in the table above, what is the marginal cost of increasing production from 3,000 to 5,000 units?

To determine the marginal cost of increasing production from 3,000 to 5,000 units, we need the information from the given table. However, since you did not provide the table, we cannot calculate the marginal cost. Please provide the table or any relevant information, so we can assist you further.

To find the marginal cost of increasing production from 3,000 to 5,000 units, we need the corresponding costs for those production levels. However, you mentioned a table above, which I cannot see. Could you please provide the table or some information from it about the cost of production at those levels?

To find the marginal cost of increasing production from 3,000 to 5,000 units, we need to look at the table that contains the production quantities and their corresponding costs. Unfortunately, you have not provided the table or any other relevant information for me to reference. Without that information, I cannot calculate the marginal cost.

However, in general, the marginal cost is calculated by finding the difference in total cost when the production quantity increases by one unit. If you have the table or data that shows the total cost for different production quantities, you can find the marginal cost by subtracting the total cost at 3,000 units from the total cost at 5,000 units. Then, divide the difference in cost by the difference in units to find the marginal cost per unit.