This topic covers the fundamental financial components of a business, specifically how costs, revenues, and profits are calculated, analyzed, and their sig
Topic Synopsis
This topic covers the fundamental financial components of a business, specifically how costs, revenues, and profits are calculated, analyzed, and their significance in business decision-making.
Key Concepts & Core Principles
- Fixed costs: costs that do not change with output (e.g., rent, insurance). Variable costs: costs that rise as output increases (e.g., raw materials, wages). Total cost = fixed cost + variable cost.
- Total revenue = price × quantity sold. Average revenue = total revenue ÷ quantity (equals price per unit in perfect competition).
- Profit = total revenue – total cost. Normal profit is the minimum profit needed to keep a firm operating; supernormal profit is any profit above normal.
- The break-even point is where total revenue equals total cost (zero profit). It can be calculated using the formula: break-even output = fixed costs ÷ (selling price – variable cost per unit).
- Economies of scale: falling average costs as output increases due to factors like bulk buying and specialisation. Diseconomies of scale: rising average costs when a firm becomes too large.