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Producer & Consumer Decisions Unfinished Business Executive MBA 512 Session #11 November 17, 2016 Brian Greber 1 2 Costs and rational decisions •Average fixed cost •Understand effect of scale on “leveraging” costs at time of making an investment – once made, its sunk! •Average variable cost •Key controllable cost on a day-to-day basis; • key to shut down economics •Produce as long as P > AVC •Average total cost •Standard for “cost accounting”; approximation of profit •A result, not a decision criteria! •Marginal cost •Key to determining profit maximizing production/sales levels •Competitive firm Produce to where P=MC 3 “Rationale Product Pricing” MC Shift # 1 2 3 # Trailers Cost / shift/ Monthly made/Shift/ month Production month $32,000 $35,000 $36,000 200 175 160 200 375 535 FC 10000 10000 10000 VC 32000 67000 103000 TC 42000 77000 113000 AFC AVC 50 27 19 ATC 160 179 193 9 People Shift AC 210 205 211 0 Person 6 People – 10%-100% higher 160 200 225 4 Law of Supply •Other things equal, as price rises the quantity supplied rises •Corollary: as quantities produced increase, the price required in the market must rise. Why might this be for individual firms? For the Market as a whole? Individual Supply Supply curve “maps” the price that it would take to entice the producer to supply one more unit; it is “minimum acceptable price” P 6 S1 P $5 Qs 60 4 50 3 35 2 20 1 5 Price (per bushel) 5 4 3 2 1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Q 70 Quantity Supplied (bushels per week) 5-5 5 Individual Supply P 6 S3 S1 P $5 Qs 60 4 50 3 35 2 20 1 5 Price (per bushel) 5 S2 4 3 2 1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Q 70 Quantity Supplied (bushels per week) 6 Theoretic Construct 2 Supplier World Supplier 1 “Market” Supplier 2 P P 25 P S2 20 S1 S = 5 10 15 + 10 20 30 Q 10 20 30 Q 10 20 30 Q 8 A Supply/Cost Curve Example •Use an engineering build up, treating each increment of supply available in the market as a “marginal supply” •This may be turning a plant on or off, opening /closing a new supply reserve, etc. •Examples from the web: http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Strategy/Strategic_Thinking/Enduring_ideas_The_industry_cost_curve_2343 http://www.minecost.com/curves.htm Firm 1 Firm's Annual Fixed Costs 50,000 Plant A Plant's Annual Fixed Costs 27,000 2 125,000 A 20,000 B 30,000 C 10,000 A 15,000 B 12,000 C 20,000 A 12,000 B 12,000 3 4 175,000 200,000 Shift # a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c a b c Output per Shift 300 250 210 550 450 350 500 450 400 350 350 350 650 500 350 600 450 400 450 350 250 750 550 450 650 550 500 Cost per Production Cost Per Unit Shift Increment Per Shift 14,000 1.A.a 46.67 14,500 1.A.b 58.00 15,000 1.A.c 71.43 19,000 2.A.a 34.55 21,000 2.A.b 46.67 23,000 2.A.c 65.71 17,000 2.B.a 34.00 18,000 2.B.b 40.00 19,000 2.B.c 47.50 14,000 2.C.a 40.00 14,000 2.C.b 40.00 14,000 2.C.c 40.00 18,000 3.A.a 27.69 20,000 3.A.b 40.00 22,000 3.A.c 62.86 16,500 3.B.a 27.50 17,500 3.B.b 38.89 19,000 3.B.c 47.50 17,000 3.C.a 37.78 18,000 3.C.b 51.43 18,000 3.C.c 72.00 29,000 4.A.a 38.67 30,000 4.A.b 54.55 31,000 4.A.c 68.89 24,000 4.B.a 36.92 26,000 4.B.b 47.27 29,000 4.B.c 58.00 9 A Supply/Cost Curve Example Output per Shift 600 650 500 550 650 450 750 450 450 350 350 350 500 300 450 550 400 400 350 550 250 500 350 350 450 210 250 Cost per Production Cost Per Unit Increment Per Shift Shift 27.50 3.B.a 16,500 27.69 3.A.a 18,000 34.00 2.B.a 17,000 34.55 2.A.a 19,000 36.92 4.B.a 24,000 37.78 3.C.a 17,000 38.67 4.A.a 29,000 38.89 3.B.b 17,500 40.00 2.B.b 18,000 40.00 2.C.a 14,000 40.00 2.C.b 14,000 40.00 2.C.c 14,000 40.00 3.A.b 20,000 46.67 1.A.a 14,000 46.67 2.A.b 21,000 47.27 4.B.b 26,000 47.50 2.B.c 19,000 47.50 3.B.c 19,000 51.43 3.C.b 18,000 54.55 4.A.b 30,000 58.00 1.A.b 14,500 58.00 4.B.c 29,000 62.86 3.A.c 22,000 65.71 2.A.c 23,000 68.89 4.A.c 31,000 71.43 1.A.c 15,000 72.00 3.C.c 18,000 Cum Volume 600 1250 1750 2300 2950 3400 4150 4600 5050 5400 5750 6100 6600 6900 7350 7900 8300 8700 9050 9600 9850 10350 10700 11050 11500 11710 11960 Price 27.50 27.69 34.00 34.55 36.92 37.78 38.67 38.89 40.00 40.00 40.00 40.00 40.00 46.67 46.67 47.27 47.50 47.50 51.43 54.55 58.00 58.00 62.86 65.71 68.89 71.43 72.00 A Supply/Cost Curve Example 80.00 70.00 3.C.c 1.A.c 4.A.c 2.A.c 3.A.c 60.00 1.A.b 4.B.c 4.A.b 50.00 Price Per Unit 10 3.C.b 1.A.a 4.B.b 2.A.b 2.B.c 3.B.c 40.00 4.B.a 3.C.a 4.A.a 3.B.b 2.C.c 3.A.b 2.C.a 2.C.b 2.B.b 2.B.a 2.A.a 30.00 3.B.a 3.A.a 20.00 10.00 0.00 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 Cumulative Market Quanity 10000 12000 14000 11 Mining Example http://www.snl.com/Sectors/MetalsMining/MineEconomics.aspx Supply Shifts P 6 P $5 Qs 60 4 50 3 35 2 20 1 5 Price (per bushel) 5 S3 S1 Change in Quantity Supplied S2 4 3 2 Change in Supply 1 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Q 70 Quantity Supplied (bushels per week) 12 13 What causes supply to shift?* •Number of sellers •Anything that shifts marginal costs: •Resource prices •Technology •Taxes and subsidies •Prices of other goods (opportunity costs) •Producer expectations * Shift means more/less cost for any quantity, or produce more/less at any price? 14 Producer Profits Producer Profits S = Cost on each incremental unit of Production Price P*Q = Revenue P1 Producer Costs Q1 Quantity 15 Sensitivity of supply •Note, the shape is measuring the responsiveness of cost to changes in quantity supplied •Inversely, the shape reflects the responsiveness of quantity supplied to changes in price •What economists call “price elasticity” of demand EsX= Percentage Change in Quantity Supplied of Product X Percentage Change in Price of Product X 16 Cross Price elasticity of supply EsXY= Percentage Change in Quantity Supplied of Product X Percentage Change in Price of Product Y •Elasticity > 0, production complements ….. Examples? •Elasticity < 0, production competitors …. Examples? 17 Price Elasticity of Supply Extreme cases Examples? • Perfectly inelastic supply • Perfectly elastic supply • Unitary Elasticity p S p p S Q Price Elast of Supply = 0 S Q Price Elast of Supply = Inf. Q Price Elast of Supply = 1 18 What influences slope of supply •Shape of curve for inputs •Diminishing returns •Time •Market period •Perfectly inelastic supply •Short run •Fixed plant size •Long run •Adjustable plant size •Supply more elastic 19 Law of Diminishing Returns (1) Units of the Variable Resource (Labor) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 (2) Total Product (TP) 0 10 25 45 60 70 75 75 70 ] ] ] ] ] ] ] ] (3) Marginal Product (MP), Change in (2)/ Change in (1) 10 15 20 15 10 5 0 -5 Increasing Marginal Returns Diminishing Marginal Returns Negative Marginal Returns (3) Average Product (AP), (2)/(1) 10.00 12.50 15.00 15.00 14.00 12.50 10.71 8.75 Total Product, TP Law of Diminishing Returns 30 TP 20 10 0 Marginal Product, MP 20 20 1 2 3 Increasing Marginal Returns 4 5 6 7 8 9 Negative Marginal Returns Diminishing Marginal Returns 10 AP 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 MP 9 Diminishing Returns Yields Increasing Costs Production Curves Average Product and Marginal Product AP MP Quantity of Labor MC Cost (Dollars) 21 AVC Cost Curves Quantity of Output 22 Fundamentals of market Analysis • Know the number of potential consumers • Know the sensitivity of consumption to changes in price • Identify and track the factors that can shift demand and/or change price sensitivity • Know all potential sources of supply • Know the cost of each increment of potential supply • Estimate the responsiveness of supply quantity to changes in price • Identify and track the factors that can shift supply and/or change price sensitivity THINK MARGINALLY, CLEARLY THINK THRU MARKET VS SHORT VS LONG RUN Market Outcomes Executive MBA 512 Session #11, November 17, 2016 Brian Greber 23 Today’s Objectives • Review the classical “competitive” market and why it is believed to be “good” • Enable a structured approach to thinking through trends, cycles, and fluctuations in market prices and quantities. • Discuss exceptions to the competitive markets and their implications. • Place these concepts into a strategic planning framework. 24 25 Putting D&S together •The meeting of the minds that balances price and quantity •What happens if you instill quotas, price ceilings, or floors? Market: Broad Definition An actual or nominal place where forces of demand and supply operate, and where buyers and sellers interact (directly or through intermediaries) to trade goods, services, or contracts or instruments, for money or barter. Markets include mechanisms or means for (1) determining price of the traded item, (2) communicating the price information, (3) facilitating deals and transactions, and (4) effecting distribution. The market for a particular item is made up of existing and potential customers who need it and have the ability and willingness to pay for it. Read more: http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/market.html#ixzz2iTw EbPzz 26 Efficient Markets • Economists’ “Holy Grail Is Efficiency” • A solution is more efficient if we can make one party better off without making others worse off. • Optimal efficiency is achieved when we can no longer make one party better off without making the other worse off, • Efficiency assumes that the “gainer” could share his/her gains with a “loser” to preserve their position, but does not require. • Efficient Markets • Allow informed meeting of the minds on prices and quantities by buyers and sellers that have reasonable alternatives and inconsequential impacts on individuals outside of the transaction. • The Invisble Hand… 27 5-27 Efficient Market System Characteristics • Private property – Yields investment, innovation, exchange, maintenance, & growth. • Freedom of enterprise and choice – Scalability, Entry and exit • Competition -- options – More “checks and balances” • Information supports pursuit of self-interest – Creates “checks and balances” • Markets and prices – Coordinating mechanism for millions of trade-offs • Monetary and banking system – Insures medium of exchange – Provides investment capital 28 Pure Competition ? “Competition is the life force of the free market system. Competition between sellers keeps prices from rising too high. Competition between buyers keeps prices from falling too low. The resulting inbetween price is perfect in the sense that it gets everyone to do the right thing.” Mathews. 29 Consumers receive value greater than costs! Price (Per Bag) Consumer Surplus Price = $8 P1 D Q1 Quantity (Bags) 30 Producers receive profits = P-C! Price (Per Bag) S Producer Surplus Price = $8 P1 Q1 Quantity (Bags) 31 Competitive Equilibrium is Good! S Price (Per Bag) Consumer Surplus Equilibrium Price = $8 P1 Producer Surplus D “Equilibrium is a condition or state in which economic conditions are balanced”. Sharma and Pathan Q1 Quantity (Bags) 32 Equilibrium “P + Q remain unchanged from their equilibrium values in the absence of external influence” . Sharma and Pathan How long do you think that is? 33 What happens when S&D shifts Effects of Changes in Both Supply and Demand Change in Supply Change in Demand Effect on Equilibrium Price Effect on Equilibrium Quantity 1. Increase Decrease Decrease Indeterminate 2. Decrease Increase Increase Indeterminate 3. Increase Increase Indeterminate Increase 4. Decrease Decrease Indeterminate Decrease 34 35 Failure 1: Limited Competition Barriers to Entry •Economies of scale •Legal barriers to entry •Patents •Licenses •Ownership or control of essential resources •Capital intensity •Pricing and other strategic barriers to entry 36 Market Structure (Models) Market Structure Continuum & exit Demand to firm Perfecty elastic – Price taker P+ Q Volatile Nearly Perfectly elastic – Price taker P+ Q Volatile, “Mark-up” P’s “Marketing leakage” Typically “kinked” P+ Q Sticky, Inefficient Downward sloping = market D P+ Q Static, P High,37Q low Inefficient Prone to Regulation Monopoly Fundamentals • Why do monopolies exist? • Natural • Regulatory • Monopoly Problem. • Outcome (assuming no cost advantage): • Lower Quantity • Higher Price • Disproportionate allocation of market value to producer profits • Inefficiency compounded when monopolist price discriminates • Monopoly vs Monopsony • One seller versus one buyer 38 Monopoly Problem to an Economist Pure Monopoly Purely Competitive Market S=MC MC b Pm P=MC= Minimum ATC Pc c Pc a D D MR Qc Qm Qc Pure competition is efficient Monopoly is inefficient 39 7-39 5-39 Oligopoly Fundamentals • A few large producers – enabled by entry barriers • Four-firm concentration ratio • Needs to be more than 40% • Half of U.S. manufacturing • Collusion is mutually beneficial • Enhances profit • Incentive to cheat • Sans collusion gives rise to “kinked demand curve” • Raise price, others don’t follow, big loss in share • Lower price, others follow to preserve share • In either case, prices and quantities are sticky and inefficient. 40 Oligopoly: Kinked Demand Can be complicated – simple version … Price and Costs Rivals Ignore Price Increase D2 P0 e Rivals Match Price Decrease D1 0 Q0 Quantity MR1 41 7-41 5-41 Oligopoly: Price Outcomes • • Price Wait for the “first to move” then follow Less frequent price changes than competitive markets Competitive Market Oligopoly Market Price Time Time 5-42 42 Pricing Examples Pulp – a relatively concentrated industry Lumber – a highly competitive industry 43 Measures of Concentration • X-firm Concentration Ratio – % of Industry Output Accounted for by X largest firms • Herfindahl Index – Sum of squared shares of firm outputs within the industry. • 1 firm HI = 1.02 = 1.0 • 4 firms equal output = 0.252 + 0.252 + 0.252 + 0.252 = 0.25 • 10 firms equal output = 0.12 + 0.12 + 0.12 + 0.12 ….. = 0.10 • 5 firms, unequal = 0.82 + 0.052 + 0.052 + 0.052 + 0.052 = 0.65 – Sometimes done in % terms (means HI tops out at 10,000) – Critical in assessing mergers • FTC looks close at industries with HI over 0.18 (1800) • FTC looks close at mergers increasing HI by 0.01 (100) 44 Low Concentration Industries (1) Industry (2) 4-Firm Concentration Ratio (3) Herfindahl Index (1) Industry (2) 4-Firm Concentration Ratio (3) Herfindahl Index 14 114 Asphalt paving 25 207 Metal windows and doors Plastic pipe 24 262 Women’s dresses 13 84 Textile bags 24 263 Ready mix concrete 11 63 Bolts, nuts, and rivets 24 205 Wood trusses 10 50 Plastic bags 23 240 Stone products 10 59 Quick printing 22 319 Metal stamping 8 31 Textile machinery 20 206 Wood pallets 7 24 Sawmills 18 117 Sheet metal work 6 25 Jewelry 16 117 Signs 5 19 Curtains and draperies 16 111 Retail bakeries 4 7 45 High Concentration Industries (1) Industry Primary copper (2) 4-Firm Concentration Ratio (3) Herfindahl Index 99 ND (1) Industry (2) 4-Firm Concentration Ratio (3) Herfindahl Index Petrochemicals 85 2662 83 1901 Cane sugar refining 99 ND Small arms ammunition Cigarettes 95 ND Motor vehicles 81 2321 Household laundry equipment 93 ND Men’s slacks and jeans 80 2515 Beer 91 ND Aircraft 81 ND Electric light bulbs 89 2582 Breakfast cereals 78 2521 78 2096 Glass containers 88 2582 Household vacuum cleaners Turbines and generators 88 ND Phosphate fertilizers 78 1853 Tires 77 1807 Electronic computers 76 2662 Alcohol distilleries 71 Household refrigerators and freezers 85 1986 Primary aluminum 85 ND 46 1609 Failure 2: Externalities 47 Inefficient Equilibrium: Externalities 48 Inefficient Equilibrium: Externalities P P Negative Externalities St St Positive Externalities S Dt D D Overallocation 0 Qo Qe Negative Externalities Q 0 Underallocation Qe Qo Q Positive Externalities 49 Failure 3: Asymmetric Information P P Hidden costs St St Misrepresented benefits S Dt D D Overallocation 0 Qo Qe Q 0 Overerallocation Qo Qe Q Consider: What happens when University misinform about employability of a major? Success or earnings potential. What happens when consumer lies on insurance forms? 50 Failure 4: Ill-conceived interference 51 Price Ceilings and Quotas: Inefficient! P S Examples? $3.50 P0 ceiling 3.00 PC D Shortage Qs Q0 Qd Q Price Ceilings: Inefficient! P S A = Transfer in value (profit) from producer to consumer B = “unrecovered” loss of profits to producers $3.50 P0 ceiling A C = “unrecovered” consumer loss from shortage B C 3.00 PC B+C = Deadweight loss D Shortage Qs Q0 Fairer? Qd Q Price Floors: Inefficient! P S Surplus floor $3.00 Pf Examples? 2.00 P0 D Q Qd Q0 Qs Price Floors: Inefficient P S Surplus floor A = Transfer in value (profit) from consumer to producer $3.00 Pf B = “unrecovered” loss of profits to producers A C 2.00 P0 C = “unrecovered” consumer loss from higher price B B+C = Deadweight loss D Fairer? Q Qd Q0 Qs Failure 5: Swings and SWAGs 56 Trend, Cycle& Seasons Price or Quant Trend Trend & Cycle Time Market Trends: Inertia/Momentum causes supply/demand to continually shift through time • What types of demand factors are apt to continuously shift through time? • What type of supply factors are apt to continuously shift through time? Caution: These continuous shifts may or may not give rise to an obvious price or quantity trend 58 Market Cycles: Imperfect Information and Expectations Causes “Oscillations” in Prices, Outputs, and Inventories • How do I know what price to charge? • What happens if I charge too much? • What happens if I charge too little? • What actually happens in the market is sometimes called “the cobweb effect” 59 Market Cycles: Imperfect Information Causes “Oscillations” in Prices, Outputs, and Inventories Price/ Production Q Inventory Time 60 Market Shocks: One time events, start the cobweb, again! Price/ Production Q Inventory Time EXAMPLES???? 61 Porter’s 5 Forces • A disciplined approach to defining markets in business terms • Really an economic approach to thinking about competitive dynamics….. 62 Factors influencing degree of competition in your industry Shape of industry supply curve and other cost considerations Dynamics of the “shoot-out” & P+Q thru time Shape of industry demand curve and other demand factors 63 Assignment: due 11/28/2016 Using your commodity from the first assignment find at least 7 years of historic monthly or quarterly price and quantity history for that good. Provide 2 Excel graphs – one of quantity through time and one of price through time. • Be sure all columns and graphs are clearly labeled and sources cited. • Be sure to format the data tab and the graph pages so they can print out in a well formatted way on one page each. Identify trends, cycles, and fluctuations and discuss what may have caused them. Specify whether they were demand shifters or supply shifters. I am looking for “likely” reasons for trends, cycles, and “shocks”; not a statistical analysis. Review your understanding of Porter’s Five Forces for this product/industry ( Barriers to Entry, Threat of Substitutes, Buyer Power, Supplier Power, and Resulting Rivalry) and relate this to the observed price and quantity behavior. Have 5 separate sections in this write-up (one for each Porter block) – conclude with “This would imply ….. for pricing through time and would imply ….. for quantities supplied through time”. 1500 word MAX. 64 5-64