Wednesday, October 5, 2011

The Concept of Cost

Cost may be one of the most confusing yet one of the most important concepts in intermediate economics. It is a key element of decision making, so it is worthwhile to clarify this concept.

There are several important types of cost to understand and be able to distinguish:

a. Opportunity cost
Opportunity cost includes all costs associated with an alternative, whether the costs are explicit or implicit (such as foregone opportunities). Opportunity cost depends on the decision being made and the time (and corresponding circumstances) at which that decision is being made.

b. Economic versus accounting costs
When making economic decisions, we must be sure to consider all relevant explicit and implicit costs.

c. Sunk versus nonsunk costs
Sunk costs are those that are unavoidable for the purposes of the decision under consideration. They should be ignored when making the decision. Nonsunk costs are avoidable for the purposes of the decision under consideration. They should be taken into consideration when making the decision.

d. Fixed versus sunk costs
Some costs may not vary with changes in (positive) output level, but still be avoidable by producing zero output. These costs may be referred to as avoidable fixed costs. They are not sunk.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

To Compromise or To Be Tenacious

People do have different views on one issue. Due to different experiences and personalities, people tend to look at the same thing from different angle. No particular one angle is right or wrong -- all the angles are a reflection of the truth, and none of them grasp the whole picture.

People understanding these will their best to avoid imposing our perspective onto others. We should avoid asking people to do what WE think is good for THEM. One man's honey is another man's poison. But when other people try to impose their opinions on us, what should we do? To compromise or to be tenacious to our principles?

Like Hamlet's ultimate question, there's no appropriate answer to that, and I believe the key to decide what to do depends on who you want to be. Be a peace-maker, then compromise; be a principle-sticker, then be tenacious.

It is you who can make the decision. But no matter what you choose, be content with your choice. Every choice you make defines you, and if you always choose they way you want to be defined that way, then you choice is always a perfect one.