Ass#6 Ans#1 2 5
Ass#6 Ans#1 2 5
Olson
Introduction to Economics Fall 2014
Answers to Homework Problem Set #3
The assignment is from Mankiw, chapter 12, Problems & Applications, pp, 252-253 -- #s4, 9, & 10.
4. Nimbus, Inc. makes brooms and then sells them door-to-door. Here [below in the table] is the
relationship between the number of workers and Nimbus’ output in a given day:
Here is the completed table – showing the Marginal Product, Total Cost, Average Total Cost, and
Marginal Cost:
Marginal Average Marginal
Workers Output Product Total Cost Total Cost Cost
0 0 --- $200 --- ---
1 20 20 300 $15.00 $5.00
2 50 30 400 8.00 3.33
3 90 40 500 5.56 2.50
4 120 30 600 5.00 3.33
5 140 20 700 5.00 5.00
6 150 10 800 5.33 10.00
7 155 5 900 5.81 20.00
a. Fill in the column of marginal products. What pattern do you see? How might you explain it?
See the table for marginal product. Marginal product rises at first, then declines because of
diminishing marginal product.
b. A worker costs $100 per day, and the firm has fixed costs of $200. Use this information to fill in the
column for total costs.
See the table for total cost. It equals $200 (fixed costs) plus $100 times the number of workers.
c. Fill in the column for average total cost. (Recall that ATC = TC/Q.) What pattern do you see?
See the table for average total cost. Average total cost is U-shaped. When quantity is low,
average total cost declines as quantity rises; when quantity is high, average total cost rises as
quantity rises.
d. Now fill in the column for marginal cost. (Recall that MC=ΔTC/ΔQ.) What pattern do you see?
See the table for marginal cost. Marginal cost is also U-shaped, but rises steeply as output
increases. This is due to diminishing marginal product.
e. Compare the column for marginal product and the column for marginal cost. Explain the relationship.
When marginal product is rising, marginal cost is falling; and when marginal product is
falling, marginal cost is rising. This relationship exists because the MC is mathematically equal
to the wage times the inverse of the marginal product.
f. Compare the column for average total cost and the column for marginal cost. Explain the relationship.
When marginal cost is less than average total cost, average total cost is falling; the cost of
the last unit produced lowers the average. When marginal cost is greater than average total
cost, average total cost is rising; the cost of the last unit produced raises the average.
9. Jane’s Juice Bar has the following cost schedules [in the table below, showing for the quantities, the
variable and total costs]:
a. Calculate average variable cost, average total cost, and marginal cost for each quantity.
The table below shows average variable cost (AVC), average total cost (ATC), and marginal cost
(MC) for each quantity.
b. Graph all three curves. What is the relationship between the marginal-cost curve and the average-total-
cost curve? Between the marginal-cost curve and the average-variable-cost curve? Explain.
The marginal-cost curve is below the average-total-cost curve when output is less than four and
average total cost is declining. The marginal-cost curve is above the average-total-cost curve
when output is above four and average total cost is rising.
Quantity = 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Firm A - TC $60 $70 $80 $90 $100 $110 $120
AC 60.00 35.00 26.67 22.50 20.00 18.33 17.14
Firm B - TC $11 $24 $39 $56 $75 $96 $119
AC 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Firm C - TC $21 $34 $49 $66 $85 $106 $129
AC 21.00 17.00 16.33 16.50 17.00 17.67 18.43
Firm A has economies of scale because average total cost declines as output increases.
Firm B has diseconomies of scale because average total cost rises as output rises.
Firm C has economies of scale from one to three units of output and diseconomies of scale
for levels of output beyond three units.