joint cost curve

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joint cost curve

Target MA
You have two plants. Plant A has costs c(y) = y^2 and Plant B has costs c(y) = 2y^2. What is the
joint cost curve?
a) y^2 c) 5y^2/9
b) 2y^2 d) 3y^2
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Re: joint cost curve

maahi
d
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Re: joint cost curve

Mauli
In reply to this post by Target MA
i think it should be A
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Re: joint cost curve

Amit Goyal
Administrator
In reply to this post by Target MA
It is none of them.
If you have access to these two plants and you want to produce y units, then you would like to produce it in a way that minimizes cost of production:
min a^2 + 2b^2
subject to a + b = y

Solving the above optimization problem with respect to a and b, where a is the number of units produced in Plant A and b is the number of units produced in Plant B, we get
a = (2/3) y and b = (1/3) y
and joint cost is a^2 + 2b^2 = [(2/3) y]^2 + 2[(1/3) y]^2 = (6/9) y^2 = (2/3) y^2
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Re: joint cost curve

Mauli
sir so shouldnt the question be in this way
c(y1)=y1^2 and c(y2) = 2y2^2..?
and y1 +y2 = y
is the framing of this question proper?
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Re: joint cost curve

Akshay Jain
sir there is no option like "none of dese"....wat to do in dis case????
Akshay Jain
Masters in Economics
Delhi School of Economics
2013-15