Professional Documents
Culture Documents
101-Managerial Economics - MBA
101-Managerial Economics - MBA
101-Managerial Economics - MBA
Limited Unlimited
Resources Needs
Introduction – Why study economics?
– What to produce,
– How to produce,
– For whom to produce,
– How to ration the commodity over time,
– How to provide for the maintenance and growth of the system.
Resources (Factors of Productions)
– Land (Rent),
– Labour (Wage),
– Capital (Interest),
– Entrepreneur (Profit).
A simple schematic model of economy
The Production Possibility Frontier
Economics
Managerial Economics
Branches of Economics
• Micro economic analysis and Macro economic analysis are two
main approaches of economic analysis:
Business Management and Economics
1 2 n n
t
PV 1
2
n
t
(1 r ) (1 r ) (1 r ) t 1 (1 r )
n
t n
TRt TCt
Value of Firm t
t
t 1 (1 r ) t 1 (1 r )
Limitations/Alternative Theories of Firm
• Sales maximization
– Adequate rate of profit
• Satisficing behavior
Profit – Definitions of Profit
• Demand is the most crucial element for the existence, survival and
profitability of firm.
• Willingness to purchase
• Ability to purchase
• At a particular price
• At a particular point of time
• Your choices likely look different from those of your friends or your
parents.
• For all of you, however, the decision about what to buy and how much of
it to buy depends on the following factors:
• You will note in Figure that quantity (q) is measured along the horizontal
axis and price (P) is measured along the vertical axis.
Features of Demand Curve
• The data in Table 3.1 show that at lower prices, Alex buys more gasoline;
at higher prices, she buys less.
• When price rises, quantity demanded falls, and when price falls, quantity
demanded rises. Thus, demand curves always slope downward.
• The utility you gain from a second ice cream cone is likely to be less than
the utility you gained from the first, the third is worth even less, and so
on.
• Qd f ( P, M , PR , , Pe , N )
2-31
General Demand Function
Qd a bP cM dPR e fPe gN
2-32
General Demand Function
– Qd = f(P)
• Law of Demand
2-34
Inverse Demand Function
• Traditionally, price (P) is plotted on the vertical axis & quantity
demanded (Qd) is plotted on the horizontal axis
2-35
Derivation of Demand Curve
2-38
Demand Schedule
2-39
A Demand Curve
2-40
Inverse Demand Functions
• Solving this direct demand equation for P gives the inverse demand
equation
Graphing Demand Curves
• Change in demand
2-43
Supply
2-44
Supply
Qs f ( P, PI , Pr , T , Pe , F )
2-45
General Supply Function
2-46
General Supply Function
Qs = f(P)
2-48
Inverse Supply Function
P = f(Qs)
2-49
Supply Schedule
2-51
A Supply Curve
2-52
Graphing Supply Curves
• Change in supply
– Occurs when one of the other variables, or
determinants of supply, changes
– Supply curve shifts rightward or leftward
2-53
Shifts in Supply
2-54
From Individual Demand to Market Demand
•
Position of Market Supply Curve
• The position and shape of the market supply curve depends on the
positions and shapes of the individual firms’ supply curves from which it
is derived.
• The market supply curve also depends on the number of firms that
produce in that market.
• If firms that produce for a particular market are earning high profits, other
firms may be tempted to go into that line of business.
• When new firms enter an industry, the supply curve shifts to the right.
• When firms go out of business, or “exit” the market, the supply curve shifts
to the left.
Market Equilibrium
2-63
Market Equilibrium
2-64
The Algebra of Market Equilibrium
• For simplicity, we assume that the demand and supply curves
are linear relationships between price and quantity.
• That is, there is only one equilibrium price, which we call P*.
• This implies:
2-73
Answer
• Market equilibrium:
Demand = Supply
2-74
Changes in Equilibrium
S
S’
S’’
B
P A •
’
P •
P’’ •C
D’
Q
Q Q’ Q’’
S
S’
S’’
A
P •
B
P
’
•
P’’ •C D
D’
Q
Q’ Q Q’’
P
S’’
S’
S
P’’ • C
B
P
’
•
A
P •
D’
Q
Q’’ Q Q’
S’’
S’
S
P’’ •C A
P •
P • B
’
D
D’
Q
Q’’ Q’ Q
• They instead must pay the market price, which is lower than the
maximum amount consumers are willing to pay (except for the
last unit sold in market equilibrium).
• Total consumer surplus for 400 units is equal to the area below demand and
above market price over the output range 0 to 400 units.
• In Figure 2.6, total consumer surplus for 400 units is measured by the area
bounded by the trapezoid uvsr.
• One way to compute the area of trapezoid uvsr is to multiply the length of
its base (the distance between v and s) by the average height of its two sides
(uv and rs): 400 X (($80 + $40)/2) = $24,000.
• Of course you can also divide the trapezoid into a triangle (1/2 base X vertical
height) and a rectangle (width X height), and then you can add the two areas
to get total consumer surplus.
• Either way, the total consumer surplus when 400 units are purchased is
$24,000.
Consumer Surplus
• Now let’s measure total consumer surplus in market equilibrium.
• At point A in Figure 2.6, 800 units are bought and sold at the market-
clearing price of $60.
• The area of the red-shaded triangle uvA in Figure 2.6 gives the total
consumer surplus in market equilibrium.
• Thus, $32,000 measures the net gain to all the consumers who voluntarily
buy 800 units from producers at $60 per unit.
• For each unit supplied, the difference between the market price
received and the minimum price producers would accept to
supply the unit is called producer surplus.
• In Figure 2.6, let’s consider the producer surplus for the 400th
unit supplied when market price is $60.
Producer Surplus
• The total producer surplus for 400 units is the sum of the
producer surplus of each of the 400 units.
• Thus, total producer surplus for 400 units is the area below
market price and above supply over the output range 0 to 400.
Producer Surplus
• In Figure 2.6, total producer surplus for 400 units is measured by the
area of the trapezoid vwts. By multiplying the base vs (= 400) times
the average height of the two parallel sides vw ($40) and st ($20).
• You can verify that the area of trapezoid vwts is $12,000 [= 400 X ($40
+ $20)/2].
• Do not be confused by the fact that the price ceiling is below the
initial equilibrium price; the term ceiling refers to that price
being the highest permissible price in the market.
• The result is that there is not enough of the good to satisfy all
consumers willing and able to purchase it at the price ceiling.
Price Ceiling
• If the equilibrium price is above the price floor, the price floor
has no effect on the market.
• When price floors are above the equilibrium price, there will
be consumers with willingness to-pay that is more than
production costs but is less than the price floor.
• The dollar value of the lost social welfare is given by the blue
triangle in Figure 2–12.
• However, when the price floor applies to a product, the deadweight loss
can be even greater.
• One possibility is that the government purchases and discards the surplus.
• This is the case with price floors on many agricultural products, such as
cheese.
• This type of price floor, where the government purchases the surplus, is
called a price support.
Price Floors
• Revisiting Figure 2–12, the quantity of unsold products is given by the
distance from G to F, and this surplus is the amount of product the
government purchases at the price floor.
• This additional deadweight loss is the cost of producing the product that
was discarded.
• Inputs
– Land, Labor, Capital and Entrepreneur
• Types of Inputs:
• Fixed Inputs
• Variable Inputs
TP
Marginal Product MPL = L
TP
Average Product APL = L
Law of Diminishing Returns & Stages of Production
• The law of diminishing marginal returns states that as the use of an input increases
in equal increments (with other inputs fixed), a point will eventually be reached at
which the resulting additions to output decrease.
• When the labor input is small (and capital is fixed), extra labor adds considerably to
output, often because workers are allowed to devote themselves to specialized tasks.
• Eventually, however, the law of diminishing marginal returns applies: When there
are too many workers, some workers become ineffective and the marginal product
of labor falls.
• The law of diminishing marginal returns usually applies to the short run when at
least one input is fixed. However, it can also apply to the long run.
Optimal Use of Variable Input
• Now the question arises, if we identified that a rational firm will operate only in
Stage – II of production, then how much labour (the variable input in our
example) should the firm used to maximize profits?
• The answer is – the firm should employ an additional unit of labour as long as
the extra revenue generated (MPR) from the sale of the output produced
exceeds the extra cost of hiring the unit of labour (MRC).
• Or where:
1 2 3 4=2x3 5
Units of Labour Marginal Product Marginal Revenue Marginal Revenue Marginal Resource
(MP) =P Product Cost = w
2.5 4 Rs. 100 Rs. 400 Rs. 200
3.0 3 100 300 200
3.5 2 100 200 200
4.0 1 100 100 200
4.5 0 100 1 200
Marginal Revenue Product & Marginal Resource Cost of Labour
• The firm should hire 3.5 units of labour because that is where MRP of labour is
equal to MRC of labour = 200.
Production with Two Variable Inputs
• Isoquants can be derived from the table given in the next slide..
Isoquants when inputs are perfect substitutes
Isoquants when inputs are complementary
Substitution among Inputs
• With two inputs that can be varied, a manager will want to consider substituting
one input for another.
• The slope of each isoquant indicates how the quantity of one input can be traded
off against the quantity of the other, while output is held constant.
• When the negative sign is removed, we call the slope the marginal rate of
technical substitution (MRTS).
• The marginal rate of technical substitution of labor for capital is the amount by
which the input of capital can be reduced when one extra unit of labor is used, so
that output remains constant.
• Like the MRS (Marginal Rate of substitution, slope of IC) , the MRTS is always
measured as a positive quantity:
Marginal rate of technical substitution (MRTS)
• The slope of the isoquant at any point measures the marginal rate of
technical substitution—the ability of the firm to replace capital with labor
while maintaining the same level of output.
Isocost lines represent all combinations of two inputs that a firm can
purchase with the same total cost.
C wL rK C Total Cost
w Wage Rate of Labor ( L)
C w
K L r Cost of Capital ( K )
r r
Optimal Input combination
Returns to Scale
Q = f(hL, hK)
• Product Innovation
• Process Innovation
• Product Cycle Model
• Just-In-Time Production System
• Competitive Benchmarking
• Computer-Aided Design (CAD)
• Computer-Aided Manufacturing (CAM)
Cost of Production & Estimation of Cost
Function
Measuring Cost: Which Costs Matter?
• Accounting Cost – Actual expenses plus depreciation charges for capital
equipment.
• Consider a firm that owns a building and therefore pays no rent for
office space. Does this mean the cost of office space is zero? The firm’s
managers and accountant might say yes, but an economist would
disagree.
• A sunk cost is usually visible, but after it has been incurred it should
always be ignored when making future economic decisions.
• Thus it should not be included as part of the firm’s economic costs. The
decision to buy this equipment may have been good or bad. It doesn’t
matter. It’s water under the bridge and shouldn’t affect current decisions.
Measuring Cost: Which Costs Matter?
• Fixed Costs – Cost that does not vary with the level of output and that
can be eliminated only by shutting down.
• Because fixed cost does not change as the firm’s level of output changes,
marginal cost is equal to the increase in variable cost or the increase in
total cost that results from an extra unit of output.
• Observe in Figure 7.1 (a) that fixed cost FC does not vary with output—
it is shown as a horizontal line at $50.
• The total cost curve TC is determined by vertically adding the fixed cost
curve to the variable cost curve.
• Because fixed cost is constant, the vertical distance between the two
curves is always $50.
The Shapes of the Cost Curves
• Figure 7.1 (b) shows the corresponding set of marginal and average variable
cost curves.
• Because total fixed cost is $50, the average fixed cost curve AFC falls
continuously from $50 when output is 1, toward zero for large output.
• Whenever marginal cost lies below average cost, the average cost curve
falls.
• Whenever marginal cost lies above average cost, the average cost curve
rises.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Output Total Fixed Total Variable Total Cost Average Fixed Average Average Marginal
Cost Cost Cost Variable Cost Total Cost Cost
0 6000 0 6000 - - - -
• Since the average physical product of labour (AP or Q/L) usually rises first,
reaches a maximum, and then falls, it follows that the AVC curve first falls,
reaches a minimum, and then rises.
• Since AVC is U-shaped, the ATC curve is also U-shaped. The ATC curve
continues to fall after the AVC begins to rise as long as the decline in the AFC
exceeds the rise in AVC.
MC Curves are ‘U’ shaped – why?
• The ‘U’ shape of MC can similarly be explained as follows:
• Since the marginal product of labour first rises, reaches a maximum, and then
falls, it follows that the MC curve first falls, reaches a minimum, and then rises.
• Thus, the rising portion of the MC curve reflects the operation of the law of
diminishing returns.
Long-run cost curves
• Long-run total cost (LTC): The firms LTC is derived from the firm’s expansion
path and shows the minimum long-run total costs of producing various levels of
output.
• The firm’s long-run average (LAC = LTC/Q) and marginal cost (LMC =
d(LTC)/d(Q) curves are then derived from the long-run total cost curve.
Long-run average and marginal cost curves
• Long-run Average cost (LAC) curves shows the lowest average cost of
producing each level of the output when the firm can build most appropriate
plant to produce each level of output.
• The figure in next slide (Fig-8.4) is based on the assumption that the firm can
build only four scales of plant (given SAC1, SAC2, SAC3 & SAC4).
• While the bottom panel of the figure is based on the assumption that the firm
can build many more or an infinite number of scales of plant.
• The top panel suggests that the minimum average cost of producing 1 unit of
output (1Q) is Rs. 80.00 and results when the firm operates the scale of plant
given by SAC1(the smallest scale of plant possible) at point A’’.
Long-run average and marginal cost curves
Long-run average and marginal cost curves
Long-run average and marginal cost curves
Average Cost of Unit Q = C = aQb
Estimation Form: log C = log a + b Log Q
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis and Operating Leverage
Cost-Volume-Profit Analysis
Total Revenue = TR = (P)(Q)
Breakeven Volume TR = TC
% Q( P AVC )
DOL
%Q Q( P AVC ) TFC
Empirical Estimation of Cost Functions
Empirical Estimation
Functional Form for Short-Run Cost Functions
TVC aQ bQ 2 cQ 3 TVC a bQ
TVC a
AVC a bQ cQ 2
AVC b
Q Q
MC a 2bQ 3cQ 2 MC b
Empirical Estimation of Cost Functions
Market Structure and Pricing Practices
Market Structure
Less Competitive
Perfect Competition
Monopolistic Competition
More Competitive
Oligopoly
Monopoly
Perfect Competition
QD 625 5 P QD QS QS 175 5 P
625 5 P 175 5 P
450 10P
P $45
QD 625 5 P 625 5(45) 400
QS 175 5 P 175 5(45) 400
Perfect Competition: Short-Run Equilibrium
Economic Profit = 0
Monopoly
• Sources of Monopoly
– Control of an essential input to a product
– Patents or copyrights
– Economies of scale: Natural monopoly
– Government franchise: Post office
Monopoly: Short-Run Equilibrium
Some characteristics
Types of Oligopoly
• Economies of scale
• Large capital investment required
• Patented production processes
• Brand loyalty
• Control of a raw material or resource
• Government franchise
• Limit pricing
Measures of Oligopoly
• Concentration Ratios
– 4, 8, or 12 largest firms in an industry
• Collusion
– Cooperation among firms to restrict competition in order to
increase profits
• Market-Sharing Cartel
– Collusion to divide up markets
• Centralized Cartel
– Formal agreement among member firms to set a monopoly
price and restrict output
– Incentive to cheat
Centralized Cartels: Price and Quantity fixation
Price Leadership
• Implicit Collusion
• Followers
– Take market price as given and behave as perfect competitors
Price Leadership: Dominant firm
Profitability and efficiency implications of oligopoly
Porter’s strategic framework
• The firm will tend to earn higher than average industry profits if:
– It does not face much of a threat from substitute products and from entry of potential
competitors
– Buyers and suppliers do not exert much market power over the firm
– There is low intensity of rivalry and competition among existing firms.
Porter’s competitive framework
Profitability and efficiency implications of oligopoly
Porter’s strategic framework
• The greater the differentiation and uniqueness of the product the firm
sells and the greater the brand loyalty of consumers for the firm’s
product, the higher is the mark-up that the firm can apply and the greater
are the profits.
• Example:
– There are few and imperfect substitute for Microsoft’s Windows Operating System
and this allows a high profit for the incumbent.
– limited threat of new entry into the field because of high cost of doing so.
– There are barriers that Microsoft raised by preinstalling Windows in all new
computers sold
– Similarly, airlines increase the cost of switching to other airlines for regular
passengers by establishing frequent-flier programmes.
Sales Maximization Model
• The argument that objective of the firm is to maximize profit or the value
of the firm has been criticized as being much narrow and unrealistic and
broader theories have been proposed.
• The managers of a firm with monopoly power must also worry about
the characteristics of demand.
• Even if they set a single price for the firm’s output, they must obtain at
least a rough estimate of the elasticity of demand to determine what that
price should be.
• All the pricing strategies that we will examine have one thing in
common:
– Although the firm would then be profitable, its managers might still
wonder if they could make it even more profitable.
Pricing methods and consumer surplus
• How can the firm capture the consumer surplus (or at least part of it) from its
customers in region A, and perhaps also sell profitably to some of its potential
customers in region B?
• For example, some customers in the upper end of region A would be charged the
higher price P1, some in region B would be charged the lower price P2, and some
in between would be charged P*.
• The problem, of course, is to identify the different customers, and to get them to
pay different prices.
Capturing consumer Surplus
Price discrimination
Price Discrimination
Why?
– The firm must have some monopoly power (i.e. control over price)
– Price elasticity of demand must be different in different markets
– The markets must be separable.
3rd Degree Price Discrimination
3rd Degree Price Discrimination
– Predatory Dumping
– Sporadic Dumping
• To see how this strategy works, think about how an electronics company might price
new, technologically advanced equipment, such as high-performance digital cameras
or LCD television monitors.
• In Figure 11.7, D1 is the (inelastic) demand curve for a small group of consumers who
value the product highly and do not want to wait to buy it (e.g., photography buffs
who want the latest camera).
• D2 is the demand curve for the broader group of consumers who are more willing to
forgo the product if the price is too high.
• The strategy, then, is to offer the product initially at the high price P1, selling mostly
to consumers on demand curve D1.
• Later, after this first group of consumers has bought the product, the price is lowered
to P2, and sales are made to the larger group of consumers on demand curve D2
Peak-load Pricing
• Marginal cost is also high during these peak periods because of capacity
constraints.
• The firm sets marginal revenue equal to marginal cost for each period, obtaining the
high price P1for the peak period and the lower price P2 for the nonpeak period, selling
corresponding quantities Q1and Q2.
• This strategy increases the firm’s profit above what it would be if it charged one price
for all periods.
• It is also more efficient: The sum of producer and consumer surplus is greater because
prices are closer to marginal cost.
• The efficiency gain from peak-load pricing is important. If the firm were a regulated
monopolist (e.g., an electric utility), the regulatory agency should set the prices P1 and
P2 at the points where the demand curves, D1 and D2, intersect the marginal cost
curve, rather than where the marginal revenue curves inter-sect marginal cost.
– It requires consumers to pay a fee up front for the right to buy a product.
Consumers then pay an additional fee for each unit of the product they wish to
consume.
• The owner of the park must decide whether to charge a high entrance fee
and a low price for the rides or, alternatively, to admit people for free but
charge high prices for the rides.
– The two-part tariff has been applied in many settings: tennis and golf clubs (you
pay an annual membership fee plus a fee for each use of a court or round of golf)
– the rental of large mainframe computers (a flat monthly fee plus a fee for each
unit of processing time consumed);
Transfer Pricing
• The rapid rise of modern large-scale enterprises has been accompanied by
decentralization and the establishment of semiautonomous profit centers.
• Example – If a steel company owned its own coal mine, the questions
would arise as to how much coal the coal mine should sell to the parent
company and how much to the outsiders, and at what prices.
– Similarly, the parent steel company must also determine how much
coal to purchase from its own coal mine and how much from the
outsiders, and at what prices.
Transfer Pricing
• These are some of the most complex and troublesome questions
that arise in the operation of large-scale enterprises today.
– An external market for the transfer or intermediate product does not exist.
– When it exist and is perfectly competitive
– When it exist and is imperfectly competitive
Transfer Pricing (with no external market)
Transfer Pricing (with perfectly competitive market)
Transfer Pricing (with imperfectly competitive market)
Pricing in Practice Cost-Plus Pricing
• Price = P = C (1 + m)
Pricing in Practice Optimal Markup
1
MR P 1
EP
EP
P MR
E 1
p
MR C
EP
P C
E 1
p
Pricing in Practice Optimal Markup
EP
P C
E 1
p
P C (1 m)
EP
C (1 m) C
E 1
p
EP
m 1
EP 1
Incremental Analysis in Pricing
• That is, as firm should change the price of a product or its output;
introduce a new product, or a new version of a given product,
accept a new order, and so on.
• Tying
• Bundling
• Prestige Pricing
• Price Lining
• Skimming
• Value Pricing
• Price Matching
Economics of Information