Applied Economics Teaching Resources

an AAEA Journal

Agricultural and Applied Economics Association

Teaching and Educational Methods

Tractable Cubic Cost Functions for Teaching Microeconomics

Scott M. Swinton(a) and Hanzhe Zhang(a)
Michigan State University(a)

JEL Codes: A22, D00, D22
Keywords: Cubic cost function, marginal cost, profit maximization

Publish Date: June 2, 2021
Volume 3, Issue 2

View Full Article (PDF) | Request Teaching Notes/Supplemental Materials

Abstract

Classes in microeconomics typically use cubic cost functions because they can exhibit marginal costs that fall as output increases to some efficient level, and then rise thereafter. Cubic cost functions embody economies of scale, making it easy to illustrate that concept with quadratic average cost curves. However, designing problems with cubic cost functions is harder than it looks because well-behaved functions must meet several mathematical and economic restrictions. Yet as instructors develop more online assignments and exam questions, they face the need to produce varied problems that support the same learning objectives. This article explains the restrictions needed to generate well-behaved cubic cost functions. It proceeds to show how to generate random parameters for well-behaved cubic cost functions for problems that meet common student learning objectives. An associated workbook contains the algorithms described here.

About the Authors: Scott M. Swinton is a University Distinguished Professor in the Department of Agricultural, Food, and Resource Economics at Michigan State University (Corresponding author: swintons@msu.edu). Hanzhe Zhang is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Economics at Michigan State University. Acknowledgements: For helpful comments on earlier versions, the authors thank Abubakr Ayesh, David Hennessy, and Maria Porter. Zhang acknowledges the National Science Foundation for financial support.

Copyright is governed under Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA

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