Private costs can also be borne by producers.
For example:
A consumer buys a unit of good, the private cost of him is mainly the price of the good.
A producer supplies a unit of good, the private cost of it is the cost of production.
There should be no definite answer for "who bears the private cost?".
Social costs = Private costs + External costs.
It's born by both consumers and producers.
Look up external costs in the internet.
If selling costs varies with production level then selling costs are variable costs but if they remain fix then these are fixed costs.
Actual Costs are costs which have occurred and can be reliably measured. Budgeted Costs are costs which have been estimated, possibly by using Forecasted Costs.
Generally variable costs are relevant costs but if due to any decision fixed costs are also going to affected then fixed costs are also relevant costs.
Besides salaries and wages earned by employees, employers incur costs for various payroll taxes, including the employer's share of Social Security and Medicare, workers' compensation premiums and unemployment insurance. Often they also incur costs for certain employee benefits, including health insurance and post-retirement benefits. All in all, additional payroll related costs can amount to 30% to 40% of wages and salaries. Call 888-924-1776 for more information about payroll related operating costs.
Yes normally fixed costs are period costs because these costs have to be paid no matter production done or not.
Hi Private costs are those incurred by the firm producing the goods/services, whereas social costs are those paid for by society. For instance, cars. The production costs and the cost of raw materials etc... are all private costs, however the CO2 emissions and the damage they cause to the environment is an additional social cost. Hope this helps Sam x
The legal costs were borne by the borrower and not the lender.
Private costs are the expenses of a supplier or producer. They are the costs incurred in provision of services or products.
Production costs.
Summary Social cost/benefit: sum of all private costs/benefit. Social welfare analysis: involves optimising social outcomes based on cost/benefit. Optimal occurs: where marginal social cost (MSC) = marginal social benefit (MSB) Is used for: cost of economic choices, policies, initiatives, etc. Longer Explanation Social cost-benefit analysis is also known as 'welfare analysis' and is very similar to normal firm optimisation models. Essentially, social cost and benefit usually involve a private producer or consumer and a public provider or public demand. In these cases, the private cost/benefit of the private actor differs from the social cost/benefit. A social cost/benefit is simply the sum of all costs and benefits of all private actors. Cost is represented on a cost-quantity axis as a positively-sloped function (linear or higher power) and benefit is a negatively-sloped function. Their optimisation occurs where the derivatives of cost and benefit (marginal social cost; marginal social benefit) are equal. This point is where profit/social welfare is greatest.
It is when the private marginal benefits or costs are not equal to social marginal benefits cost. Therefore, result could be likely market failure.
The determination of which costs are born by the consumer of manufacturer often depends on the position of the company. If they are trying to increase sales by undercutting the competition they will often bear more of the cost. However, eventually all costs will have to be borne by the consumer in order for the company to stay in business.
What you sacrifice for a decision is one of the non-monetary costs of many choices.
Producers raise prices to meet increased costs, which causes costs to consumers to rise.
What you sacrifice for a decision is one of the non-monetary costs of many choices.
Producers raise prices to meet increased costs, which causes costs to consumers to rise.
It is possible for perfectly competitive markets to be inefficient when externalities are present. Externalities arise when an economic activity has an unintended impact on other economic agents and/or the market. This results in there being a socially optimal level of production that does not coincide with the privately determined equilibirum level of production derived from the supply and demand curves (which, respectively, represent the marginal private costs and marginal private benefits to producers and consumers). With respect to the efficiency of markets, positive externalities result in too little of the good in question being produced. In this case, the market equilibrium is lower than desired (the marginal social benefit curve lies above the marginal private benefit [demand] curve). In this case, the efficient market outcome would occur where the marginal social beneift curve interests the marginal private cost (supply) curve. When negative externalities occur, too much of the good in question is being produced. This results in the supply curve, which represents the marginal private costs of production, lying below the marginal social cost curve because the private cost curve fails to take into account the costs of production incurred by all of society. In this case, the efficient market outcome would occur where the marginal social cost curve coincides with the private marginal benefit (demand) curve.