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A car manufacturing company owns its factory outright and has no mortgage or loan payments associated with it. Therefore, from an economic perspective, the use of this factory does not contribute to the company's total cost of production for a given year.
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The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.7 The firm and its customers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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An entrepreneur starts a new company by investing $200,000 of their own savings, which could have otherwise earned a 5% annual return in a stock market index fund. After the first year, the company's financial records show that total revenues were $550,000 and total explicit costs (like wages, materials, and rent) were $545,000. Based on this information, which statement best analyzes the company's first-year performance from an economic perspective?
Shareholder Decisions and Capital Costs
Analyzing the Full Cost of Capital for a Business
A car manufacturing company owns its factory outright and has no mortgage or loan payments associated with it. Therefore, from an economic perspective, the use of this factory does not contribute to the company's total cost of production for a given year.
Explaining Shareholder Compensation as a Production Cost
A car manufacturing firm incurs various costs related to its capital. Match each type of cost or capital with its correct description in the context of the firm's operations.
Evaluating Investment Projects with Capital Costs
For a company to acquire and maintain physical assets like factories and machinery, it must raise financial capital from investors. The payment required to convince these investors to provide their funds, rather than placing them in an alternative investment, is considered a cost to the firm because it covers the ________ of the investors' capital.
A manufacturing firm decides to expand its production capacity by building a new factory. Arrange the following steps in the logical order that illustrates how the firm would account for the full economic cost of this new capital investment.
The accountant for 'Prestige Motors' presents an annual report showing total revenues of $10 million and total explicit costs (wages, materials, rent, etc.) of $9.8 million, resulting in a stated profit of $200,000. The company was funded entirely by its shareholders, who invested $5 million that could have otherwise earned a 6% annual return in a comparable investment. The CEO, reviewing the report, argues that the company did not actually make an economic profit. What is the most likely reason for the CEO's argument?