Economics HL
Economics HL
4
Chapters
117
Notes
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
IB Resources
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 2 - Microeconomics

Unraveling Economic Profits From Basics To Market Structures

Word Count Emoji
684 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Focusing on firms & profits

Economic Profits 

  • Definition: Profits = Total Revenues (TR) - Total Economic Costs (TC)
  • Real-World Example: Think of baking and selling cookies; you subtract the cost of ingredients and baking tools from the total money earned from selling cookies to get profits!.
  • Revenues
  • Total Revenues (TR): Money collected from selling goods, TR = Price (P) * Quantity (Q) sold.
  • Average Revenue (AR): Revenue per unit sold, AR = P.
  • Fun Fact: The demand curve a firm faces is also its AR curve. If you imagine the line of people waiting to buy the latest video game, that's your demand curve!

Economic costs the tricky part!

Explicit and Implicit Costs

  • Explicit Costs: Out-of-pocket costs, like paying for raw materials.
  • Implicit Costs: Value of firm-owned resources like buildings.
  • Real-World Example: Think of a lemonade stand! Explicit costs include lemons and sugar, while implicit costs could include the table you already owned.

 Normal Profit

  • Part of the economic cost; it's what an entrepreneur could earn elsewhere with the same risk.
  • Example: If you can earn $10 playing music but choose to run a business, you'd expect at least $10 from your business. It's like picking one game to play over another; you'd expect at least as much fun!

Average costs and profit maximization

 Average Costs (AC)

  • AC = Total Costs (TC) / Quantity (Q). It's like slicing a cake and figuring out the cost of each slice!.
  • Profit Maximization:
  • Marginal Cost (MC): Extra cost of making one more product. Imagine the exhaustion from baking one more cookie!
  • Marginal Revenue (MR): Extra revenue from selling one more product. It's the cash from that extra cookie sale!
  • Nike-Swoosh Shape: The MC has a curve like the Nike logo, thanks to diminishing returns. Think of squeezing lemons; at first, it's easy, then it gets harder!
  • Rule: Firms maximize profits where MR = MC. If it's like a game score, you want to balance the scores to win!

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IB Resources
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 2 - Microeconomics

Unraveling Economic Profits From Basics To Market Structures

Word Count Emoji
684 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited on 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Focusing on firms & profits

Economic Profits 

  • Definition: Profits = Total Revenues (TR) - Total Economic Costs (TC)
  • Real-World Example: Think of baking and selling cookies; you subtract the cost of ingredients and baking tools from the total money earned from selling cookies to get profits!.
  • Revenues
  • Total Revenues (TR): Money collected from selling goods, TR = Price (P) * Quantity (Q) sold.
  • Average Revenue (AR): Revenue per unit sold, AR = P.
  • Fun Fact: The demand curve a firm faces is also its AR curve. If you imagine the line of people waiting to buy the latest video game, that's your demand curve!

Economic costs the tricky part!

Explicit and Implicit Costs

  • Explicit Costs: Out-of-pocket costs, like paying for raw materials.
  • Implicit Costs: Value of firm-owned resources like buildings.
  • Real-World Example: Think of a lemonade stand! Explicit costs include lemons and sugar, while implicit costs could include the table you already owned.

 Normal Profit

  • Part of the economic cost; it's what an entrepreneur could earn elsewhere with the same risk.
  • Example: If you can earn $10 playing music but choose to run a business, you'd expect at least $10 from your business. It's like picking one game to play over another; you'd expect at least as much fun!

Average costs and profit maximization

 Average Costs (AC)

  • AC = Total Costs (TC) / Quantity (Q). It's like slicing a cake and figuring out the cost of each slice!.
  • Profit Maximization:
  • Marginal Cost (MC): Extra cost of making one more product. Imagine the exhaustion from baking one more cookie!
  • Marginal Revenue (MR): Extra revenue from selling one more product. It's the cash from that extra cookie sale!
  • Nike-Swoosh Shape: The MC has a curve like the Nike logo, thanks to diminishing returns. Think of squeezing lemons; at first, it's easy, then it gets harder!
  • Rule: Firms maximize profits where MR = MC. If it's like a game score, you want to balance the scores to win!

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟