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Study Guide – Unit II (Chapters 18, 20-24, 26) Big Picture: The Microeconomics of Product (and Resource) Markets extends the discussion of supply and demand to include “price elasticity,” a measure of consumers’ and producers’ responses to price changes; it then analyzes markets in which government sets maximum or minimum prices. It also examines the behavior of producers with regard to the influence of production costs, product demand, product prices and revenue on setting levels of output. Next, it examines the characteristics of the four basic market models, pure competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly and pure monopoly. Finally, it looks at wage determination and the role labor supply, demand and productivity play in determining wages and earnings. Big Ideas: Elasticity measures the degree to which price changes affect quantity demanded or quantity supplied: Price elasticity of demand measures consumer response to price changes, while price elasticity of supply measures producers’ ability to respond to price changes: o If consumers are relative sensitive to price changes, demand is elastic; if they are relatively unresponsive, demand is inelastic. o Elasticity of supply depends on the ease of shifting resources between alternative uses. The amount of a product a firm is willing to supply depends on production costs—the prices and productivity of the resources essential to production—and the price the product will bring in the market. Production costs include variable, fixed and marginal costs. In the long run, as firms get larger, they can profit from economies of scale. Industries are grouped into four models based on their market structures: o Pure competition: a large number of independent firms producing a standardized product, in which no single firm can influence market price. o Pure monopoly: a sole producer of a commodity for which there are no close substitutes, in which market entry is effectively blocked. Except for regulated monopolies, pure monopolies have negative economic effects o Monopolistic competition: many firms offering elastic products, differentiated through advertising; these firms have limited control over price, and entry is relatively easy. The goal of these firms is to shift demand within a niche market to the right, resulting in higher prices and a larger market share. o Oligopoly: characterized by the presence of few firms, each having a significant faction of the market. Barriers to entry exist and collusion is possible. Oligopolists emphasize nonprice competition through advertising, since they usually have the money. Not all pages will be covered, though you should be familiar with all terms listed below. There is a critical relationship between labor productivity and real wages. Wage differentials are explained by the differences among worker characteristics, job characteristics and lack of worker mobility. Essential Questions (some or all of these questions will be on the Unit Exam): The laws of supply and demand act on producers’ and consumers’ decisions in the marketplace. Yet, different products and/or services vary in their sensitivity to changes in price: o Summarize the main determinants of price elasticity of demand and supply; o Analyze why governments apply excise taxes to liquor and gasoline and not on restaurant meals or basketball shoes; o Using the ideas of consumer surplus and producer surplus, explain why competitive markets are efficient—e.g., why below- or above-equilibrium levels of output are inefficient, according to these two sets of ideas. The text claims that “Costs exist because resources are scarce, productive, and have alternative uses. When society uses a combination of resources to produce a particular product, it forgoes all alternative opportunities to use those resources for other purposes. The measure of the economic cost, or opportunity cost, of any resource used to produce a good is the value or worth the resource would have in its best alternative use” [emphasis in original]. Answer two (2) of the following: o Explain why, in the long run, there are no fixed costs and why, similarly, the law of diminishing returns doesn’t apply; o Using the concepts of economies and diseconomies of scale, explain the shape of a firm’s long-run ATC curve, and what bearing the shape of the long-run ATC curve can have on the structure of an industry; o Describe why business managers consider marginal cost (MC) a better indicator of a firm’s efficiency than total cost (TC) or average total cost (ATC). “Pure monopoly exists when a single firm is the sole producer of a product for which there are no close substitutes.” Answer two (2) of the following: o Describe the major barriers to entry into an industry, explaining how each barrier can foster either monopoly or oligopoly; o Assume that a pure monopolist and a purely competitive firm have the same unit costs; contrast the two with respect to (a) price, (b) output, (c) profits, (d( allocation of resources, and (e) impact on the distribution of income; o Some propose that natural monopolists should be allowed to determine their profitmaximizing outputs and prices and then government should tax their profits away and distribute them to consumers in proportion to their purchases from the monopoly. Explain why this proposal may or may not be as socially desirable as requiring monopolists to equate price with marginal cost or average total cost. o Explain why unregulated, non-natural monopolies are “bad” for society. “Most markets in the U.S. economy fall between the two poles of pure competition and pure monopoly….Most firms have distinguishable rather than standardized products and have some discretion over the prices they charge. Competition often occurs on the basis of price, quality, location, service, and advertising. Entry to most real-world industries ranges from easy to very difficult but is rarely completely blocked”: o Compare the elasticity of the monopolistic competitor’s demand with that of a pure competitor and a pure monopolist; o Explain why monopolistically competitive firms frequently prefer non-price competition to price competition; o Explain why there is so much advertising in monopolistic competition and oligopoly: how such advertising helps consumers and promotes efficiency, and why it might be excessive at times. “Technological advance is evidenced by new and improved goods and services and new and improved production or distribution processes.” And today, many economists consider technical advances as “an integral part of capitalism,” not a “random, external force to which the economy adjusted.” Answer two (2) of the following: o Based on the following table, answer the questions that follow: Amount of R&D (millions) $10 20 30 40 50 60 Expected Rate of Return on R&D (%) 16 14 12 10 8 6 If the interest-rate cost of funds is 8 percent, what will be the optimal amount of R&D spending for this firm? Explain why $20 million of R&D spending will not be optimal. Why won’t $60 million be optimal either? o Explain how research by universities and government affects innovators and technological advance, and why some university researchers might be becoming more like entrepreneurs and less like “pure scientists.” o Make a case that neither pure competition nor pure monopoly is conducive to a great deal of R&D spending and innovation—why oligopoly might be more favorable to R&D spending and innovation than either pure competition or pure monopoly. Unit Summary: Price elasticity of demand is a measure of the responsiveness or sensitivity of quantity demanded to changes in the price of a product—e.g., the degree to which a change in price affects quantity demanded... When quantity demanded is relatively responsive to a price change, demand is said to be elastic; when it is relatively unresponsive, demand is said to be inelastic: o Demand is elastic when the percentage change in quantity is greater than the percentage change in price; o Demand is inelastic when the percentage change in quantity is less than the percentage change in price; o o Demand elasticity is not the same at all prices; One way to test the demand elasticity of a product is the total revenue test: When demand is elastic, a decrease in price will increase total revenue and an increase in price will decrease total revenue; When demand is inelastic, a decrease in price will decrease total revenue and an increase in price will increase total revenue; o The price elasticity of demand for a product depends on the number of good substitutes for the product, its relative importance in the consumer’s budget, whether it is a necessity or a luxury and the period of time under consideration. Price elasticity of supply is a measure of the sensitivity of quantity supplied to changes in the price of a product: o Supply will tend to be more price inelastic in the short run than in the long run. Price ceilings and price floors set by gov’t prevent price from performing its rationing function— that is, reach equilibrium: o A price ceiling results in a shortage of the product, may bring about formal rationing by gov’t and a black market, and causes a misallocation of resources; o A price floor creates a surplus of the product, and may induce gov’t to take measures either to increase the demand for or to decrease the supply of the product. In money terms, the costs of using resources are an opportunity cost: the payments a firm must make to the owners of resources to attract these resources away from their best alternative opportunities for earning incomes. In the short run the firm cannot change the size of its plant and can vary its output only by changing the quantities of the variable resources it employs. In the long run, all the resources employed by the firm are variable resources, and therefore all its costs are variable costs. As the firm expands its output by increasing the size of its plant, average total cost tends to fall at first because of the economies of large-scale production, but total cost begins to rise because of the diseconomies of large-scale production. The price a firm charges and its output of that product depend only on the demand for and the cost of producing it, but on the character of the market. The models of the markets are pure competition, pure monopoly, monopolistic competition and oligopoly. A firm selling its product in a purely competitive industry cannot influence the price and is a price taker. A firm will maximize profits when marginal revenue (MR) equals marginal costs (MC) at an output level where price is greater than average total cost. Pure monopoly: a market structure in which a single firm sells a product for which there are no close substitutes: o Monopoly firms are price makers; o In monopolies, the following barriers to entry exist: Economies of scale; Legal restrictions through patents and licenses; Ownership or control of essential resources; Pricing and other practices, such as price cuts, ad campaigns, producing excess capacity. o Pure monopoly has the following effects on the economy: They charge a higher price and produce less output than in a more competitive industry; It contributes to income inequality in the economy; The legal fees, lobbying and public-relations expenses to obtain and /or maintain monopoly status add nothing to output, but increase costs; It’s not likely to be technologically progressive, since there’s no incentive to do so; o Policy options to deal with monopoly include use of antitrust laws and breakup of firms, and the regulation of price, output and profits. Monopolistic competition, found in many industries, has the following characteristics: o The relatively large number of sellers means that each has a small market share, there is no collusion, and firms take actions that are independent of each other; o They exhibit product [nonprice] differentiation: different attributes, services to customers, brand names, packaging, etc. o Entry into or exit from the industry is relatively easy; o In addition to price competition, monopolistically competitive firms also use nonprice competition in the form of product differentiation, new-product development and advertising. o Product differentiation means consumers will be offered a wide range of types, styles, brands, and quality variants of a product; Oligopolies are composed of a few firms that dominate an industry and sell a standardized or differentiated product: o They control price, though there is also mutual interdependence, because firms must consider the reactions of rivals to any changes; o Barriers to entry, plus mergers, help explain the existence of oligopoly; o Concentration of the industry can be measured by either concentration ratios or the Herfindahl index. o Oligopoly often leads to overt or covert collusion among firms to fix prices or coordinate pricing; overt collusion can include cartels. o These firms often avoid price competition, but since they have greater financial resources, they do engage in nonprice competition through product development and advertising. Technological advance involves the development of new and improved products and new and improved ways of producing and distributing products. Technological advance involves a three-step process: o Invention – the discovery of product or process, which is encouraged by the granting of patents; o Innovation – the first successful commercial use of a new product or method or the creation of a new form of business; this can involve innovation of products (product innovation) or methodologies (process innovation); o Diffusion – the spread of an innovation through imitation or copying. The optimal amount of R&D (research and development) depends on the marginal benefit and marginal cost of R&D activity; the greatest profit from R&D will be reached when the marginal benefit equals the marginal costs: o Sources for financing firms’ R&D activities are banks, bond issues, retained earnings, venture capital, etc. A firm’s marginal cost of these funds is the interest rate; o A firm’s marginal benefit of R&D is its expected profit (or return) from the last dollar spent on R&D; o The optimal amount of R&D in a marginal-cost and marginal-benefit analysis is the point where the interest-rate cost-of-funds (marginal-cost) curve and the expected-rateof-return (marginal-benefit) curve intersect. R&D expenditures can be justified only if the expected return equals or exceeds the cost of financing it; o Firms may use a fast-second strategy by imitating the innovator, rather than spending R&D money on invention, resulting in the imitation problem; o Taking the lead in innovation could offer firms several protections and potential advantages: Patents limitation imitation and protect profits; Copyrights and trademarks reduce direct copying; The time lags between innovation and diffusion give innovators time to make substantial economic profits; There is potential purchase of innovating firm by larger firm at high price; Brand names may provide major marketing asset. o Technological advances, however, do enhance economic efficiency. The wage rate received by a specific type of labor depends on the demand for the supply of that labor and the competitiveness of the market in which that type of labor is hired. Differences in wages exist for three reasons: o Workers are not homogeneous and have different skills, abilities and training; o Jobs vary in difficulty and attractiveness, meaning that higher wages may be necessary either to attract skilled labor or to compensate for less desirable aspects of some jobs; o Workers are not perfectly mobile, and some areas may simply pay more. Unit II Terms: Price elasticity of demand Midpoint formula Elastic demand Inelastic demand Unit elasticity Perfectly inelastic demand Perfectly elastic demand Total revenue (TR) Total-revenue test Price elasticity of supply Market period Short run Long run Cross elasticity of demand Income elasticity of demand Consumer surplus Producer surplus Efficiency losses (“deadweight losses”) Economic (opportunity) cost Explicit costs Implicit costs Normal profit Economic profit Total product (TP) Marginal product (MP) Average product (AP) Law of diminishing returns Fixed costs Variable costs Total cost Average fixed cost (AFC) Average variable cost (AVC) Average total cost (ATC) Marginal cost (MC) Economies of scale Diseconomies of scale Constant returns to scale Minimum efficient scale (MES) Natural monopoly Pure competition Pure monopoly Monopolistic competition Oligopoly Imperfect competition Price taker Average revenue Total revenue Marginal revenue Break-even point MR = MC rule Short-run supply curve Long-run supply curve Constant-cost industry Increasing-cost industry Decreasing-cost industry Productive efficiency Allocative efficiency Barriers to entry Simultaneous consumption Network effects X-inefficiency Rent-seeking behavior Price discrimination Socially optimal price Fair-return price Monopolistic competition Product differentiation Nonprice competition Excess capacity Oligopoly Homogeneous oligopoly Differentiated oligopoly Strategic behavior Mutual interdependence Concentration ratio Inter-industry competition Import competition Herfindahl index Game-theory model Collusion Kinked-demand curve Price war Cartel Tacit understandings Price leadership Technological advance Very long run Invention Patent Innovation Product innovation Process innovation Diffusion Start-ups Venture capital Interest-rate cost-of-funds curve Expected-rate-of-return curve Optimal amount of R&D Imitation problem Fast-second strategy Inverted-U theory of R&D Creative destruction Wage rate Nominal wage Real wage Purely competitive labor market Monopsony Minimum wage Wage differentials Marginal revenue productivity Noncompeting groups Human capital Compensating differences Incentive pay plan Short-Answer Questions—some or all will be used as short-answer questions on the exam: Summarize the price elasticity of demand in terms of the change in total revenue when price changes. Summarize the factors which together determine the price elasticity of demand for a product? Explain what determines the price elasticity of supply of an economic good or service? What if the government institutes a price floor? Illustrate the economic consequences with a graph. Judge what type of adjustments a firm can make in the long run that it cannot make in the short run Distinguish between a fixed cost and a variable cost. Summarize what is meant by economies of scale and some of the more important factors that explain its existence? Assess the causes diseconomies of large scale? Explain to a small company why economies of scale are a barrier to entry? Cite examples of how patents and licenses create barriers to entry. Define product differentiation, and design a method by which a product can be differentiated? Identify the ways in which product differentiation and product development may offset the economic inefficiency associated with monopolistic competition. What are the essential characteristics of an oligopoly, and how does oligopoly differ from pure competition, pure monopoly and monopolistic competition? Explain the price leadership model and the leadership tactics oligopolistic firms use. Use a marginal-cost and marginal-benefit graph to illustrate how the firm decides on the optimal amount of research and development. Support the notion that a firm’s revenues and profits can be increased through product innovation. Design a rationale by which innovation might create or reduce monopoly.