In 2015–2016, oil prices collapsed below $30 per barrel. Many U.S. shale producers faced a decision: keep pumping at a loss or shut down. The right answer depended on one comparison: does the market price cover the variable cost of production (labor, chemicals, transportation)? If yes, keep pumping — the fixed costs (drilled wells, leases) are unrecoverable either way, so any revenue above variable cost reduces the net loss. If price falls below variable cost, each barrel produced makes the loss worse. Thousands of individual production decisions hinged on this single comparison.
The setup
The shutdown condition tells a firm when it minimizes losses by halting production rather than continuing. It operates differently in the short run and long run.
Short run: fixed costs are already paid and cannot be recovered. The relevant comparison is between price and average variable cost (AVC):
- P ≥ AVC: keep producing. Revenue covers all variable costs and some or all fixed costs. Producing reduces the loss compared to shutting down (which still incurs all fixed costs).
- P < AVC: shut down. Each unit produced costs more in variable inputs than it earns. Production makes the loss larger than just incurring the fixed cost loss at zero output.
The break-even point (P = ATC) is where the firm earns zero economic profit — covering all costs including fixed costs. The shutdown point (P = AVC) is the floor below which production itself becomes counterproductive.
What happens — and why
Between the shutdown point and the break-even point, the firm operates at an economic loss but continues producing because shutting down would produce a larger loss. A firm with $10,000 in monthly fixed costs and $5 AVC that sells output at $7 per unit: each unit covers $2 toward fixed costs. At 3,000 units, it covers $6,000 of fixed costs and still loses $4,000 — but stopping entirely loses the full $10,000. Operating reduces the loss by $6,000.
Below the shutdown price: that same firm with price at $4 (below $5 AVC) loses $1 per unit produced — so producing 3,000 units loses $10,000 in fixed costs plus $3,000 in variable cost losses. Stopping loses only the $10,000 in fixed costs. Shutdown saves $3,000.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration's drilling data documents these decisions in real time: rig counts fall when oil prices approach or drop below operator breakeven costs — the revealed shutdown condition playing out across thousands of wells simultaneously.
Where you see it in the wild
Airlines offer a vivid example. When demand collapsed in March 2020, airlines faced the shutdown condition on individual routes and across entire operations. Many routes where revenue covered marginal operating costs (fuel, crew, gates) continued; routes where it did not were suspended. The Bureau of Transportation Statistics airline data shows this immediate adjustment — route capacity collapsed fastest where route-specific variable costs exceeded revenues.
Why it matters
The shutdown condition determines the lower bound of the supply curve. The short-run supply curve starts at the shutdown price (minimum AVC) — below that price, firms produce zero. Above it, they follow the profit-maximizing MR = MC rule. Understanding where the shutdown point lies tells regulators, analysts, and competitors how much price can fall before industry capacity exits the market.





