MGEA01H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Average Variable Cost, Average Cost, Diminishing Returns

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MGEA01H3 Full Course Notes
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MGEA01H3 Full Course Notes
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Mga01h3 f: chapter 11 - behind the supply curve: inputs and costs. Textbook: microeconomics, second canadian edition, by krugman, wells, au and parkinson. The importance of the firm"s production function, the relationship between quantity of inputs and quantity of output. Why production is often subject to diminishing returns to inputs. The various types of costs a firm faces and how they generate the firm"s marginal and average cost curves. Why a firm"s costs may differ in the short run versus the long run. How the firm"s technology of production can generate increasing returns to scale. A production function: is the relationship between the quantity of inputs a firm uses and the quantity of outputs that a firm produces. How much output is produced depends on the inputs used. Inputs: raw materials, labor, capital (factory, machines, tools). A fixed input: is an input whose quantity is fixed for a particular period of time and cannot be varied.

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