(7) Chapter 11 - Managerial Decisions in School Book
(7) Chapter 11 - Managerial Decisions in School Book
Managerial Decisions in
Competitive Markets
11-1
Perfect Competition
11-2
Demand for a Competitive
Price-Taker
• Demand curve is horizontal at price determined by intersection of
market demand & supply
• Perfectly elastic
• Marginal revenue equals price
• Demand curve is also marginal revenue curve (D = MR)
• Can sell all they want at the market price
• Each additional unit of sales adds to total revenue an amount equal to
price
11-3
Demand for a Competitive
Price-Taking Firm (Figure 11.2)
Price (dollars)
Price (dollars)
P0 P0
D = MR
0 Q0 0
Quantity Quantity
Profit = π = TR - TC
11-5
Profit-Maximization in the
Short Run
• In the short run, the firm incurs costs that are:
• Unavoidable and must be paid even if output is zero
• Variable costs that are avoidable if the firm chooses to shut
down
• In making the decision to produce or shut down, the firm
considers only the (avoidable) variable costs & ignores
fixed costs
11-6
Profit Margin (or Average Profit)
• Level of output that maximizes total profit occurs at a
higher level than the output that maximizes profit margin
(& average profit)
• Managers should ignore profit margin (average profit) when
making optimal decisions
( P ATC )Q
Average profit
Q Q
P ATC Profit margin
11-7
Short-Run Output Decision
11-8
Short-Run Output Decision
• Total revenue cannot cover total avoidable cost (TR < TVC) or,
equivalently, P AVC
• Produce zero output
• Lose only total fixed costs
• Shutdown price is minimum AVC
11-9
Fixed, Sunk,& Average Costs
• Fixed, sunk, and average costs are irrelevant in the
production decision
• Fixed costs have no effect on marginal cost or minimum
average variable cost—thus optimal level of output is
unaffected
• Sunk costs are forever unrecoverable and cannot affect current
or future decisions
• Only marginal costs, not average costs, matter for the optimal
level of output
11-10
Profit Maximization: P = $36
(Figure 11.3)
11-11
Profit Maximization: P = $36
(Figure 11.3)
11-12
Profit Maximization: P = $36
(Figure 11.4)
Break-even point
Break-even point
11-13
Short-Run Loss Minimization:
P = $10.50 (Figure 11.5)
Profitcost
Total = $3,150
= $17 -x$5,100
300
= -$1,950
= $5,100
11-14
Summary of Short-Run
Output Decision
11-15
Short-Run Supply Curves
11-16
Short-Run Producer Surplus
11-17
Computing Short-Run
Producer Surplus (Figure 11.6)
Producer surplus TR TVC
$9 110 $5.55 110
$990 $610
$380
Or, equivalently,
Producer surplus = Area of trapezoid edba in Figure 11.6
= Height Average base
80 110
($9 $5)
2
$380
$380 multiplied by 100 firms ($380 100) $38,000 11-18
Short-Run Firm & Industry Supply
(Figure 11.6)
11-19
Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium
11-20
Long-Run Cost
Figure 10.8 illustrates economies and diseconomies of scale.
11-21
Long-Run Profit-Maximizing
Equilibrium (Figure 11.7)
11-22
Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium
(Figure 11.8)
11-23
Long-Run Industry Supply
• Long-run industry supply curve can be flat (perfectly
elastic) or upward sloping
• Depends on whether constant cost industry or increasing cost
industry
• Economic profit is zero for all points on the long-run
industry supply curve for both types of industries
11-24
Long-Run Industry Supply
11-25
Long-Run Industry Supply for a
Constant Cost Industry (Figure 11.9)
11-26
Long-Run Industry Supply for an
Increasing Cost Industry (Figure 11.10)
Firm’s output
11-27
Economic Rent
• Payment to the owner of a scarce, superior resource in
excess of the resource’s opportunity cost
• In long-run competitive equilibrium firms that employ such
resources earn zero economic profit
• Potential economic profit is paid to the resource as economic rent
• In increasing cost industries, all long-run producer surplus is paid to
resource suppliers as economic rent
11-28
Economic Rent in Long-Run
Competitive Equilibrium (Figure 11.11)
11-29
Profit-Maximizing Input Usage
• Profit-maximizing
level of input usage
produces exactly
that level of output
that maximizes
profit
11-30
Profit-Maximizing Input Usage
• Marginal revenue product (MRP)
• MRP of an additional unit of a variable input is the
additional revenue from hiring one more unit of the
input
TR
MRP P MP
L
• If choose to produce:
• If the MRP of an additional unit of input is greater
than the price of input, that unit should be hired
• Employ amount of input where MRP = input price
11-31
Profit-Maximizing Input Usage
• Average revenue product (ARP)
• Average revenue per worker
TR
ARP P AP
L
11-32
Profit-Maximizing Input Usage
11-33
Profit-Maximizing Labor Usage
(Figure 11.12)
11-34
Profit-Maximizing Labor Usage
(Figure 11.12)
11-35
Implementing the
Profit-Maximizing Output Decision
11-36
Implementing the
Profit-Maximizing Output Decision
• Step 3: Check shutdown rule
• If P AVCmin then produce
• If P < AVCmin then shut down
• To find AVCmin substitute Qmin into AVC
equation b
Qmin
2c
AVCmin a bQmin cQ 2
min
11-37
Proof of AVC Min
AVC a bQ cQ 2
AVC
at min 0
Q
AVC
b 2cQ 0
Q
b
Qmin
2c
11-38
Implementing the
Profit-Maximizing Output Decision
P = SMC
P = a + 2bQ* + 3cQ*2
11-39
Implementing the Profit-Maximizing
Output Decision
• Step 4: If P AVCmin, find output where
P = SMC
• Set forecasted price equal to estimated
marginal cost & solve for Q*
P a 2bQ 3cQ * *2
b b 4ac
2
Q
*
11-40
2c
11-40
Implementing the
Profit-Maximizing Output Decision
• Step 5: Compute profit or loss
• Profit = TR – TC
= P x Q* - AVC x Q* - TFC
= (P – AVC)Q* - TFC
11-42
Profit & Loss at Beau Apparel
(Figure 11.13)
11-43