Production costs are reduced when the fixed overhead costs can be spread out over a
large volume of output, adding little to the cost of each individual item. Scheduling also
affects production costs. When a high-volume retailer signs a contract for a large order
from a given manufacturer, that manufacturer can then schedule the work evenly
throughout the year. This avoids the additional costs that go with ups and downs in the
orders that come in unpredictably from the market, leaving the manufacturer’s workforce
idle during some weeks.
The fact that profits are contingent upon efficiency in producing what your customers
want, at a price that customers are willing to pay – and that losses are an ever present
threat if a business fails to provide that – explains much of the economic prosperity found
in economics that operate under free market competition. Profits as a realized end-result
are crucial to the individual business, but it is the Prospect of Profits – and the threat of
losses – that is crucial to the functioning of the economy as a whole.
Efficiency is the difference between having the necessities, comforts and amenities of
high-income countries and suffering the hunger and deprivations too often found in
poorer countries.
Inventory is a substitute for knowledge. Since you don’t always know just how much inventory you are actually going to need and since inventory costs money, a business enterprise must try to limit how much inventory it has on hand. Those businesses, which have the greatest amount of knowledge and come closest to the optimal size of inventory, will have their profit prospects enhanced. Just as prices in general affect the allocation of resources from one place to another at a given time, so returns on investment affect the allocation of resources from one time period to another. A high rate of return provides incentives for people to save and invest more than they would at a lower rate of return. – A higher rate of return encourages people to consume less in the present so that they may consume more in the future. It allocates resources over time. The present value of an asset is in fact nothing more than its anticipated future returns, added up and discounted for the fac...
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