Chapter 7: Problem 20
Are there fixed costs in the long-run? Explain briefly.
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Chapter 7: Problem 20
Are there fixed costs in the long-run? Explain briefly.
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A small company that shovels sidewalks and driveways has 100 homes signed up for its services this winter. It can use various combinations of capital and labor: intensive labor with hand shovels, less labor with snow blowers, and still less labor with a pickup truck that has a snowplow on front. To summarize, the method choices are: Method 1: 50 units of labor, 10 units of capital Method 2: 20 units of labor, 40 units of capital Method 3: 10 units of labor, 70 units of capital If hiring labor for the winter costs \(\$ 100\) /unit and a unit of capital costs \(\$ 400,\) what is the best production method? What method should the company use if the cost of labor rises to \(\$ 200 /\) unit?
What is the difference between economies of scale, constant returns to scale, and diseconomies of scale?
What are explicit and implicit costs?
Why will firms in most markets be located at or close to the bottom of the long-run average cost curve?
Small "Mom and Pop firms," like inner city grocery stores, sometimes exist even though they do not earn economic profits. How can you explain this?
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