Firm Decision-Making on Costs
Based on the owner's sole motivation as described in the case study, which option should the firm choose? Justify your answer by calculating the net change in total costs for each option.
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A firm's owner is solely motivated by minimizing the firm's total costs. These costs are the sum of two components: the total wages paid to employees and the total amount spent on improving environmental quality. If the firm is currently paying $100,000 in wages and spending $20,000 on environmental quality, which of the following alternative scenarios would the owner find more desirable?
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A firm's owner is motivated solely by minimizing the firm's total costs, which are the sum of wages paid and expenditures on environmental quality. Match each cost scenario in Column A with the scenario in Column B that the firm's owner would find equally desirable (i.e., they would be indifferent between the two).
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A firm's owner is motivated solely by minimizing the firm's total costs, which consist of wages paid to employees and expenditures on environmental quality. The firm is currently spending $150,000 on wages and $50,000 on environmental quality. If the firm decides to increase its spending on environmental quality to $65,000, it must reduce its wage payments to $____ in order to be indifferent between the two scenarios.
A firm's owner is motivated solely by minimizing the firm's total costs, which are the sum of wages paid to employees and expenditures on environmental quality. The owner is presented with several new operational plans. Each of these new plans, despite having different combinations of wage and environmental spending, results in the exact same total cost as the firm's current operations. Based on the owner's stated motivation, how will they view these new plans relative to the current situation?
A firm's owner is motivated solely by minimizing the firm's total costs, which are the sum of wages paid and expenditures on environmental quality. The firm is currently operating at "Plan A," with $200,000 in wages and $50,000 in environmental spending. The owner is considering four alternative plans:
- Plan B: $180,000 in wages, $80,000 in environmental spending.
- Plan C: $220,000 in wages, $30,000 in environmental spending.
- Plan D: $190,000 in wages, $60,000 in environmental spending.
- Plan E: $210,000 in wages, $50,000 in environmental spending.
Which statement correctly analyzes the owner's preference ordering for these plans?