THE FIRM AND ITS CUSTOMERS: PART 1

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
12 MONOPOLY CHAPTER.
Advertisements

MBMC Monopoly and Other Forms of Imperfect Competition.
Part 7 Monopoly Many markets are dominated by a single seller with market power The economic model of “pure monopoly” deals with an idealized case of a.
Harcourt, Inc. items and derived items copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. Monopoly u A monopoly is the sole seller of its product.  its product does not.
Ch. 12: Monopoly Causes of monopoly
Departures from perfect competition
Ch. 12: Monopoly  Causes of monopoly  Monopoly pricing and output determination  Performance and efficiency of single-price monopoly and competition.
David Bryce © Adapted from Baye © 2002 Power of Rivalry: Economics of Competition and Profits MANEC 387 Economics of Strategy MANEC 387 Economics.
Monopoly KW Chap. 14. Market Power Market power is the ability of a firm to affect the market price of a good to their advantage. In declining order.
Eco 101 Principles of Microeconomics Consumer Choice Production & Costs Market Structures Resource Markets
12 MONOPOLY CHAPTER.
12 MONOPOLY CHAPTER.
Chapter 8 Managing in Competitive, Monopolistic, and Monopolistically Competitive Markets Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
Monopoly ECO 230 J.F. O’Connor. Market Structure Perfect Competition –participants act as price takers and cannot by individual behavior affect market.
Copyright © 2004 South-Western Monopoly vs. Competition While a competitive firm is a price taker, a monopoly firm is a price maker. A firm is considered.
The Four Conditions for Perfect Competition
MONOPOLY Why do monopolies arise? Why is MR < P for a monopolist?
Competitive Markets. Content Perfect competition Competition and resource allocation Dynamics of competition and competitive market processes.
LONG RUN COMPETITIVE EQUILIBRIUM. One Price Monopoly Versus Perfect Competition.
CHAPTER 8 Managing in Competitive, Monopolistic, and Monopolistically Competitive Markets McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
10 Monopoly The price of monopoly is upon every occasion the highest which can be got. ADAM SMITH Monopoly The price of monopoly is upon every occasion.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education Canada Monopoly 13 CHAPTER.
Monopoly CHAPTER 12. After studying this chapter you will be able to Explain how monopoly arises and distinguish between single-price monopoly and price-discriminating.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7: Monopoly, Oligopoly, and Monopolistic Competition.
PPA 723: Managerial Economics Lecture 15: Monopoly The Maxwell School, Syracuse University Professor John Yinger.
Unit 10 MARKET POWER: Monopoly and Monopsony. Outcomes Define monopoly market power Identify sources of monopoly power Determine the social cost of monopoly.
MONOPOLY 12 CHAPTER. Objectives After studying this chapter, you will able to  Explain how monopoly arises and distinguish between single-price monopoly.
Monopoly Single seller – 100% of the market (may exert same market power with >25%) Barriers to entry keep competition to a minimum Firms control price.
Monopoly and Oligopoly
Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power
Five Sources Of Monopoly
Monopoly and Other Forms of Imperfect Competition
What almost always happens to quantity demanded as price drops?
Monopoly Single seller – 100% of the market (may exert same market power with >25%) Barriers to entry keep competition to a minimum Firms control price.
Chapter 9 Monopoly © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Chapter 15 Monopoly.
Monopolistic Competition
Monopoly and imperfect competition
CHAPTER 14 Monopoly.
Comparison of Market Structures
Monopolistic Competition
Monopoly.
Chapter 9 Monopoly © 2006 Thomson/South-Western.
Chapter Ten Monopolies.
Monopoly A firm is considered a monopoly if . . .
Monopolistic Competition
Pure Monopoly Chapter 11 11/8/2018.
Monopoly © 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a.
ECN 201: Principles of Microeconomics
Lecture 14 Monopolistic competition
Industrial Organization
UNIT 7 MARKET STRUCTURE.
THE ECONOMY: THE CORE PROJECT
CHAPTER 10 OUTLINE 10.1 Monopoly 10.2 Monopoly Power 10.3 Sources of Monopoly Power 10.4 The Social Costs of Monopoly Power 10.5 Monopsony 10.6 Monopsony.
Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power
Ch. 13: Monopoly Causes of monopoly
LIPSEY & CHRYSTAL ECONOMICS 12e
THE FIRM AND ITS CUSTOMERS: PART 2
Prepared by Robert F. Brooker, Ph.D. Copyright ©2004 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.Slide 1 Market Structure Perfect.
Monopoly © 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a.
Monopoly © 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a.
Market Structures I: Monopoly
Chapter Twenty-Five Monopoly Behavior.
16 Monopoly CLICKER QUESTIONS Notes and teaching tips: 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20,
Pure Monopoly Chapter 10.
Economics: Principles in Action
Perfect Competition What conditions must exist for perfect competition? What are barriers to entry and how do they affect the marketplace? What are prices.
THE FIRM AND ITS CUSTOMERS
Perfect Competition What conditions must exist for perfect competition? What are barriers to entry and how do they affect the marketplace? What are prices.
Monopoly A monopoly is a single supplier to a market
Presentation transcript:

THE FIRM AND ITS CUSTOMERS: PART 1 Unit 7 THE FIRM AND ITS CUSTOMERS: PART 1

OUTLINE Introduction Production: Key concepts Pricing and Production Decisions: Profit maximization Gains from Trade Price Elasticity of Demand

A. Introduction

In all developed countries, most people work for large firms. A firm’s success and ability to grow partly depends on its pricing and production decisions.

The Context for This Unit Interactions between firms and workers determine wages, which are part of a firm’s production costs. Other key decisions for firms include choosing product prices and quantities to produce. How do these decisions depend on demand and production costs? How can policies affect the division of surplus between firms and customers? (Unit 6)

This Unit Model of interactions between customers and profit-maximising firms producing differentiated products Factors that affect the firm’s choice of price and quantities produced (costs, price elasticity, market power) Surplus: Measuring the gains from trade

B. Production: Key concepts

Describing production: Economies of scale A firm’s costs depend on its scale of production and the type of production technology it has. Large firms can be more profitable than small firms because of technological and/or cost advantages. If inputs increase by a given proportion, and production… Then the technology exhibits… Increases more than proportionally Increasing returns to scale in production Economies of scale Increases proportionally Constant returns to scale in production Increases less than proportionally Decreasing returns to scale in production Diseconomies of scale

Economies of scale: Examples Economies of scale include: Cost advantages – Large firms can purchase inputs on more favourable terms, because they have greater bargaining power when negotiating with suppliers. Demand advantages - Network effects (value of output rises with number of users e.g. software application) However, large firms can also suffer from diseconomies of scale, e.g. additional layers of bureaucracy due to too many employees. Thus, outsourcing may be cheaper than to manufacture it within the firm

C. Pricing and Production Decisions: Profit maximization

Demand curve To make pricing and production decisions, managers also need to know the demand for the firm’s product. Demand curve = quantity that consumers will buy at each price. In theory, firms can estimate the demand curve for their product by surveying a large number of consumers.

Isoprofit curve (Economic) Profit = Total revenue – Total costs (Costs include the opportunity cost of capital) Isoprofit curves show price- quantity combinations that give the same profit. The shape of a firm’s cost function affects the shape of their isoprofit curves.

Firm maximizes profits by choosing point where MRS = MRT Profit maximisation The firm’s constrained optimization problem is analogous to the consumer’s from Unit 3. Demand curve = Firm’s feasible frontier (slope = MRT) Isoprofit curves = Firm’s indifference curves (slope = MRS) Firm maximizes profits by choosing point where MRS = MRT

D. Gains from Trade

Measuring surplus Consumer surplus (CS) = the total difference between willingness-to-pay and purchase price Producer surplus (PS) = the total difference between revenue and marginal cost (Profit = PS – fixed costs) Total surplus = Consumer surplus + Producer surplus = Total gains from trade (shaded area)

Deadweight loss Deadweight loss = a loss of total surplus relative to a Pareto efficient allocation (unexploited gains from trade) Total surplus is highest when Demand = Marginal Cost (Pareto efficient allocation) Starting at point E, we can only have a Pareto improvement to point F if there is price discrimination.

E. Price Elasticity of Demand

Price elasticity of demand A firm’s pricing decision depends on the slope of the demand curve. Price elasticity of demand = degree of responsiveness (of consumers) to a price change. MR is always positive when demand is elastic.

Price elasticity and profits A firm’s markup (profit margin as a proportion of the price) is inversely proportional to its price elasticity of demand. Elastic demand Inelastic demand

Price elasticity and policy The effect of good-specific taxes depends on the elasticity of demand for those goods. Governments raise more tax revenue by levying taxes on price-inelastic goods. Several countries e.g. Denmark and France have introduced taxes on unhealthy foods – primarily to reduce consumption, not to raise revenue.

Price elasticity and market power A firm’s profit margin depends on the elasticity of demand, which is determined by competition: Demand is relatively inelastic if there are few close substitutes. Firms with market power have enough bargaining power to set prices without losing customers to competitors. Competition policy (limits on market power) can be beneficial to consumers when firms collude to keep prices high.

Market power: Monopolies Example of market power: A firm selling specialized products. They face little competition and hence have inelastic demand. They can set price above marginal cost without losing customers, thus earning monopoly rents. This is a form of market failure because there is deadweight loss. A natural monopoly arises when one firm can produce at lower average costs than two or more firms e.g. utilities. Instead of encouraging competition, policymakers may put price controls or make these firms publicly owned.

Both of these tactics can shift the firm’s demand curve. Gaining market power Firms can increase their market power by: Innovating – Technological innovation can allow firms to differentiate their products from competitors’ e.g. hybrid cars. Firms that invent a completely new product may prevent competition altogether through patents or copyright laws. Advertising – Firms can attract consumers away from competing products and create brand loyalty. Advertising can be more effective than discounts in increasing demand for a brand. Both of these tactics can shift the firm’s demand curve.

Summary 1. Model of a firm with market power (price-setter) Price and production decisions depend on a firm’s demand curve and cost function. Profit-maximising choice where MRS = MRT Or, in terms of revenue and costs, where MR = MC 2. Surplus measures the gains from trade Total surplus = Producer surplus + Consumer surplus Deadweight loss when allocation not Pareto efficient Price elasticity of demand affects surplus and profits

In the next part Model of supply and demand interactions under perfect competition (no market power) Determinants of competitive equilibrium Similarities and differences between price-taking and price-setting firms