Fixed Costs: Fixed costs are the costs that are independent of the amount of goods or services produced by the business. For example rent, salaries.
For fixed costs, you have to pay them even if you do nothing.
Variable Costs: A variable cost can vary in relation to the amount of business activities. For example raw material, energy usage, labour, logistics, etc.
Marginal Costs: It can be defined as the additional cost (increase or decrease) to total production cost from producing one additional unit of good or service.
Marginal Revenue: It is the additional revenue that can be generated by selling one additional unit of goods or services. In microeconomic theory, when marginal cost (MC)
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Results are compared to its competitors in the same industry in order to be interpreted.
Revenue per Employee: Revenue % Number of Employees
Current Ratio: Current ratio measures if a company has enough resources to meet its short-term obligations. It shows the proportion of current assets in relation to its current liabilities. The higher the ratio, the more liquid the company is. The ideal current ratio is 2 for most enterprises. 1.5 is also an acceptable ratio. Current ratio being under 1 indicates that company is having difficulties and unable to meet its liabilities, making the company “illiquid”.
Try to keep your current ratio above 1.5, otherwise you’ll go down fast.
Quick Ratio: It is a liquidity ratio that measures how quick a company can pay its liabilities. It differs from Current Ratio because in quick ratio, inventory is excluded from current assets. The reason why is that the inventory may not sell out so fast. So quick ratio quickly captures if your company has enough liquidity, which is frequently used by banks, creditors, investors. Ideal ratio would be 1:1 or
The total cost of production of Sony’s new product is the addition of both fixed and variable costs. Fixed costs are assets within a business that are not used up or sold during the typical production course e.g. buildings and machinery. Variable costs are costs that fluctuate in time with the production output or sales revenue of a company such as Sony e.g. raw material and labour costs. Figure 1.1 shows how the total cost is composed of both fixed and variable costs.
Fixed costs are what it costs a company to run before they make any products irrespective of the level of activity e.g. rent & rates, insurance, salaries, utilities.
Unlike fixed cost variable cost you have some room to play, variable cost is all about changing inputs around to change output. Or as defined by Thomas and Maurice “variable input is one for which the level of
When a firm wants to determine its optimal level of output using marginal revenue and marginal cost the firm needs these two to be equal. Marginal revenue is a change in the total revenue when one or even more units of output are sold. Marginal cost is the cost associated with producing one or more units. Optimal level of output is the desired level of goods or even service that is produced by a company. When the revenue and the cost become equal then the firm that uses profit maximization to determine the optimal level of output has succeeded.
This ratio indicates whether it can respond to the current liabilities by using current assets. As many times, we can cover short-term obligations, as better for the company. This indicates that significant and high improvement in the liquidity. The increase in the current ratio 11.5 % will result in an increase in current assets where the current liabilities increased by 2.1%.
In comparison, the marginal cost is the added cost of producing one more unit of output. It is determined by the change in total cost (TC) divided by the change in output (Q). MC= TC/Q. In the provided scenario, for Company A to produce one widget TC=$30, to produce two widgets TC=$50 thus the marginal cost was $20; furthermore the cost per widget to produce was $25. Marginal cost will continue to decrease for Company A until they reach their profit maximization of $42.86 per widget at 7 widgets. Marginal cost will then begin to decrease for every additional widget produced until the end result of 15 widgets with a MC that exceeds $80, also allowing TC to topple to TR ($1220/15=$81.33).
* Marginal Cost – The opportunity cost that arises from an increase in that activity
Current ratio is type of liquidity ratio. It is a financial tool used to measure a company’s ability to pay off its short-term debts with its short-term assets. A company’s current ratio is expressed by dividing its current assets by its current liabilities. A higher current ratio means the company is more capable of paying off its debts. If the current ratio is under one, this suggests the company is unable to pay off its obligations if they were due at that point (Investopedia, 2013). Companies that have trouble collecting money for its receivables or have long inventory turnovers can run into liquidity problems because they are unable to lessen their obligations.
According to this method, every unit of the product is assigned all direct, fixed, and variable costs. This method includes the cost of direct materials and labor as well as a portion of the overhead costs associated with it in the final costing of every unit of the product.
The slope of the total revenue curve is marginal revenue and the slope of the total cost curve is marginal cost. Economic profit (the difference between total revenue and total cost) is maximized where marginal revenue equals marginal cost. This is consistent with the marginal decision rule, which holds that a profit-maximizing firm should increase output until the marginal benefit of an additional unit equals the marginal cost. The marginal benefit of selling an additional unit is measured as marginal revenue. Finding the output at which marginal revenue equals marginal cost is thus an application of our marginal decision rule.
A variable cost is a corporate expense that varies with production output. Variable costs are those costs that vary depending on a company's production volume; they rise as production increases and fall as production decreases (Variable Cost, n.d.); in the case study for all cost per event such
Variable Costing: Only those costs of production that vary directly with activity (variable costs) are treated as product costs. Under variable costing, only the variable manufacturing costs are included as a part of the cost of the product manufactured. The fixed manufacturing costs are treated as an expense of the period in which they are incurred. Selling and administrative costs
All the costs by a company can be broken into two categories, fixed costs and variable costs. Costs that are independent of output are called fixed costs. Fixed costs remain constant throughout the relevant range and are usually considered sunk for the relevant range. Buildings and machinery are included inputs that cannot be adjusted in the short term. They are only fixed in relation to the quantity of production for a certain time period. The cost of all inputs is variable, in the long run.
3 variable costs indentified, they are power, operations, material. They are proportional to the revenue intake.
considered relative to those of close competitors and with one eye to the likely reaction of rival