Ask Question
1 January, 11:54

Suppose a farmer in Georgia begins to grow peaches. He uses $1,000,000 in savings to purchase land, he rents equipment for $50 comma 000 a year, and he pays workers $140 comma 000 in wages. In return, he produces 250 comma 000 baskets of peaches per year, which sell for $3.00 each. Suppose the interest rate on savings is 2 percent and that the farmer could otherwise have earned $40 comma 000 as a shoe salesman. What is the farmer's economic profit? The peach farmer earns economic profit of $ nothing.

+1
Answers (1)
  1. 1 January, 12:04
    0
    ($500,000)

    Explanation:

    Economic profit = revenue - explicit costs - implicit costs (opportunity cost)

    The revenue is = $3.00 x 250,000 peaches

    = $750,000

    The explicit costs are = land cost + equipment rent + salaries

    = $1,000,000 + 50,000 + 140,000

    = $1,190,000

    The implicit costs are = interest income + earnings as a shoe salesman

    = $20,000 + $40,000

    = $60,000

    Economic profit = $750,000 - $1,190,000 - $60,000

    = ($500,000)

    Thus, the farmers' total economic profit is actually a total economic loss of $500,000
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “Suppose a farmer in Georgia begins to grow peaches. He uses $1,000,000 in savings to purchase land, he rents equipment for $50 comma 000 a ...” in 📗 Business if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers