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Economics What’s Economics about? ♦ Science of making decisions to allocate scarce resources to alternative uses. ♦ Three fundamental questions: – What? – How? – To whom? ♦ Microeconomics vs Macroeconomics. Managerial Economics vs Micro Economics A market economy • Microeconomics vs Macroeconomics ♦ Microeconomics: – Studies decision making and interactions of individual agents; – Concentrates on Demand, Supply and Markets. ♦ Macroeconomics: – Studies the evolution of the aggregate economy, as a result of individual decisions and interactions; – Concentrates on Product, Unemployment and Inflation. • Managerial Economics vs Micro economics • Managerial economics applies microeconomic theory to business problems – How to use economic analysis to make decisions to achieve firm’s goal of profit maximization • Microeconomics – Study of behavior of individual economic agents • Why Managerial Economics? The Fundamentals of Managerial Economics • Use economic profits; • Identify objectives and constraints; • Understand markets; • Conduct marginal analysis; • Consider incentives and signaling; • Recognize time value of money Economic Cost of Resources • Opportunity cost of using any resource is: – What firm owners must give up to use the resource • Market-supplied resources – Owned by others & hired, rented, or leased • Owner-supplied resources – Owned & used by the firm Total Economic Cost • Total Economic Cost – Sum of opportunity costs of both marketsupplied resources & owner-supplied resources • Explicit Costs – Monetary payments to owners of marketsupplied resources • Implicit Costs – Nonmonetary opportunity costs of using owner-supplied resources Economic Cost of Using Resources E x p lic itC o s t s o f M a r k e t S u p p lie d R e s o u r c e s T h e m o n e ta r y p a y m e n ts to r e s o u r c e o w n e r s + I m p l i c i tC o s t s o f O w n e r S u p p l i e d R e s o u r c e s T h e r e t u r n s f o r g o n e b y n o tt a k in g t h e o w n e r s ’r e s o u r c e s t o m a r k e t = T o t a lE c o n o m ic C o s t T h e to ta lo p p o r tu n ity c o s ts o f b o th k in d s o fr e s o u r c e s Types of Implicit Costs • Opportunity cost of cash provided by owners – Equity capital • Opportunity cost of using land or capital owned by the firm • Opportunity cost of owner’s time spent managing or working for the firm Economic Profit versus Accounting Profit • Economic profit = Total revenue – Total economic cost = Total revenue – Explicit costs – Implicit costs • Accounting profit = Total revenue – Explicit costs • Accounting profitdoes not subtract implicit costs from total revenue • Firm owners must cover all costs of all resources used by the firm – Objective is to maximize economic profit 3. Use economic profits ♦ Accounting profits ♦ Economic profits: – Oportunity costs. ♦ Example: Operation of a small pizzeria. ♦ Objective: maximize shareholders value. Operation of a small pizzeria (I) ♦ Mike runs a small pizzeria in his hometown. ♦ He owns the building. ♦ Annual revenues are €100000 euros. ♦ Annual costs are €20000. ♦ Annual profit is €80000 euros. ♦ This is not the economic profit! Operation of a small pizzeria (II) ♦ Mike could have a job earning €30000. ♦ Mike could have rented the space for €100000. ♦ The economic profit is just: ∏ = 80000-30000-100000= -50000 ♦ CONCLUSION: Mike should close the pizzeria, rent the space and get the alternative job. 2. Identify objectives and constraints ♦ The role of objectives: – Choices are made to achieve objectives; – Objectives of the unit and objectives of the sub-units. ♦ Resources are scarce: – Impose constraints; – Limit possibilities. Maximizing the Value of a Firm • Value of a firm – Price for which it can be sold – Equal to net present value of expected future profit • Risk premium – Accounts for risk of not knowing future profits – The larger the rise, the higher the risk premium, & the lower the firm’s value Maximizing the Value of a Firm • Maximize firm’s value by maximizing profit in each time period – Cost & revenue conditions must be independent across time periods • Value of a firm = 1 (1 r ) 2 (1 r ) 2 ... T T (1 r ) T t 1 t (1 r ) t 3. What is a Market? • A market is any arrangement through which buyers & sellers exchange goods & services • Markets reduce transaction costs – Costs of making a transaction other than the price of the good or service Price-Takers vs. Price-Setters • Price-taking firm – Cannot set price of its product – Price is determined strictly by market forces of demand & supply • Price-setting firm – Can set price of its product – Has a degree of market power, which is ability to raise price without losing all sales Market Structures • Market characteristics that determine the economic environment in which a firm operates – Number & size of firms in market – Degree of product differentiation – Likelihood of new firms entering market Perfect Competition • Large number of relatively small firms • Undifferentiated product • No barriers to entry Monopoly • Single firm • Produces product with no close substitutes • Protected by a barrier to entry Monopolistic Competition • Large number of relatively small firms • Differentiated products • No barriers to entry Oligopoly • Few firms produce all or most of market output • Profits are interdependent – Actions by any one firm will affect sales & profits of the other firms Globalization of Markets • Economic integration of markets located in nations around the world – Provides opportunity to sell more goods & services to foreign buyers – Presents threat of increased competition from foreign producers Recognize the time value of money ♦ Many decisions have monetary implications throughout a long period of time (R&D is a typical example). This raises specific problems. ♦ 1€ today is worth more that 1€ one year from now. – Opportunity cost of capital; – Use present values. ♦ Example: R&D of new drugs. • 4. Conduct marginal analysis ♦ Why and how marginal analysis: – Decide on the basis of marginal benefits and marginal costs. ♦ Examples: – Discrete decisions: How many machines (Labor) to buy? 3. Use economic profits ♦ Accounting profits ♦ Economic profits: – Oportunity costs.