Title: ECW2731
1ECW2731
Managerial Economics
2Structure
Weeks 7-8 Competition, market structures and
business decisions
Week 9 Pricing strategies and practices
Week 10 Business and Government.
Weeks 5 - 6 Production and Costs
Managerial Economics
Week 11 Capital budgeting
Weeks 3-4 Demand analysis and estimation
Week. 12 Research question Business and current
economic situation.
Week 2 Basic economics principles demand and
supply.
Week1 Introduction. The nature of managerial
economic decision making
3What prices should be set?
Mark-up pricing
Price discrimination.
Two part pricing
Tying
Multiple and joint product pricing.
Transfer pricing
4Introduction. The nature of managerial economic
decision making
Reading
Hirschey, Chapter 15
5What prices should be set?
Markup Pricing And Profit Maximization
- Competitive Markets
- Profit maximization always requires setting Mp
MR - MC 0, or MRMC, to maximize profits. - In competitive markets, PMR, so profit
maximization requires setting PMR MC. - Imperfectly Competitive Markets
- With imperfect competition, P gt MR, so profit
maximization requires setting MRMC.
6How companies discover the level of customer
demand?
Mark-up pricing
- Regular prices
- Discounts
- Rebates
- Coupon promotions
- Regional pricing
- Other pricing strategies
7Markup on cost
Mark-up pricing
- The difference between price and cost (profit
margin or markup) is expressed as a percentage
of cost - Two steps
- The firm estimates the cost per unit of output of
the product - The firm adds a markup to the estimated average
cost
8Markup on price
Mark-up pricing
- The difference between price and cost (profit
margin or markup) is expressed as a percentage
of price
9Target Return Figure
Mark-up pricing
P L M K F/Q (PA)/Q where P is
price L is unit labor cost M is unit
material cost K is unit marketing cost F is
fixed cost Q is units of output A is total
gross operating assets P is desired profit
rate on assets
10The role of cost in markup pricing
Mark-up pricing
- Standard costs based on historic accounting can
be misleading if not adjusted to reflect
opportunity costs. - During peak periods of full capacity usage fully
allocated costs is relevant. - P L M K F/Q (PA)/Q
- During off-peak periods only incremental costs
are relevant. - P L M K
11Price discrimination.
- Where a firm exercises market power, the
opportunity may exist to further increase profits
by charging different prices to different
consumers, or to different groups of consumers
for reasons other than costs - In so doing the firm will appropriate all or part
of the consumer surplus.
12General Principle
Price discrimination.
- General Principle Profit-Making Criteria
- Price discrimination exists if P1/P2 ? MC1/MC2.
- Ability to segment the market.
- Multiple markets with no reselling.
- Price elasticity of demand differs across
submarkets.
13Types of price discrimination
Price discrimination.
- First-degree the firm is aware of each buyers
demand curve - Second-degree the firm charges a different
price, depending on the quantity each buyer
purchases - Third-degree the firm breaks buyers into groups
based upon their price elasticity of demand
14First Degree Price Discrimination(Perfect Price
Discrimination)
Price discrimination.
- Each consumer is charged the price he/she is
willing to pay. - Producer takes all the consumer surplus
151st. degree price discrimination
Price discrimination.
Price
P1
PL
Demand
Q1
Q
Quantity
161st. degree price discrimination
Price discrimination.
Price
P1 P2
PL
Demand
Q1 Q2
Q
Quantity
171st. degree price discrimination
Price discrimination.
Price
P1 P2 P3
PL
Demand
Q
Q1 Q2 Q3
Quantity
181st. degree price discrimination
Price discrimination.
For each consumer price chargedprice willing
to pay Monopolist appropriates all consumer
surplus
Price
P1 P2 P3 P4 . .
PL
Demand
Q
Quantity
192nd Degree Price Discrimination(non-linear
pricing)
Price discrimination.
- Different price is charged for a different
quantity bought (but not across consumers). - set one price for a 1st bundle, a lower price for
a 2nd bundle, .... - extract some, but not all of consumer surplus
- Note
- In 1st deg casegtdifferent prices charged for
different consumers - In 2nd deg casegtdifferent prices charged for
different quantities (for same consumer)
202nd Degree Price Discrimination(non-linear
pricing)
Price discrimination.
- Examples
- Telephone companies charging different prices for
- different quantities
213rd Degree Price Discrimination
Price discrimination.
P
P
MC
DT MRT
D2
D1
MR2
MR1
Q
Q
Q
QT
Market 2 flatter D more elastic
Mkt1Mkt2 QTQ1Q2
Market1 steeper D less elastic
223rd Degree Price Discrimination
Price discrimination.
P
P
MC
DT MRT
D2
D1
MR2
MR1
QT
Q
Q
Q
Mkt1Mkt2 QTQ1Q2
Market 2
Market1
How much to sell in each Mkt (Q1? Q)2? what
prices (P1? P2)?
233rd Degree Price Discrimination
Price discrimination.
P
P
MC
DT MRT
D2
D1
MR2
MR1
QT
Q2
Q
Q
Q1
Market 2 MR2MC More elastic demand
Mkt1Mkt2 QTQ1Q2 MR1MR2MC
Market1 MR1MC Less elastic demand
243rd Degree Price Discrimination
Price discrimination.
P
P
MC
P1
P2
DT MRT
D2
D1
MR2
MR1
QT
Q2
Q
Q
Q1
Market 2 MR2MC More elastic Demand - Higher
Price
Mkt1Mkt2 QTQ1Q2 MR1MR2MC
Market1 MR1MC Less elastic Demand - Lower price
25Two part pricing
100
Per-unit fee is equal to marginal costs plus a
fixed fee equal to to the amount of consumer
surplus (membership fee, Service fee)
80
Consumer surplus 800
60
Monopoly Price
Profits 1,600
40
MC AC
20
Demand
Q
MR
0
0
120
20
100
40
80
60
(a) Monopoly Per Unit Pricing
26Tying
- Occurs when a firm sells a product, the use of
which requires the consumption of a complementary
product - The consumer is required to buy the complementary
product from the firm selling the product itself
27Multiple-product Pricing
- Demand Interrelations
- Cross-marginal revenue terms indicate how product
revenues are related to another. - Production Interrelations
- Joint products may compete for resources or be
complementary. - A by-product is any output customarily produced
as a direct result of an increase in the
production of some other output.
28Joint Products in Variable proportions
- Joint Products in Variable Proportions
- If products are produced in variable proportions,
treat as distinct products. - For joint products produced in variable
proportions, set MRAMCA and MRBMCB. - Common costs are joint product expenses.
- Allocation of common costs is wrong and
arbitrary. - Joint Products in Fixed Proportions
- Some products are produced in a fixed ratio.
- If QQAQB, set MRQMRAMRBMCQ.
29Joint product pricing.
Joint products produced in fixed proportions
Some products are produced in a fixed
ratio QQAQB MRTMRA MRB MCQ
30 Transfer pricing
Transferring an intermediate product from one
division to another in a vertically integrated
firm
- Financial autonomy of divisions
- Marginal cost opportunity cost
- Three cases
- Products Without External Markets
- Products With Competitive External Markets
- Products With Imperfectly Competitive External
Markets
31 Transfer pricing
No external markets
- Financial autonomy of divisions
- Economic profit of one division is a cost of
another division. - Profit cant be made
- Pricing at marginal cost covering opportunity
costs.
32 Transfer pricing
There is an external market alternative
- Financial autonomy of divisions
- Two cases
- The external market is perfectly competitive
- Pricing at the external market price
- The external market is not perfectly competitive
- Pricing at the marginal revenue of the combined
external and internal markets