Revenue, Profits, and Price: Crash Course Economics #24 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Adriene: Welcome to Crash Course Economics, I’m Adriene Hill
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Jacob: and I’m Jacob Clifford, and I have a confession. Economists’ perfect little
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models don’t exactly reflect real life. Which is disappointing.
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Adriene: Don’t worry. You’re not wasting your time. Microeconomics explains ideas and concepts in
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pretty broad terms, and leaves the business specifics to other courses like accounting,
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management, and marketing. Understanding economics can help entrepreneurs become better
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decision makers. Think of it like a liberal arts education — it's not where you go to
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learn any specific job — but it can help you see the big picture.
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[Theme Music]
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Jacob: Let’s say a lawyer stops practicing law and decides to open up a pizza parlor.
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Let’s say his total revenue from selling pizza is $50,000 and he has to pay $20,000
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to cover stuff like the ingredients, the oven, rent, and wages. Now, an accountant would
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calculate his profit, the revenue minus the costs, as $30,000. Not bad.
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But an economist recognizes that there‘s a cost missing: the opportunity cost. Our
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pizza entrepreneur loses the income he would have earned by being a lawyer, let’s say
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$100,000. If you factor that in, he is actually losing $70,000.
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But he's his own boss. He might be happier running a pizza shop even though he is making
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less money. Well, maybe, but the point is, you have to factor in these implicit benefits
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and costs when you make decisions.
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So there's actually two types of profit. Accounting profit, which is revenue minus just explicit
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costs, those traditional out-of-pocket costs you think of when you run a business. And
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there’s Economic profit which is revenue minus explicit and implicit costs — which
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is those indirect opportunity costs.
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Adriene: In this example, putting a dollar price on opportunity cost is pretty easy.
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It’s just the income he’s not earning as a lawyer. Maybe the idea of putting a price
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on intangible implicit things seems a little strange, but you do it all the time. When
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you’re deciding whether or not to get a job you calculate the explicit costs — like
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how much it costs to get to work every day, but also the implicit costs — the value
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of the things you have to give up.
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Maybe you’re giving up the money you could earn doing some other job, time with family
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and friends, or the opportunity to binge watch Gilmore Girls. How much that actually costs depends
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on the individual, but if the wage offered is greater than the cost of all those things, you take the job.
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Businesses use this same logic. They calculate their potential revenue and their costs of
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production, including implicit costs, to make informed decisions. This means that companies
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in competitive markets don’t make very much profit.
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In fact, economists argue that they make no economic profit. To be clear, companies need to make accounting
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profit to stay in business, so they do make a profit, just not above and beyond their opportunity costs.
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Here’s why: If you're the first one to start selling glowsticks at a rave, you might make
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some economic profit. You would cover the cost of glow sticks and possibly all of your
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opportunity costs, the money you could be earning doing something else.
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But if you’re making a ton of extra money on top of that, it's likely that glowstick
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competitors will jump in the market. Competition will lower the price and reduce your sales.
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New vendors will continue to enter until all that extra profit disappears, just like the
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beautiful light of a glow stick fading away on Sunday morning. Businesses that stay in
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the market make just as much as they would doing something else.
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In other words, they have zero economic profit — that’s what economists call normal profit.
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And it’s the minimum level of economic profit a company needs to stay in business. But remember,
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this is only in very competitive markets that have low barriers for entry. If it's hard
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for other companies to enter a market than a business can earn economic profit.
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Jacob: So now, let’s look at the cost of production. The actual cost of producing things.
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Economists point out that there's two types of costs: there's variable costs and fixed
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costs. Variable costs change with the amount produced. So, a variable cost for a pizza
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restaurant is the costs of ingredients, like wheat and cheese, and the wages paid to workers.
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The more pizza you make, the more of those resources you need, and the higher those costs.
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But, fixed costs, as you might imagine are fixed. The cost of an oven or rent don’t
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change, even if you produce more pizza. Now, together, fixed costs and variable costs make
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up the total cost for a specific number of pizzas.
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Now, Average cost, or the cost per unit, is the total cost divided by the number of output.
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The average cost of producing most things initially falls as more is produced.
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So if the owner of the pizza shop spends $10,000 on a brand new oven, the average cost of that
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very first pizza produced is gonna be about $10,000. The average cost of producing two
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pizzas would be around $5,000. And once you get to 10 pizzas, it’s like $1,000 — that’s an expensive pizza.
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The more units he makes, the lower the average cost per pizza, because fixed costs can be
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spread over a large number of units. Now obviously the owner wouldn't have bought that oven if
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he expected only to make 10 pizzas.
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Buying expensive equipment only makes sense if you plan on making a lot. That’s one
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reason why large companies often have a cost advantage over small companies.
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Adriene: So, the cost to produce only one car would be really, really high. Like, millions
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of dollars. But the average price of a new car in the US is over $33,000. To keep their
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average cost down, car manufactures make hundreds of cars per day in huge, expensive factories.
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Their total total costs are astronomical, but the average cost per car is relatively low.
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Unless you want an Aston Martin or something.
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This is called economies of scale. Companies that produce more can utilize mass production
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techniques and spread out their fixed costs over a lot of units. Economies of scale work
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so well, some companies get big enough to dominate their industry and limit competition
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We’ll get to that. For now let’s go back to the pizza example. Economies of scale means
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that a larger pizza restaurant may have a slight cost advantage compared to a smaller
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restaurant because they can afford things like ovens with conveyor belts. To get the
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average cost to fall even further, a restaurant could automate the entire process and have
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robots produce 1000 pizzas per hour, but that doesn’t make sense if no one wants to buy
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all those pizzas. Although it’s great to keep costs down, the goal of a business is
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not to have the lowest average cost. The goal is to make the right number of pizzas that maximize profit.
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To produce the right amount, a business should follow the profit maximizing rule:
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continue to produce as long as the marginal revenue of the last unit produced is greater or equal
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to the marginal cost. This is often shortened down to “produce where MR equals MC.”
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Let’s break it down. Marginal revenue is the additional revenue earned from selling another unit.
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So if a pizza company can sell every pizza for $10 then their marginal revenue for each is $10.
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Marginal cost is the additional cost of producing another unit.
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It is the change in total cost from producing one more pizza.
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So if the marginal cost of another pizza is $5 and you can sell it for $10 then you should
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definitely produce that pizza. You would make a $5 profit off it. If the marginal cost of
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next pizza is $9 then you should produce that pizza too.
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But, if the marginal cost of the next pizza is $12, you shouldn’t make it. The additional
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cost is greater than the additional revenue. Notice in this example the marginal cost is
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increasing. That’s true for the production of almost everything. The more you make, each
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additional unit is eventually going to cost more. Let’s learn why in the Thought Bubble
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Jacob: Businesses have all kinds of variable costs, but let’s imagine a pizza shop where
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the only variable cost is labor. And while we’re using the power of imagination, let’s
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say that they’re making rainbow flavored pizza. Anyway, when one worker is hired,
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that worker does absolutely everything himself.
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He purees the rainbows, assembles the pizza, puts it in the oven, and delivers it.
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But, when a company hires a second worker, they can start to specialize. One worker prepares
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the ingredients while the other makes the pizza and puts it in the oven. Now, this specialization
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decreases the the marginal cost of each pizza. If one worker can make 5 pizzas in an hour,
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but two workers can produce 20 pizzas then the additional cost of each of those pizzas will be lower.
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But the benefits of specialization are limited. As the company continues to hire more and
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more workers, the total amount of pizzas they produce each hour is going to increase at a slower rate
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They’ve run up against the law of diminishing marginal returns. As you add variable resources,
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like workers, to a set number of fixed resources, like ovens, the additional output generated
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from each additional worker will eventually decrease. There are just too many cooks in the kitchen.
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Now, eventually, they’ll get to a point where hiring another worker only adds one
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more pizza to their hourly total. Now, the marginal cost of that last pizza is huge.
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And, it's likely to be higher than the additional revenue the company is gonna get from selling
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that pizza. So to maximize profit, a company should make sure they produce the right number
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of pizzas. Where the marginal cost of the last unit produced is going to be up to,
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but not greater than, the marginal revenue.
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Adriene: Thanks Thought Bubble. The Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns applies to all
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sorts of tasks. For farmers, there’s likely to be a large additional yield from fertilizing
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a field for the first time, but each time they fertilize the additional gains diminish.
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At some point, too much fertilizer can actually cause the total yield to fall. This also applies to studying.
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The returns from your first hour of studying are high. Instead of failing your final exam, you may get a C.
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Another hour of studying may get you a B and another hour may get you up to a B+. But every
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hour you get lower and lower returns. And, again at some point — maybe the twelfth hour of studying
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— your grade would actually go down since you stayed up all night and fell asleep during the test.
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Understanding this law helps people balance costs and benefits, but there's one more cost
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we need to cover: sunk costs. A sunk cost is a cost that's already been paid and can't be recovered.
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Economists stress that sunk costs shouldn't be included when making future decisions.
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Assume a business spends 2 million dollars developing a new product, and then no one
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wants that product. They have to come up with something else. The money spent on developing
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the first product is a sunk cost and should be ignored moving forward. This type of rational
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decision making seems like common sense, but behavioral economists point out that people
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make irrational decisions all the time.
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Think about dating. Imagine a you’ve been with someone for a couple years. If your relationship
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starts going sour, you might try to ignore the red flags. Who wants to give up on a relationship
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that you’ve invested so much time in? Economics tells us to think about sunk costs and focus
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instead on the benefits and costs in the future. Get outta there!
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Jacob: So there you have it. Everything you need to know to run your own business.
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Except, not really. Economics explains business decision making in broad terms.
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Adriene: If you really want to learn all the details, become an entrepreneur and start a business.
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And if you ever get interviewed by Fortune magazine or The Wall Street Journal,
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make sure to tell them that it all started here, with Crash Course Economics.
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Thanks for watching, we’ll see you next week.
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Jacob: Crash Course Economics was made with the help of all these nice people. You can
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help with our costs by subscribing to Crash Course at Patreon, where your support will
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help keep Crash Course free, for everyone, forever. And you get great rewards.
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Thanks for watching and DFTBA!
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Adriene: Let's break it down. Marginal revenue is the additional revenue earned from --
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[crashing noise] [laughter] Are you OK?