more. You can continue to re-enter new combinations of labor, capital and materials in proportional amounts so that the total cost does not change. As an example, click “Back” and then click “Reset”. Enter the following amounts: 39 units of capital, 506 units of labor and 852 units of materials. Click “Results”. You will arrive at the table entitled, “Teddy Bear Production Results”. Fill in the table on the next page. Note that the total cost should still be $8,080.00. Course CostMin Exercise #4Answers Page 5 Output Produced: Average Cost: 49,988.91 units $ 0.16 per unit_ MCL: __0.16__ MRTSL,M: __2.00__ P-RatioL,M: __2.00__ MCM: MRTSL,K: P-RatioL,K: __0.16__ __0.50 _ __0.50__ MCK: _ 0.16_ _ MRTSK,M: __4.01__ P-RatioK,M: __4.00__ Compare each MRTS with its respective price ratio. What is different about these results? In this example, all of the MRTSs are equal to or very close to the respective price ratios. Moreover, what is different about these results with respect to the marginal costs of each factor? In this example, the marginal costs are all equal to each other. Click “See Graph” and draw the resulting graph showing the isoquants and the isocost line for Materials versus Labor. Materials 856 508 Labor Click on “Capital Graph” and draw the graph that you see. Capital 39 Labor 508 Course CostMin Exercise #4 Answers Page 6 On the graph above, does the combination of labor and capital chosen for the firm lead to a tangency between an isocost line and an isoquant? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Does this indicate an optimal result? ___Yes___ (Yes, No). Is this conclusion consistent with the numerical results for this example? ___Yes___ (Yes, No).