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  • Alternative Non-Linear Cost Function for Beautiful Cars

  • Slope of an Isoprofit Curve

Isoprofit Curve Slope and the Price-Marginal Cost Relationship

The slope of an isoprofit curve is determined by the relationship between price (P) and the firm's marginal cost (MC). Specifically, the curve slopes downward in areas where price is greater than marginal cost (P > MC) and slopes upward where price is less than marginal cost (P < MC). For a firm with a constant marginal cost, such as Beautiful Cars, the isoprofit curve is horizontal when price equals marginal cost (P = MC) and slopes downward when P > MC. [7] In contrast, for firms with non-constant marginal costs, the isoprofit curves can have both upward and downward sloping sections based on the relationship between price and marginal cost at different quantities.

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  • Isoprofit Curve Slope and the Price-Marginal Cost Relationship

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  • A firm's total cost to produce Q units of a good is given by the function C(Q) = 50 + 2QΒ². The firm is currently operating at a point on one of its isoprofit curves, producing 10 units (Q=10) and selling them at a price of $60 per unit (P=60). What is the slope of the isoprofit curve at this specific point (P=60, Q=10)?

  • Deriving the Isoprofit Curve Slope

  • Analyzing a Firm's Pricing Trade-off

  • Consider a firm whose production is characterized by a standard U-shaped average cost curve. For any single isoprofit curve plotted on a graph with Price (P) on the vertical axis and Quantity (Q) on the horizontal axis, the slope of the curve is positive for all possible quantities.

  • Derivation and Interpretation of the Isoprofit Curve Slope

  • A firm's total cost to produce a good is given by the function C(Q). To find the slope of the isoprofit curve at a specific point (Qβ‚€, Pβ‚€), you must follow a series of steps. Arrange the following steps in the correct logical order.

  • A firm's profit (Ο€) is given by the equation Ο€ = P*Q - C(Q), where P is price, Q is quantity, and C(Q) is the total cost function. The slope of an isoprofit curve on a graph with P on the vertical axis and Q on the horizontal axis is given by the derivative dP/dQ. Match each component of the isoprofit curve's slope analysis with its correct mathematical expression or economic interpretation.

  • A firm operates on an isoprofit curve at a point where it produces 20 units of a good (Q=20) and sells them at a price of $100 per unit (P=100). The firm's total cost of production is described by the function C(Q) = 100 + 10Q. At this specific point, the slope of the firm's isoprofit curve is ____.

  • A firm is operating at a production level Q > 0 where the market price P is strictly greater than the firm's marginal cost (MC) of production. At this specific point on the firm's price-quantity graph, what is the characteristic of the slope of the isoprofit curve?

  • A company's total cost to produce a specialized component is given by the function C(Q) = 200 + 15Q + QΒ², where Q is the number of components. The company is currently operating at a point where it produces 10 components (Q=10) and sells them at a price of $55 each (P=55). Based on the slope of the isoprofit curve at this specific point, what is the approximate trade-off the company must make to maintain its current level of profit?

Learn After
  • Example of a Quadratic Cost Function (C(Q) = 320 + 2Q + 0.2Q^2)

  • The Flat Isoprofit Curve for Beautiful Cars (P=MC, Profit = -$80,000)