ECN E102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 29: Sunk Costs, Marginal Cost

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9 Dec 2020
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Sunk cost: a cost that has already been committed and cannot be removed. Analysis of the firm"s shutdown decision is an example of the irrelevance of sunk. You can ignore them when making decisions costs. We assume that the firm cannot recover its fixed costs by temporarily stopping production. Regardless of the quantity of output supplied (even if it is zero), the firm still has to pay the fixed costs. As a result, the firm"s fixed costs are sunk in the short run, and the firm can safely ignore these costs when deciding how much to produce. The firm"s long-run decisions to exit or enter a market. If a firm exits, it again will lose all revenue from the sale of its product, but now it. A firm exits the market if the revenue it would get from producing is less than its saves on both fixed and variable costs of production total costs.

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