Why do high fixed costs force firms to shut down temporarily or shut down forever?
What will be an ideal response?
If a firm finds that the revenue it earns from the output it produces and sells does not even cover its fixed costs, then the firm will shut down. In many cases in the real world, the shutdown is temporary and part of business conditions firms may face. For example, oil wells are shut down if the price of oil does not cover the fixed costs of oil production. Seasonal resorts shut down over the off-season months because there are not enough paying customers to cover the fixed costs. In a recession, businesses will shut down factories because product demand and revenues do not cover fixed costs. Shutdowns are more common than typically thought and are often temporary until economic conditions and revenues expand to cover the fixed costs. If economic conditions do not improve, however, a business may be forced to shut down forever because it cannot ever cover its fixed costs.
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Assume that Bulgaria has a comparative advantage in producing sandals and Finland imports sandals from Bulgaria. We can conclude that
A) Labor costs are higher for sandal producers in Finland than in Bulgaria. B) Bulgaria also has an absolute advantage in producing sandals relative to Finland. C) Bulgaria has a lower opportunity cost of producing sandals relative to Finland. D) Finland has an absolute disadvantage in producing sandals relative to Bulgaria.
Microeconomics examines the
A) total household expenditures. B) behavior of the economy as a whole. C) aggregate business spending. D) decision making undertaken by individual households.