Экономические науки
Elena Guseva, a 1st year student
PhD Olena Zhukova, science and language supervisor
Donetsk State University of Ukraine
Theory of Supply
The
theory of supply is the theory of how much output firms choose to produce. The
principal assumption of the supply theory is that the producer will maintain
the level of output at which he maximizes his profit. Profit can be defined in
terms of revenue and costs. Revenue is what the firm earns by selling goods or
services in a given period such a year. Costs are the expenses which are
necessary for producing and selling goods or services during the period. Profit
is the revenue from selling the output minus the costs of inputs used.
Costs
should include opportunity costs of all recourses used in production.
Opportunity cost of a commodity is the amount an input can obtain in its best
alternative use (best use elsewhere). In particular, costs include the owner’s
time and effort in running a business. Costs also include the opportunity cost
of the financial capital of the financial capital used in the firm.
Aiming
to get higher profits, firm obtain each output level as cheaply as possible.
Firms choose the optimal output level to receive the highest profits. This
decision can be described in terms of marginal
cost and marginal revenue.
Marginal
cost is the increase in total cost when one additional unit of output is
produced.
Marginal
revenue is the corresponding change in total revenue from selling one more unit
of output.
As the
individual firm has to be a price-taker, each firm’s marginal revenue is the
prevailing market price. Profits are the highest at the output level at which
marginal cost is equal to marginal revenue, that is, to the market price of the
output. Is profits are negative at this output level, the firm should close
down.
An
increase in marginal cost reduced output. A rise in marginal revenue increases
output. The optimal quantity also depends on the output prices as well as on
the input costs. Of course, the optimal supply quantity is affected by such
noneconomic factors as technology, environment, etc.
Making
economic forecasts, it is necessary to know the effect of a price change on the
whole output rather than the supply or individual firms.
Market
supply is defined in terms of the alternative quantities of a commodity all
firms in a particular market offer as price varies and as all other factors are
assumed constant.
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