Author Question: Assume that a manufacturer of new handheld computer makes a sales pitch to a retailer in which he is ... (Read 85 times)

Frost2351

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Assume that a manufacturer of new handheld computer makes a sales pitch to a retailer in which he is willing to sell 5,000 at 10, 7,000 for 8, 9,000 for 7 .
 
  But any orders above that amount will start costing the retailer more money on a per-unit basis. The president of the retailer asks why he can't get a discount if he orders more. Can you provide an answer that would help this president understand this apparent paradox?

Question 2

How do decreasing returns to scale affect the shape of the long-run average cost curve?
 
  What will be an ideal response?



kaylee05

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Answer to Question 1

The explanation is that the manufacturer apparently faces a U-shaped average cost curve. He is able to offer discounts up to the 9,000 unit level because that represents output on the downward-sloping side of the curve down to the minimum average total cost. Output levels past this point start driving the average total cost upwards.

Answer to Question 2

When the firm faces decreasing returns to scale, average costs per unit produced rise as the firm's scale of production rises. Thus, the long-run average cost curve would be upward sloping.



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