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Entry, Exit, and Supply Curves: Increasing Costs

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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    - Now that we understand a firm's cost
    curves, and its entry and exit decisions,
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    we're able to show how supply curves are
    actually derived from these more
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    fundamental considerations.
    Let's take a closer look.
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    - The supply curve
    is built upon firm
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    entry and exit decisions and the
    effect of these decisions on industry
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    costs. And the key question is this, as
    industry output increases, what happens to
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    costs? There are three possibilities.
    First, an increase in cost industry. That
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    is industry costs increase with greater
    output. Second, constant cost industry.
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    Industry costs are flat, they don't change
    with greater or lesser output. And
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    finally a decreasing cost industry,
    industry cost falls with greater output.
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    As we'll see, the first and second are
    quite common, the third is quite uncommon,
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    but is nevertheless important and
    interesting in order to understand
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    economic geography, which we'll come to a
    bit later. Let's show how the industry
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    supply curve is derived from the entry and
    exit and cost curves of individual firms.
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    We can do this for an increase in cost
    industry very easily with just a two firm
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    example. Suppose that Firm 1 is a
    producer of oil, where its oil is very
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    close to the surface, so it has a quite low
    average cost curve. It's pretty cheap for
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    this firm to produce oil. On the other
    hand, Firm 2 has a much higher average
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    cost curve because for Firm 2 it's
    located in a part of the world where it
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    has to drill much deeper in order to get
    the oil. Now, given these figures what's
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    the industry supply curve of oil if the
    price of oil is below $17? Well, if the
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    price of oil is below $17, neither of
    these firms can make a profit.
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    That's below the minimum point of the
    average cost curve for both of these
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    firms. So neither of these firms is going
    to want to be in the industry. So if the
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    price of oil is below $17, the industry
    supply is just going to be zero, right
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    here, zero. Now what happens at $17? Well,
    at $17, Firm 1 just breaks even. So
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    we'll say Firm 1 will just enter the
    industry. So at $17, the industry output
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    is the same as the output of Firm 1,
    namely four units. Notice that at $17,
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    Firm 2 doesn't enter the industry
    because the price is still too low. Firm
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    2 is not going to make a profit, will
    take a loss at that price. Indeed as the
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    price of oil increases, the output from
    Firm 2 will increase as it moves along
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    its marginal cost curve. That will
    continue to happen so industry output will
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    increase along with the output of Firm 1
    until we reach a price of $29. At the
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    price of $29, Firm 2 just breaks even
    and it enters the industry. So at $29,
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    total industry output is 6 units from
    Firm 1 and five units from Firm 2 for
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    a total of 11 units from, uh, the industry. As
    the price goes above $29 both Firm 1
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    and Firm 2 expand along their marginal
    cost curves so the industry output is then
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    the sum of the output from both firms. So
    what we see here is that the industry
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    supply curve is upward sloping because the
    cost curves of these firms are different.
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    Because in order to attract more firms
    into this industry, the only way we can do
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    that is by attracting higher cost firms.
    So the industry supply curve is upward
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    sloping. Any industry where it's difficult
    to exactly duplicate the productive inputs
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    is going to be an increase in cost
    industry. I've already mentioned oil, but
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    copper, gold, silver, all the mining
    industries, are very similar. We can't just
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    duplicate another gold mine. If we want
    another gold mine we're going to have to
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    dig deeper, we're going to have to look
    elsewhere, it's going to be more expensive
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    to produce it than it is now. Coffee is
    another example, because there's really
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    only a limited number of places in the
    world where we could produce great coffee.
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    If we want coffee from other places than
    Brazil or Guatemala, it's going to be
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    lower quality. We're going to have to go
    down further on the mountain. It's going
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    to require more inputs. Nuclear engineers -
    very hard to expand the supply of nuclear
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    engineers. There's a limited number of
    people who can be a nuclear engineer. If
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    we want more nuclear engineers, we're
    really going to have to pull them from
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    other industries where they have very high
    opportunity cost. So it's hard to expand
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    the supply of nuclear engineers without
    pushing up the wages of nuclear engineers.
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    That's an increasing cost industry.
    Moreover, any industry that buys a large
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    fraction of the output of an increasing
    cost industry will also be an increasing
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    cost industry. So pretty obviously
    gasoline is an increasing cost industry
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    because if we want more gasoline that
    requires more oil, and oil is an increasing
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    cost industry. Electricity will primarily
    be an increasing cost industry to the
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    extent that we generate our electricity
    from coal. So if we want a lot more
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    electricity we're going to require more
    coal and that's going to push the price of
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    coal up, which is going to push
    the cost of producing electricity up.
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    - So what we just showed is that for an
    increasing cost industry, you can derive a
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    upward sloped supply curve.
    We're now going to do a constant cost
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    industry for which we'll show you actually
    get a flat supply curve, and then a
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    decreasing cost industry, which as you
    might expect, will give you now a
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    downward-sloped supply curve. We'll
    do these in separate lectures. Thanks.
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    - [Announcer] If you want to test yourself,
    click, "Practice Questions," or if you're
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    ready to move on,
    just click, "Next Video."
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    ♪ [music] ♪
Title:
Entry, Exit, and Supply Curves: Increasing Costs
Description:

We understand cost curves and entry and entry/exit decisions. Now we are going to explore how each firm’s decisions influence the supply curve. Here’s the key question: As industry output increases, what happens to costs? We look at three options: an increasing cost industry, a constant cost industry, and a decreasing cost industry.
First up, we look at oil as an example of an increasing cost industry. One oil company drills for oil that is close to the surface, and the second company drills for oil deep underground. Other examples of increasing cost industries include copper, gold, and silver, coffee, and even the profession of nuclear engineers.
Microeconomics Course: http://mruniversity.com/courses/principles-economics-microeconomics

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Micro
Duration:
06:33

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