Biaya Produksi (Bagian 4) : Kurva Biaya Jangka Panjang vs Jangka Pendek
Summary
TLDRIn this lecture, Teuku Warsito, a lecturer at PKN STAN, explains the differences between short-run and long-run cost curves in production theory. He discusses how capital remains fixed in the short run but can vary in the long run, impacting cost structures. The lecture covers expansion paths, optimal input combinations, and differences in cost efficiency between short and long-run production. It also explores economies and diseconomies of scale, where the firm's cost behavior changes with varying output levels, emphasizing the importance of flexibility in capital use for long-term efficiency.
Takeaways
- π The focus of the discussion is comparing long-run and short-run cost curves in production.
- π In the short run, capital is fixed, while in the long run, both capital and labor are variable and can change.
- π The expansion path differs between the short run and long run due to the flexibility in changing capital and labor.
- π In the long run, the expansion path is a straight line from the origin, while in the short run, it's curved due to capital constraints.
- π§ Short-run constraints cause the company to adjust labor more aggressively when output increases, unlike in the long run where both labor and capital are adjusted proportionally.
- π‘ Companies have optimal capacities for producing goods, and smaller firms can be more efficient when output is low since capital is used optimally without excess.
- π Long-run average total cost (ATC) curves are generally lower than short-run ATC curves due to the flexibility in adjusting capital in the long run.
- π’ Companies of different sizes (small, medium, large) have varying short-run ATC curves, but in the long run, firms can choose the most efficient curve based on output.
- π° Economies of scale occur when ATC decreases as output increases, while diseconomies of scale happen when ATC rises with higher output, often due to management or coordination issues.
- π In the short run, when capital is fixed, costs increase more significantly as output grows, compared to the long run where adjustments in capital make production more efficient.
Q & A
What is the main difference between short-run and long-run cost curves?
-The main difference is that in the short run, capital (K) is fixed and cannot change, while in the long run, both capital (K) and labor (L) are variable, allowing more flexibility in cost adjustments.
Why does the short-run expansion path curve bend at certain points?
-The short-run expansion path bends because capital is fixed, so to increase production, the firm must increase labor, causing inefficiencies once a certain level of output is reached. This results in a horizontal stretch, reflecting diminishing returns to labor.
How does the long-run expansion path differ in shape compared to the short-run?
-The long-run expansion path is a straight line originating from the origin (0,0), indicating that both capital and labor can be adjusted optimally to maintain efficiency, unlike the bending short-run curve where capital is fixed.
What happens to the optimal input combination when production increases in the long run?
-In the long run, as production increases, the optimal input combination adjusts by increasing both capital (K) and labor (L) proportionally, ensuring efficiency at higher output levels.
Why is long-run average total cost (ATC) lower than short-run ATC?
-Long-run ATC is lower because firms can adjust all inputs, including capital, allowing them to operate at an optimal scale and avoid inefficiencies present in the short run due to fixed inputs.
What is meant by 'economies of scale' in the context of long-run costs?
-Economies of scale occur when the firm's average cost decreases as output increases, due to factors like input specialization, bulk purchasing discounts, and efficient management.
What are constant returns to scale, and when do they occur?
-Constant returns to scale occur when the average cost remains unchanged as output increases. This happens when the firm is able to increase input proportionally to output without gaining or losing efficiency.
What causes diseconomies of scale?
-Diseconomies of scale arise when increasing output leads to higher average costs. This can happen due to factors like management complexity, inefficiencies in large-scale operations, and limits to input specialization.
What is cost-output elasticity, and how is it calculated?
-Cost-output elasticity is the ratio of the percentage change in total cost to the percentage change in output. It helps measure how responsive costs are to changes in production levels.
When do diseconomies of scale become apparent on a long-run cost curve?
-Diseconomies of scale become evident when the long-run ATC curve starts to rise, indicating that increasing output leads to higher per-unit costs due to inefficiencies in managing larger operations.
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