* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Part II: Micro-Economics (the Market): II
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Part II: II-1: Micro-Economics (the Market): Perfect Competition (Chap 8): The demand for the individual firm’s product is infinitely elastic. i.e., the market price = AR= MR The firm’s profit maximizing output: MR = MC: The firm’s supply curve is its MC above its minimum average variable cost (AVC) curve. If MR is greater than the AVC, a portion of the fixed cost is also covered. At equilibrium, the economic profit is zero (i.e., MR = minimum ATC). A permanent decrease in demand: a shift of the market demand curve to the left, not a movement along the demand curve; the price would fall, increasing losses (P < minimum ATC) for the firms; as firms exit the market, the market S shifts to the left in the short run, the market price goes up, the remaining firm’s output goes up. Plant size and long-run average cost depend on: Whether it is a decreasing or increasing cost industry, Long run changes in D and S Efficiency of Perfect competition: For the individual firm: at equilibrium, P (=MR) is the minimum total average cost; The market: consumer surplus and producer surplus are fully realized without any dead weight loss. II-2: Monopoly (Chap 9): Natural monopoly: if economies of scale prevails over the entire long-run-average-cost curve, if average cost is still falling when the entire market demand is satisfied. A single price monopoly: Profit maximizing output: Q* where MR = MC (given the scale of the production) The market demand curve is the AR curve; The MR curve lies below the AR curve (the market demand curve), Profit = Price (AR) – Average Total Cost If the regulator sets the price equal to the monopolist’s long-run average cost, then the monopolist’s economic profit will be zero. The demand is elastic because at Q*, MR (=MC) >0, Revenue maximizing output: Output where the price elasticity of the demand is 1 (MR=0). Inefficiency of monopoly compared with perfect competition: A smaller output and a higher price compared to perfect competition. Consumer surplus available under perfect completion is substantially reduced by the monopoly’ profit and a deadweight loss: under perfect competition (the consumer surplus and producer surplus) vs. monopoly (consumer surplus, producer surplus, monopoly’s profit, deadweight) With a competitive price for the monopoly rent (economic profit): Buy the monopoly paying a price until the economic profit becomes zero, The cost of maintaining monopoly (barrier to entry)would push up the ATC Price discrimination by monopoly: How to increase the monopolist’s profit? The profit maximizing output is where MR =MC; when the monopolist charges different price to different customers, the market demand curve becomes the monopolist’s marginal revenue curve; The consumer surplus is replaced with the monopolist’s additional profit. II-3: Monopolistic Competition & Oligopoly (Chap 10): Monopolistic competition: product differentiation A declining demand curve (i.e., not a flat demand curve): output @ MR = MC, profit/ loss = P – ATC Advertising: shifts up the ATC; makes demand more elastic (a flatter MR) As output increases, the price falls, the markup shrinks. In the long run, economic profit = 0, when output @ MR = MC Excess capacity (Q < Q @ minimum ATC), markup (price > MC) Oligopoly: barriers to entry by new firms Natural oligopoly: the efficient scale of production & economies of scale. The kinked demand curve: price hikes are not matched, but price cuts are A broken MR curve, the MCs pass through the break. A shift in MC within the break won’t change the price or quantity. Collusion (i.e., communicating) among oligopolists, Can make monopoly’s profits if they don’t cheat; One firm cheats (Q up, ATC down), the complier incurs a loss; If both cheat, then back toward the competitive equilibrium P and Q. e.g., the OPEC The game theory: taking into account the expected behavior of others The prisoners’ dilemma: rules (no communication), payoffs : Neither confesses 2 years; Only one confesses 1, one denies 10 years; Both confess 5 years; stategies, outcome, The Nash equilibrium: Strategy: Outcome: what’s my best option, supposing the other’s action? Neither firm earns an economic profit, because both firms cheat on the agreement: Sub-optimal outcome, II-4: Efficiency and Competitive Market (Chapters 3, 17): Market price as a means of resources allocation Demand curve and consumer surplus (marginal social benefit) Supply curve and producer surplus (marginal social cost) “The invisible hand” maximizes the consumer and producer surpluses. Obstacles to efficiency: deadweight loss from under- and over- production II-4: Market Interference (Chapters 3, 16): Interference of market demand and supply: Obstacles to efficiency: deadweight loss from under- and over- production The supply of housing: after earthquake (a shift of the supply to the left); long run adjustment (a shift of the supply to the right) Taxes: A tax on sellers (S shifts to the left) & a tax on buyers (D shifts to the left): inelastic demand, P goes up (buyers pay the tax), elastic demand, P does not change (sellers pay the tax) inelastic supply, P does not change (sellers pay the tax), elastic supply, P goes up (buyers pay the tax) changes in consumer & producer surpluses, deadweight loss, tax revenue Subsidies: Production subsidies: shift Supply curve to the right, Q increases, P falls Fiat: Rent ceiling: Housing shortage, black market rent (consumer & producer surpluses, deadweight loss, loss from search) Minimum wage: Unemployment (firms’ & workers’ surpluses, deadweight loss, loss from search) Production quota: Q falls to the quota, P rises Illegal goods: both D, S shift to the left because of the penalty for breaking the law. Public goods: everyone can consume it. The free-rider problem: enjoying public goods without paying for your share of the cost. II-5: Markets for Factors of Production (Chapters 13, 14): Labor: The demand for labor: The demand for a factor of production is a derived demand. Marginal Revenue Product (MRP) of labor, MRP = MP* MR Profit maximizing demand for labor: Profit maximizing quantity @ MR = MC becomes MRP = Wage diminishing marginal product = > diminishing marginal revenue product The supply of labor: each person’s supply curve bends backward. Income effect dominated the opportunity cost of leisure The labor union shifts the supply curve to left (P up, Q down) Monopsony: Demand is the MRP of labor, Supply is the AC; derive MC from the S (AC), Profit maximization rule: quantity where MR =MC becomes MRP =Wage Q & P lower than the competitive equilibrium Minimum wage law in Monopsony: P at the minimum wage, Set P such that Q is greater than under no minimum wage Capital: The demand for and supply of financial capital: the subject of Corporate Finance The Marginal Revenue Product (MRP) of capital (i.e., expected cash flow), The price of capital: interest rate (risk free interest rate + risk premium), Incur outflow now in exchange for uncertain cash inflow in the future, Discount the expected cash flow using an appropriate discount rate corresponds to the uncertainty of the cash-flow, The NPV rule of investment decision, Land: The stock supply of land is perfectly inelastic: As compared to the supply of a non-renewable resource that is perfectly elastic Because the suppliers will decide whether to sell it or to keep; The supply of a non-renewable resource is perfect elastic at a price that equals the present value of the expected price next period, Management: Separation of ownership and management of the firm’s resources, The board of directors represent the owners’ interests, The agency problem between owners and managers, owners and directors Economic rent earned by the owner of a factor of production; Economic rent = supplier’ surplus (the area above the supply curve); The area below the supply curve is the opportunity cost. If the supply curve is horizontal (perfectly elastic), zero economic rent and 100 % opportunity cost.