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Types of costs

IB Business Management โ€ข Unit 3

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๐Ÿงฑ Fixed Costs

Definition: Fixed costs are costs that do not change with the level of output or sales. They stay the same whether the business produces 1 unit or 10,000 units.

  • Rent for premises
  • Insurance premiums
  • Salaries of permanent staff
  • Loan repayments
  • Depreciation of equipment
Fixed costs are sometimes called 'overheads' โ€” they have to be paid even if the business sells nothing! ๐Ÿข

๐Ÿ“ˆ Variable Costs

Definition: Variable costs are costs that change in direct proportion to the level of output or sales. Produce more โ†’ costs go up. Produce less โ†’ costs go down.

  • Raw materials and components
  • Packaging materials
  • Direct labour (piece-rate workers)
  • Delivery and distribution costs
  • Sales commissions
Example: A pizza restaurant's flour, cheese and toppings are variable costs โ€” the more pizzas it makes, the more ingredients it uses ๐Ÿ•

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โž• Total Costs & Semi-Variable Costs


Total costs

Formula: Total costs (TC) = Fixed costs (FC) + Variable costs (VC)

This is one of the most fundamental formulas in business โ€” it tells you the complete cost of running the business at a given level of output.


Semi-variable costs

Some costs have both a fixed and a variable element. These are called semi-variable (or mixed) costs.

  • Phone bills โ€” fixed monthly charge + variable call charges
  • Electricity โ€” standing charge + cost per unit used
  • Sales staff pay โ€” base salary (fixed) + commission (variable)
Semi-variable costs sit between fixed and variable โ€” they have a BASE cost that stays constant plus an extra part that changes with output ๐Ÿ“Š

๐Ÿ“ Average Cost per Unit

Formula: Average cost = Total costs รท Number of units produced

Average cost tells you how much each unit costs to produce. As output increases, fixed costs are spread over more units โ€” so the average cost per unit typically falls.

Example: A business has fixed costs of $10,000 and variable cost per unit of $5. If it makes 1,000 units: TC = $10,000 + (1,000 ร— $5) = $15,000. Average cost = $15,000 รท 1,000 = $15 per unit. If it makes 2,000 units: TC = $10,000 + (2,000 ร— $5) = $20,000. Average cost = $20,000 รท 2,000 = $10 per unit.
This is why larger businesses often have lower costs per unit โ€” they benefit from economies of scale! ๐Ÿ“‰

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๐Ÿท๏ธ Classifying Costs in Practice

In the exam, you may be given a list of costs and asked to classify them. Use this simple test:


  • Does the cost change when output changes? YES โ†’ Variable | NO โ†’ Fixed
  • Does it have both a fixed part and a changing part? โ†’ Semi-variable
  • Is the cost directly linked to each unit produced? โ†’ Variable
  • Would you still pay it if you produced zero units? โ†’ Fixed
The zero-output test is your best friend: if the cost is still there when the factory is empty โ€” it's FIXED! ๐Ÿญ

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