IMPLICIT COST: An opportunity cost that does not involve a monetary payment or any other form of compensation. The monetary payment that is often made to compensate the person who initially foregoes the satisfaction is not made for implicit cost. There is no payment to transfer the burden of the opportunity cost from the original person to someone else. Implicit cost is also occasionally termed implicit opportunity cost.Opportunity cost is the highest valued foregone alternative. In some cases the opportunity cost involves a monetary payment or compensation. In other cases there is no compensation, monetary or otherwise. This distinction gives rise to two types of opportunity cost--explicit and implicit. Cost and PaymentAn implicit cost results if the person who initially foregoes the satisfaction in the pursuit of an activity and is not compensated by money or another form of payment. The opportunity cost begins and ends with the person foregoing the satisfaction.A common perception, especially among those not trained in the subtleties of economics, is that the terms "cost" and "payment" are synonymous. In other words, a cost is incurred only when money trades hands. And whenever money trades hands, a cost occurs. Cost, however, is synonymous with foregone satisfaction, and may or may not involve a money payment. When an opportunity cost does NOT involve a money payment, it is an implicit cost. Consider an example.
No CompensationThe key to an implicit cost is that no explicit transaction occurs, money does not trade hands. There is no record of a transaction, especially the type of record used by business firms to track expenses. But a cost is incurred nonetheless.While it might seem as though almost every opportunity cost involves a payment of some sort, the existence of implicit cost is quite prevalent in the economy. Consider two examples:
An Explicit AlternativeThe counterpart of implicit cost is explicit cost. Explicit cost is an opportunity cost that does involve a monetary payment or some form of compensation. If, for example, Edgar Millbottom is a paid employee of Waldo's TexMex Taco World and receives a wage for his efforts, then the opportunity cost of his foregone satisfaction is compensated and the result is be an explicit cost.Check Out These Related Terms... | explicit cost | cost | economic cost | free good | free resource | Or For A Little Background... | opportunity cost | scarcity | limited resources | unlimited wants and needs | satisfaction | value | And For Further Study... | economics | dismal science | three questions of allocation | division of labor | economic good | first rule of scarcity | opportunity cost, production possibilities | total cost | normal profit | accounting cost | normal profit | total cost | short-run production analysis | efficiency | Recommended Citation: IMPLICIT COST, AmosWEB Encyclonomic WEB*pedia, http://www.AmosWEB.com, AmosWEB LLC, 2000-2025. [Accessed: December 16, 2025]. |
