Global Economics for Managers - Chapter 13-17 Review
Variable costs in the short-run
Wages, transportation costs, raw material costs, manufactured inputs. Costs that increase as more output is created
Duopoly
an oligopoly consisting of only two firms
If marginal costs equal average total costs
average total costs are minimized
A firm whose average total cost continually declines at least to the quantity that could supply the entire market is known as a
natural monopoly
As the number of sellers in an oligopoly becomes very large
The quantity of output approaches the socially efficient quantity
Can an monopolistically competitive firm earn profit in the long run or the short run?
The short run only!
In the short run, what is total cost?
The sum of both fixed and variable costs.
What does the total cost curve look like?
The total cost curve goes up with quantity per output.
What is the policy makers response to the prisoners dilemma?
They encourage firms to compete instead of cooperate Anti-trust laws Penalties Moral Appeals
The competitive firm's long-run supply curve is that portion of the marginal cost curve that lies above average
Total Cost
Profit
Total Revenue - Total Cost
How does a firm in perfect competition decide to shut down in the long run?
Total Revenue < Total Cost Price < Average Total Cost MR = MC Maximized Profit
How does a firm in perfect competition shut down in the short-run?
Total Revenue is < Total Variable Costs Price < Avg Variable Costs
Total Cost (TC)
Total fixed cost (TFC) + Total Variable Cost
What is a price taker?
A company that has to accept the price that the market sets for a good. They have no influence over setting the price.
Opportunity Cost
All of the things that must be forgone to acquire that item.
Marginal Cost
Change in total cost / Change in quantity
Total Cost
Comprises variable costs when we refer to the long run, since there are no fixed costs.
Fixed Costs
Costs that do not change when you change production - rent, electricity, salaries for workers
When a monopolist increases the amount of input that it produces and sells, average revenue
Decreases and marginal revenue increases
If government regulation sets the maximum price for a natural monopoly equal to its marginal cost, then the natural monopolist will....
Earn economic losses
In the long run, if a very small factory were to expand its scale of operations, it is likely that it would initially experience
Economies of scale
monopolist's profits with price discrimination will be
Higher than if the firm charged just one price because the firm will capture more consumer surplus
What are the characteristics of monopolistic competition
Hybrid of perfect competition and monopoly Market described as imperfect competition Many sellers Product differentiation Free entry/exit into market
marginal cost
Increase in total cost per additional unit of good produced.
How do perfect competition and monopoly differ?
Influence of Price/Quantity? Perfect Competition: Price Taker Monopoly: Price maker Size of firm to market? Perfect Competition: Small Monopoly: 100% of the market Demand Curve Shape? Perfect competition: Horizonal Monopoly: Downward sloping Market Decisions: Perfect Competition: Only Quantity Monopoly: Quantity and Price
How are perfect competition and monopolies the same?
Maximize profits, Marginal Revenue = Marginal Cost, both can earn economic profits in the long run
Are there fixed costs in the long-run?
No, only cost that matters is the average cost (TC/output)
In perfect competition, is the demand curve perfectly elastic or inelastic?
Perfectly elastic -
In a Duopoly
Price is determined by market demand i.e. the prisoners dilemma - if one firm increases production (Q), this will impact the price for the whole market. We vs. Me.
What does the curve on a production function graph do?
Production increases at a decreasing rate, so the line flattens at the top with quantity of output and the number of workers hired.
Total Revenue
Quantity of output the firm produces multiplied by the price at which it sells its output.
Oligopoly Characteristics
Small group of sellers Offer similar or identical products Tension between cooperation and self interest Game theory
What characterizes a monopoly?
Sole seller of a product or service No close substitutes Price maker Barriers to entry: Examples: Diamond mines (limited supply), Drug Patents (government regulations), The production process: natural monopolies.
What is the conclusion we can make from the prisoner's dilemma?
That many people will choose their own self interests vs. the collective good of the group. Illustrates why cooperation is difficult to maintain even when it is mutually beneficial.
Short-run
That period of time when at least one input is fixed and cannot be changed.
explicit costs
The actual payments a firm makes to its factors of production and other suppliers.
How do firms in perfect competition
The gap between total revenue and total cost, or at the point where marginal revenue equals marginal cost (this is how much of the product they should make to maximize profit).
Marginal product of labor
The increase in output that results from employing one additional unit of labor
Economies of scale
When long-run average total cost declines as output increases.
Diseconomies of scale
When long-run average total cost rises as output increases
Monopolistic Graph: The efficient price and quantity are represented by point
Where marginal cost crosses demand curve (downslope)
Are there fixed costs in the short run?
Yes!
If, as the quantity produced increases, a production function first exhibits increasing marginal product and later diminishing marginal product, the corresponding marginal-cost curve will
be U-shaped
When a firm has a natural monopoly, the firm's average total cost is
downward sloping
In the long run a company that produces and sells popcorn incurs total costs of $1,050 when output is 90 canisters and $1,200 when output is 120 canisters. The popcorn company exhibits
economies of scale because average total cost is falling as output rises
Accounting profit is equal to total revenue minus
explicit costs
economies of scale
factors that cause a producer's average cost per unit to fall as output rises
average fixed cost
fixed cost divided by the quantity of output produced
If marginal revenue exceeds marginal cost, a monopolist should
increase output. WHY?? Because when MR > MC for a monopolist, that means they can produce extra goods and continue to make a profit.
Public ownership of natural monopolies
tends to be inefficient
implicit costs
input costs that do not require an outlay of money by the firm
Explicit costs
input costs that require an outlay of money by the firm
Average total cost is increasing whenever
marginal cost is greater than average total cost
When a profit-maximizing firm in a monopolistically competitive market charges a price higher than marginal cost
the firm may be incurring economic losses
concentration ratio
the percentage of the market's total output supplied by its four largest firms
Diminishing Marginal Product
the property whereby the marginal product of an input declines as the quantity of the input increases
Production function
the relationship between the quantity of inputs used to make a good and the quantity of output of that good
Economic profit is equal to total revenue minus
the sum of implicit and explicit costs
A natural Monopoly occurs when
there are economies of scale over the relevant range of output
Average total cost equation
total cost/quantity
Use the following information to answer question. Madelyn owns a small pottery factory. She can make 1,000 pieces of pottery per year and sell them for $100 each. It costs Madelyn $20,000 for the raw materials to produce the 1,000 pieces of pottery. She has invested $100,000 in her factory and equipment: $50,000 from her savings and $50,000 borrowed at 10 percent (assume that she could have loaned her money out at 10 percent, too). Madelyn can work at a competing pottery factory for $40,000 per year. The accounting profit at Madelyn's pottery factory is...
$75,000 Explicit Costs: $ 20,000 for materials $ 50,000 x .10 = $5,000 100,000-25,000 = $75,000
Why do monopolistic competitive firms need to market their products or services?
Because they need to advertise in order to let consumers know about their product and why they should buy it. There is so much competition they need to stand out in the crowd and gain recognition.
In monopolistic competition, where does the MR curve lie below on the graph?
Below the demand curve. Price is always going to more than Marginal Revenue.
tying agreement
Buyer is required to purchase one product in order to get another product
Ms. Joplin sells colored pencils. The colored-pencil industry is competitive. Ms. Joplin hires a business consultant to analyze her company's financial records. The consultant recommends that Ms. Joplin increase her production. The consultant must have concluded that , at her current level of production, Ms. Joplin's
Marginal revenues exceed her marginal cost If the marginal revenue exceeds the marginal cost, then the firm can increase profit by producing one more unit of output.
Perfect competition or a "competitive market"
Market with many buyers and sellers (consumers and firms). Homogeneous products - the same Buyers and sellers are price takers Easily enter and exit market
Long-run
The period of time when all inputs and therefore cost can vary.
Monopolistic competition
a market structure in which many companies sell products that are similar but not identical.
The efficient scale of production is the quantity of output that minimizes
average total cost
When marginal costs are below average total costs
average total costs are falling
When a monopolist produces an additional unit, the marginal revenue generated by that unit must be
below the price because the price effect outweighs the output effect.
What is the equation for marginal cost?
change in total cost / change in quantity
Average marginal cost
cost of each additional unit of output
Variable Costs
costs that vary with the quantity of output produced
product-variety externality
surplus consumers get from the introduction of new products
opportunity cost
whatever must be given up to obtain some item