Microeconomics,, 16th Canadian Edition

(Sean Pound) #1

8.1 The Long Run: No Fixed Factors LO


1, 2, 3


There are no fixed factors in the long run. Profit-maximizing firms
choose from the available alternatives the least-cost method of
producing any specific output.
Profit-maximizing firms must minimize the cost of producing any
given level of output. The condition for cost minimization is

The principle of substitution states that, in response to changes in
factor prices, profit-maximizing firms will substitute toward the
cheaper factors and substitute away from the more expensive factors.
A long-run average cost curve represents the boundary between
attainable and unattainable costs for the given technology and given
factor prices.
The shape of the LRAC curve depends on the relationship of inputs to
outputs as the whole scale of a firm’s operations changes. Increasing,
constant, and decreasing returns lead, respectively, to decreasing,
constant, and increasing long-run average costs.
The LRAC and SRATC curves are related. Each SRATC curve
represents a specific plant size and is tangent to the LRAC curve at the
level of output for which that plant size is optimal.

MMPPK =
L

pK
pL
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