Characteristics of LAC Curve
The following characteristics
of LAC curve should be noted:
i.
The LAC curve is tangential to the various SAC curves. It is drawn to
cover them and is often drown as Envelope curve as no point as SAC curve can
ever be below the LAC curve.
ii.
The LAC curve is U-shaped of like a dish. This U-shaped of the LAC curve implies lower and lower
average costs in the beginning until the optimum scale of the enterprise is
reached and successively higher average costs thereafter i.e. with plants
larger than that of the optimum scale.
The
tendency of the long run average costs to fall as the firm expands its
operation scale is a reflection of cost economies available with the increase
in size, while the ultimate size in the long run curve is due largely to the
eventual setting in of diseconomies of scale.
The SAC curve is also U-shaped but the difference is that
LAC curve is fatter, that is U-shaped of the LAC curve will be less pronounced.
This is because in the long run such economies are possible as cannot be gad in
the short run.
iii. The long
average cost curve can never cut a short run curve. Though they are tangential to each other. This implies that
for any given output, average cost cannot be higher in the long run than in the
short-run. This is because any adjustment that will reduce costs and which it
is possible to mase in the short-run con also be made in the long run. On the
other side. It is not always possible in the short-run to produce a given
output in the cheapest possible way.
iv.
LAC curve will touch the optimum scale curve. At latter's cost point i.e., N.
v.
LAC curve will touch SAC curve lying to the left of the
optimum scale. Curve at the left of their least
cost points.
LAC curve will touch SAC cure laying at the
right of the optimum scale curve at the right their least cost points. Thus one will find the LAC curve is
tangential to the minimum cost point in optimum scale SAC and not in case of
other SAC curves.
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