Bog'liq cambridge-international-as-and-a-level-economics
Costs in the long run In the long run, the fi rm can alter
all of its inputs, using
greater quantities of any of the factors of production. It
is now operating on a larger scale. So all of the factors of
production are variable in the long run. In the very long
run, technological change can alter the way the entire
production process is organised, including the nature of the
products themselves. In a society with rapid technological
progress this will shrink the time period between the
short run and the long run. In turn this will shift the fi rm’s
product curves up and its cost curves down since fi rms are
more effi
cient as a consequence of new technologies. Th
ere
are now examples in consumer electronics where whole
processes and products have become obsolete in a matter
of months let alone years as a result of more powerful
microchips increasing the volume and speed of the fl ow of
information. One has only to see how mobile phones have
changed and will continue to change in the future. Another
example is in air transport where the new generation of
supersized jets have greatly improved fuel effi
ciency and
reduced average costs per passenger.
It is possible that a fi rm can fi nd a way of lowering its
cost structure over time. One way might be by increasing
the amount of capital used relative to labour in the
production process, with a consequent increase in factor
productivity. Car manufacturing and assembly plants are a
very good example of this.
Th
e long-run average cost (
LRAC ) curve shows the least
costly combination of producing any particular quantity.
Moving from its short-run equilibrium shown in
Figure 7.10a
,
part b of this fi gure shows a fi rm experiencing falling
LRAC s
over time. Th
is would enable it to lower the price without
sacrifi cing profi t. Products such as laptops, digital cameras,
iPhones and games players are examples where prices have
fallen through competition and changing technology.
Th
e shape of the
LRAC is derived from a series of short-
run situations. As output increases so too does the scale
of the fi rm’s operations. Th
e
LRAC curve is a curve that
just touches or is tangential to each of these short-run cost
curves. It is therefore the lowest possible average cost for
each level of output where the factors of production are all
variable. It should be pointed out, however, that the fi rm is
not necessarily producing at the minimum point on each
of its
SRAC curves.
Figure 7.11
shows the
LRAC curve. Th
is represents the
fi rm’s planning or envelope curve as it is sometimes known.
It is a fl atter U-shape than the
SRAC curves and can be
explained by