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Justifying Shareholder Returns as a Production Cost
A firm's managers are debating whether the expected return they must provide to shareholders should be considered a true cost of production when evaluating a new project. Explain why, from an economic standpoint, the return required to compensate shareholders for their investment is a necessary component of the firm's total production costs.
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Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Evaluating Business Profitability
A software company reports an annual accounting profit of $200,000. The total capital invested in the company by its shareholders is $2,000,000. These shareholders could have earned a 12% annual return by investing in a different, equally risky venture. Based on this information, which statement best analyzes the company's performance from an economic perspective?
If a company's annual accounting profit is exactly equal to the total return its shareholders could have earned by investing their capital in the next best alternative with similar risk, the company's economic profit for that year is zero.
Justifying Shareholder Returns as a Production Cost
Evaluating Utility as a Standard of Living Metric
Comparing Venture Profitability
A business owner is evaluating the total costs of their first year of operation. Match each economic term to the corresponding example from their business.
An entrepreneur invests $500,000 of their own savings to start a new coffee shop. After the first year, the shop's total revenue is $300,000 and its explicit costs (rent, wages, supplies) are $250,000, resulting in an accounting profit of $50,000. The entrepreneur could have earned a 15% annual return by investing the $500,000 in a stock market index fund with similar risk. From an economic standpoint, what is the most accurate assessment of the coffee shop's first-year performance?
A firm generates $620,000 in total revenue with explicit production costs of $500,000. The shareholders have invested $1,000,000 of capital, which could have earned a 10% return in an alternative, equally risky investment. While the firm's accounting profit is $120,000, its economic profit is only $____.
A company is evaluating a new project that requires a $1 million capital investment from its shareholders. The project is expected to generate an annual accounting profit of $80,000. The shareholders could alternatively invest their capital in a different venture of similar risk and earn a 9% annual return. Based on an economic analysis, what is the most sound recommendation for the company?