Variable vs Fixed Costs

Basis: How the cost behaves as activity level changes

The Inverse Behaviour Pattern

Cost Type Total Per Unit
Variable Changes with activity Constant
Fixed Constant Changes with activity (inversely)

Variable Costs

Definition: Cost that varies in total direct proportional to activity level.

Example Activity Measure Behavior
Direct materials (batteries) Units produced 1 battery per bus, always
Electricity ($2/machine-hour) Machine hours More production = more power
Sales commission ($30/table) Units sold Zero sales = zero commission

Formula:

Total Variable Cost=Variable Cost per Unit×Number of Units
Units Cost/Unit Total Variable Cost
1 $50 $50
500 $50 $25,000
1,000 $50 $50,000

Fixed Costs

Definition: Cost whose total remains constant regardless of activity level.

Example Behavior
Rent Same monthly payment whether you make 10 or 10,000 units
Supervisor salary Same whether factory runs at 50% or 100% capacity
Insurance Premium doesn't change with production volume
The Per-Unit Trap

Fixed costs per unit decrease as volume increases—but total hasn't changed. Don't confuse lower average cost with actual savings.

Fixed Cost Units Average Cost/Unit
$8,000 10 $800
$8,000 500 $16
$8,000 2,000 $4

This is arithmetic, not real cost reduction.

Connection to Economics

Timeframe Accounting Term Economics Term
Short-run Lower average fixed cost per unit Movement along SRAC curve
Long-run Step change in fixed costs (new capacity) Moving to different SRAC curve
Very long-run Technology shifts cost structure LRAC curve shifts downward

Relevant Range = one short-run average cost curve. Exceed it → step change.


North: Where this comes from

East: What opposes this?

South: Where this leads

West: What's similar?