Explicit and Implicit Costs, and Accounting and Economic Profit

Similar documents
Benefits, Costs, and Maximization

Section A: Summary Content Notes

CHAPTER 5:2: Costs of Production:

Shifts in Aggregate Supply

Types of Ownership. Creating a Pro Forma. Sole Proprietorship (or Partnership) Corporation. Limited Liability Corporation (LLC)

1. The cost of an item is the sacrifice of resources made to acquire it. 2. An expense is a cost charged against revenue in an accounting period.

Cost concepts, Cost Classification and Estimation

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Which store has the lower costs: Wal-Mart or 7-Eleven? 2013 Pearson

Short-Run Costs and Output Decisions

7 Costs. Lesson. of Production. Introduction

Demand, Supply, and Efficiency

Chapter 9 Making Decisions

23 Perfect Competition

Using Enterprise Budgets to Compute Crop Breakeven Prices Michael Langemeier, Associate Director, Center for Commercial Agriculture

Understanding Supply. Chapter 5 Section Main Menu

3 CHAPTER OUTLINE CASE FAIR OSTER PEARSON. Demand, Supply, and Market Equilibrium. Input Markets and Output Markets: The Circular Flow

Practice Test for Midterm 2 Econ Fall 2009 Instructor: Soojae Moon

How the AD/AS Model Incorporates Growth, Unemployment, and Inflation

Production and Cost. This Is What You Need to Know. Explain the difference between accounting and economic costs and how they affect the determination

Chapter 2. Job Order Costing and Analysis QUESTIONS

ECONOMICS ASSIGNMENT CLASS XII MICRO ECONOMICS UNIT I INTRODUCTION. 4. Is free medicine given to patients in Govt. Hospital a scarce commodity?

ECON 260 (2,3) Practice Exam #4 Spring 2007 Dan Mallela

UNIT 8 COST CONCEPTS AND ANALYSIS I

Economics Challenge Online State Qualification Practice Test. 1. An increase in aggregate demand would tend to result from

The Costs of Production

JOB ORDER COSTING. LO 1: Cost Systems. Determine whether job order costing or process costing would be more appropriate for each industry.

AP Microeconomics Chapter 8 Outline

Principles of Economics Final Exam. Name: Student ID:

PEACHTREE COMPLETE 2009 WORKSHOP 6 THE CORNER DRESS SHOP

The Firm s Objective. A Firm s Total Revenue and Total Cost. The economic goal of the firm is to maximize profits. A Firm s Profit

Acct 2301 (Spring 2006) - Exam 1

Cost Behavior. Material Cost: Direct material: 1. seen in the final product 2. economic/visible to trace Indirect Material:

6. Refer to the Michael's Manufacturing, Inc. information above. Raw materials used for July is:

COST ACCOUNTING b.com part II Regular & Private (SUPPLEMENTARY) Solved Paper. Compiled & Solved by: Sameer Hussain

Horngren's Financial & Managerial Accounting, 4e (Nobles) Chapter 16 Introduction to Managerial Accounting. Learning Objective 16-1

Chapter 17 Job Order Costing Study Guide Solutions Fill-in-the-Blank Equations. Exercises. 1. Estimated activity base. 2. Underapplied. 3.

SUPPLY. definition: Supply means the quantity offered for sale by sellers at particular prices, during a certain period of time.

Incremental Analysis. LO 1: Analysis

Chapter 3--Product Costing: Manufacturing Processes, Cost Terminology, and Cost Flows

COST C O S T COST. Cost is not a simple concept. It is important to distinguish between four different types - fixed,, variable, average and marginal.

Chapter 6 Business Ownership and Operations

Strategic Management Concepts

Business Plan. (Not required if you have already prepared a formal business plan using another format)

Changes in Equilibrium Price and Quantity: The Four-Step Process

Variable Costing: A Tool for Management. M. En C. Eduardo Bustos Farías

Perfectly Competitive Supply. Chapter 6. Learning Objectives

WJEC (Wales) Economics A-level

Accounting for Manufacturing

CHAPTER 17 (FIN MAN); CHAPTER 2 (MAN) JOB ORDER COST SYSTEMS

HOMEWORK ECON SFU

Vendor Database Tutorial

chapter: Solution Factor Markets and the Distribution of Income

User Manual - Custom Finish Cattle Profit Projection

GLOSSARY OF TERMS ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND BUSINESS INNOVATION

Business objectives. Profit maximisation. WJEC A-level Economics

Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics Economic Statistics Directorate

7.4. Market Economy & Circular Flow

APPROACHES FOR CUTTING COSTS: A THOUGHT-STARTER

Handout. Ekonomi Manajerial [EMKU4402] Drs. Wihandaru SP, M.Si. Fak. Ekonomi / Manajemen

COST THEORY. I What costs matter? A Opportunity Costs

Things people like and desire.

Accounting for Overheads - Marginal Costing

MATERIAL HANDLING OPTIONS IN THE BEVERAGE INDUSTRY: Choosing Right and Staying Efficient

Inventory Cost Accounting Tips and Tricks. Nick Bergamo, Senior Manager Linda Pei, Senior Manager

Test Bank Horngren's Financial & Managerial Accounting The Managerial Chapters 5th Edition Miller-Nobles

CHAPTER 8: THE COSTS OF PRODUCTION

JOINT UNIVERSITIES PRELIMINARY EXAMINATIONS BOARD 2015 EXAMINATIONS BUSSINESS STUDIES - MSS J132 MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS

Chapter 7 Knowledge with Information Systems: Forecast Revenues and Expenses for the App

PLANNING FOR SUCCESS P a g e 0

Total Costs. TC = TFC + TVC TFC = Fixed Costs. TVC = Variable Costs. Constant costs paid regardless of production

Using the Percent Equation

rate is used to apply overhead costs to products. Our purpose in this section is to provide a detailed example of cost flows in an ABC system.

HOW TO BUILD A BUSINESS PLAN by Cynthia W. Massarsky

Writing a Request for Proposals for an E-learning Solution

Multiple Choice Questions

III/IV B.Tech (Mech. Engg.) Fifth sem, Regular Exam, Nov Sub: ENGINEERING ECONOMICS AND ACCOUNTANCY [14ME506/A]

LARGE IS NOT THE NEW SMALL: MOVING DOWNSTREAM TO SMALLER CLIENTS

Identify the set-up and running costs for a new clothing retailer. Revenueis the money a business collects from sales. Unit Price x Quantity Sold.

CHAPTER 9 SOLUTIONS TO PROBLEMS: SET B PROBLEM 9-1B. Expected unit sales... Unit selling price... Total sales...

Chapter 5: Merchandising Operations and the Multiple-Step Income Statement

Turgut Ozal University Department of Economics ECO 152 Spring 2014 Assist. Prof. Dr. Umut UNAL PROBLEM SET #5

Managerial Accounting and Cost Concepts

Robert Ackerman Office Hours: 2:00-3:00PM T/Th Office: PA202 (Phillips Hall Annex) Economics 101

FLSA Resource Guide. October Cascade Employers Association

The Program Ledger: Evaluating Program Performance

Outsourcing and the Role of Strategic Alliances

Firm Behavior and the Costs of Production

COST COST OBJECT. Cost centre. Profit centre. Investment centre

Exercise E21-1 page 886. (a) Factory Labor 103,000 Factory Wages Payable 90,000 Employer Payroll Taxes Payable 9,000

Funding and Finance Value: An Introduction

A few firms Imperfect Competition Oligopoly. Figure 8.1: Market structures

Factors affecting location include:

Strategy of Cluster-Based Development: KAIZEN, Microfinance, and Infrastructure

Chapter 3 Systems Design: Job-Order Costing

8 Benefits of Network Marketing & Communicating Them

CIE Economics A-level

Service, Merchandising, Manufacturing, or Something Else Company?

Association of Accounting Technicians

JOB COSTING AND OVERHEAD

Transcription:

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 1 Explicit and Implicit Costs, and Accounting and Economic Profit Alex Van der Merwe Based on Explicit and Implicit Costs, and Accounting and Economic Prot by OpenStax This work is produced by OpenStax-CNX and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 By the end of this section, you will be able to: Abstract Explain the dierence between explicit costs and implicit costs Understand the relationship between cost and revenue Private enterprise, the ownership of businesses by private individuals, is a characteristic of the South African economy. When people think of businesses, often giants like Standard Bank, Sasol, MTN and Toyota SA come to mind. But rms come in all sizes. In fact the majority of private sector rms in South Africa employ less than 10 people (Schussler: 2012) which means that collectively they employ more people than the bigger rms. The biggest single cost for most rms is that of labor.,height!,height! Version 1.1: Nov 24, 2016 6:55 am -0600 http://cnx.org/content/m48621/1.8/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 2 Source: Statistics South Africa, 2016 Each of the businesses in these sectors, regardless of size or complexity, tries to earn a profit: % else, if it doesn't fit -48pt! Profit = Total~Revenue -- Total~Cost (1) % end of conditional for this bit of math Total revenue is the income brought into the firm from selling its products. It is calculated by m % else, if it doesn't fit -48pt! Total~Revenue = Price Quantity (2) % end of conditional for this bit of math

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 3 We will see in the following chapters that revenue depends on the demand for the firm's products. We can distinguish between two types of cost: explicit and implicit. Explicit costs are out-of-poc These two definitions of cost are important for distinguishing between two conceptions of profit, note: Consider the following example. Fred currently works for a big law firm. He is considering openi Step 1. First you have to calculate the costs. You can take what you know about explicit costs a % else, if it doesn't fit -48pt!

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 4 Office~rental : ~~ R60,000 Law~clerk's~salary : +R120,000 Total~explicit~costs : ~~~R180,000 (3) % end of conditional for this bit of math Step 2. Subtracting the explicit costs from the revenue gives you the accounting profit.

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 5 % else, if it doesn't fit -48pt! Revenues : R750,000 Explicit~costs : --R180,000 Accounting~profit : R570,000 (4) % end of conditional for this bit of math

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 6 But these calculations consider only the explicit costs. To open his own practice, Fred would ha Step 3. You need to subtract both the explicit and implicit costs to determine the true economic % else, if it doesn't fit -48pt!

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 7 Economic~profit = total~revenues~--~explicit~costs~--~implicit~costs = R750,000~--~R180,000~--~R580,000 = --R10,000~per~year (5) % end of conditional for this bit of math Fred would be losing R10,000 per year. That does not mean he would not want to open his own busi

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 8 Implicit costs can include other things as well. Maybe Fred values his leisure time, and startin Now that we have an idea about the different types of costs, let's look at cost structures. A firm 1 Key Concepts and Summary Privately owned firms are motivated to earn profits. Profit is the difference between revenues a 2 Self-Check Questions Exercise 1 (Solution on p.??-idm37741456.) A firm had sales revenue of R1 million last year. It spent R600,000 on labor, R150,000 o

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 9 Exercise 2 (Solution on p.??-idm14827104.) Continuing from Exercise 1, the firm's factory sits on land owned by the firm that could 3 Review Questions Exercise 3 What are explicit and implicit costs? Exercise 4

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 10 Would an interest payment on a loan to a firm be considered an explicit or implicit cost Exercise 5 What is the difference between accounting and economic profit? 4 Critical Thinking Questions Exercise 6 Some small family owned businesses such as corner cafés or shops, sometimes exist even t

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 11 5 Problems Exercise 7 A firm is considering an investment that will earn a 6% rate of return. If it were to bo References: Schussler, M. 2012. Business owners in SA. Who, where, how big, what they do, and a few other facts. Ava Statistics South Africa. 2016. Quarterly employment statistics (QES) December 2015. http://www.statssa.gov.za/ (Accessed: 24 Apr 2016) Statistical

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 12 Solutions to Exercises in this Module Solution to Exercise (p.??-idm18450688) Accounting profit = total revenues minus explicit costs =R1,000,000 -- (R600,000 + R150,000 Solution to Exercise (p.??-idp12466368) Economic profit = accounting profit minus implicit cost = R50,000 -- R30,000 = R20,000. Glossary Definition 1: accounting profit total revenues minus explicit costs, including depreciation Definition 2: economic profit total revenues minus total costs (explicit plus implicit costs)

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 13 Definition 3: explicit costs out-of-pocket costs for a firm, for example, payments for wages and salaries, rent, or materials firm Definition 4: an organization that combines inputs of labor, capital, land, and raw or finished component material Definition 5: implicit costs opportunity cost of resources already owned by the firm and used in business, for example, expanding Definition 6: private enterprise the ownership of businesses by private individuals production Definition 7: the process of combining inputs to produce outputs, ideally of a value greater than the value of the

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 14 revenue Definition 8: income from selling a firm's product; defined as price times quantity sold

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 15

OpenStax-CNX module: m63513 16