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Enduring Ideas: The industry cost curve

In this interactive presentation—one in a series of multimedia frameworks—McKinsey director Rob Latoff offers insight into the industry cost curve, a business school classic for understanding pricing. By bringing discipline and a practical set of definitions to bear, this framework can be applied to real-world, competitive markets.

Producers of a commodity are generally willing to supply it as long as the price they can command exceeds the unit cost of production. Yet how do they determine which business units’ products can be priced competitively in which market segments? The industry cost curve—a standard microeconomic graph that maps a product’s available capacity incrementally in order of increasing cost—is fundamental for analyzing the dynamics of pricing.

Enduring Ideas: The industry cost curve
A narrated interactive on a business school classic for understanding pricing.

Under many conditions, the level of demand for a product and the cost of the next available supplier’s capacity determine the market price. In theory, the industry cost curve allows companies to predict the impact that capacity, shifts in demand, and input costs have on market prices. In practice, however, a multitude of questions can muddy the waters. Do competitors have access to a number of markets? Will reinvesting profits in a product shift the market’s economics? Does the product’s real or perceived value differ among user segments? Faced with such complexities, before the 1980s many businesses relied on a gut-level approach to pricing.

Early in that decade, McKinsey consultants started looking for ways to unravel the complexity. They defined the important variables involved in this curve and the methods for applying it to real-world, competitive markets. Linear programming helped to unscramble a number of options for products, users, and locations, yielding a series of simpler market situations for which the curve can be plotted. By weighing the trade-offs, a company can ground its strategy on the market’s predicted price and profit sensitivities, as well as its competitors’ actions.

The industry cost curve brings microeconomic rigor to pricing analyses, while still requiring some finesse in teasing out the most powerful insights. Ideally suited to commodity products, it is also applicable where real quantifiable differences in value exist—for example, the length of time for ocean transit. The cost curve’s enduring power is evident in its use in addressing climate change. By plotting the costs of various levers for abating carbon emissions, organizations can identify the most economically viable options.

Recommend (491)
  • 21 JULY 2009
    Andrew Simpson
    CEO
    Concentric Energy Corp
    WIckenburg, AZ USA

    ...We do mining cost curves by region on a graph with individual mines displayed on the cost curve. One may then click a given mine indicated by a point on the cost curve to drill down to an underlying valuation...

    .
    Andrew Simpson
    CEO
    Concentric Energy Corp
    WIckenburg, AZ USA

    Your “movie” for the cost curve is elegant. We do mining cost curves by region on a graph with individual mines displayed on the cost curve. One may then click a given mine indicated by a point on the cost curve to drill down to an underlying valuation analysis. We value mines as private assets based on the cash flow indicated by cost; in order to calibrate the private-to-public arbitrage spread, we value a publicly traded mine as a call option on a reserve base where we use the cost per unit as the strike price in the option equation.

    .
  • 10 APRIL 2009
    Farhan Ali
    AVP
    Dubai Islamic Bank Pakistan Ltd
    Karachi Pakistan

    It is better if you divide your analysis into developed and undeveloped nations. Like in Pakistan your demand and supply theory does not work accurately.

    .
    Farhan Ali
    AVP
    Dubai Islamic Bank Pakistan Ltd
    Karachi Pakistan

    It is better if you divide your analysis into developed and undeveloped nations. Like in Pakistan your demand and supply theory does not work accurately.

    .
    OUR REPLY
    MKQ_response

    Mr. Ali, Thank you for your note. I would not, however, separate the developed from the undeveloped world, in general. I, myself, have successfully used the cost curve many times combining countries and regions in both categories on the curve.

    The key is to appropriately define the demand market and the supply that has access to that demand market. If an economy is closed (whether or not it’s developed) you should only include the capacity that has access to that closed market. Many markets lie somewhere between perfectly open and closed, due to trade barriers and tariffs. In these markets, those frictional costs must be added to the cost to serve local demand. Should the world economy step more towards nationalism as a way to address the current economic crisis, these frictional costs would likely grow in number and magnitude.

    In any case, the cost curve still works well—once the markets, suppliers with access to the market, and frictional costs to access the market are incorporated.

    Regards,

    OUR REPLY
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