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Lecture One – i.) Introduction ii.) Profits and Markets

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1 Lecture One – i.) Introduction ii.) Profits and Markets
Managerial Economics Professor Chris Wimmer December

2 Course Description Intended to use economics and apply it to business decisions Main goal – Profit! Score of the game! Course Text: Managerial Economics by Christopher Thomas and S. Charles Maurice Course info on:

3 Background It will be assumed that students know some basic economics and calculus But old topics will be review quickly before going on to new areas

4 Tentative Marking Scheme
Final exam – 50% Quizzes – 2 quizzes = 20%  40% Tutorial Participation Cannot miss tutorials!!

5 Outline of Class Rules Be on time Don’t sleep in class
Raise your hand to talk There are no dumb questions Never laugh at people No cheating Turn off cell. Make calls on break If you are absent, let me know ahead

6 Testing Rules No cell phones!
Only calculator, pens, ruler, and student card No talking or side beside other people Not doing these things you will be failed!

7 Economics A working definition
Text: A study of how a society manages its resources. Interactions of consumers and producers. Study of the market Scarcity causes value and need for strategic allocation

8 Managerial Economics & Theory
Managerial economics applies microeconomic theory to business problems How to use economic analysis to make decisions to achieve firm’s goal of profit maximization Microeconomics Study of behavior of individual economic agents

9 Economic Cost of Resources
Opportunity cost of using any resource is: What firm owners must give up to use the resource Market-supplied resources Owned by others & hired, rented, or leased Owner-supplied resources Owned & used by the firm

10 Opportunity costs Definition: Opportunity cost is whatever is given up (forsaken) to get an item or service or anything else you want to do or enjoy If you are have to take time off work to go to the dentist, what is the opportunity cost of a $100 visit.

11 Total Economic Cost Total Economic Cost Explicit Costs Implicit Costs
Sum of opportunity costs of both market-supplied resources & owner-supplied resources Explicit Costs Monetary payments to owners of market-supplied resources Implicit Costs Nonmonetary opportunity costs of using owner-supplied resources

12 Economic Cost of Using Resources (Figure 1.1)
+ =

13 Types of Implicit Costs
Opportunity cost of cash provided by owners Equity capital Opportunity cost of using land or capital owned by the firm Opportunity cost of owner’s time spent managing or working for the firm

14 Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit
Economic profit = Total revenue – Total economic cost = Total revenue – Explicit costs – Implicit costs Accounting profit = Total revenue – Explicit costs Accounting profit does not subtract implicit costs from total revenue Firm owners must cover all costs of all resources used by the firm Objective is to maximize economic profit

15 Maximizing the Value of a Firm
Price for which it can be sold Equal to net present value of expected future profit Risk premium Accounts for risk of not knowing future profits The larger the risk, the higher the risk premium, & the lower the firm’s value

16 Maximizing the Value of a Firm
Maximize firm’s value by maximizing profit in each time period Cost & revenue conditions must be independent across time periods Cannot be reliant on previous periods production Value of a firm =

17 Separation of Ownership & Control
Principal-agent problem Conflict that arises when goals of management (agent) do not match goals of owner (principal) Moral Hazard When either party to an agreement has incentive not to abide by all its provisions & one party cannot cost effectively monitor the agreement

18 Corporate Control Mechanisms
Require managers to hold stipulated amount of firm’s equity Increase percentage of outsiders serving on board of directors Finance corporate investments with debt instead of equity

19 Price-Takers vs. Price-Setters
Price-taking firm Cannot set price of its product Price is determined strictly by market forces of demand & supply Price-setting firm Can set price of its product Has a degree of market power, which is ability to raise price without losing all sales

20 What is a Market? A market is any arrangement through which buyers & sellers exchange goods & services Markets reduce transaction costs Costs of making a transaction other than the price of the good or service

21 Markets and Economic Activity
Markets are where trade takes place between a buyer an seller. These days it doesn’t have to be a physical place Market economies let the ‘invisible hand’ or market forces allocate its resources. This is said to produce the highest level of efficiency Producers and consumers interact in a market to establish the price of goods or services and quantity produced. Any impediments are said by most economists to reduce efficiency and total welfare

22 Market Structures Market characteristics that determine the economic environment in which a firm operates Number & size of firms in market Degree of product differentiation Likelihood of new firms entering market

23 Perfect Competition Large number of relatively small firms
Undifferentiated product No barriers to entry

24 Monopoly Single firm Produces product with no close substitutes
Protected by a barrier to entry

25 Monopolistic Competition
Large number of relatively small firms Differentiated products No barriers to entry

26 Oligopoly Few firms produce all or most of market output
Profits are interdependent Actions by any one firm will affect sales & profits of the other firms

27 Globalization of Markets
Economic integration of markets located in nations around the world Provides opportunity to sell more goods & services to foreign buyers Presents threat of increased competition from foreign producers

28 Homework Read Chapter one Do Technical problems: 1, 2, 3, 4
Do Applied Problems: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. 7 Tomorrow we start chapter 2


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