Title: Applied Microeconomics
1Applied Microeconomics
2Outline
- Rationale
- Assumptions
- Short-run supply and equilibrium
- Long-run supply and equilibrium
- Rents
3Readings
- Kreps Chapter 11
- Perloff Chapter 8
- Zandt Chapters 7 and 8
- Case Growth and profitability
4What is Interesting about Competitive Markets?
- Reasonable description of many markets
- Interesting benchmark
- Important for analysis of efficiency
5Assumptions
- Firms and consumers are price takers they
assume that the consumption and production
decisions they make have no impact on prices (at
least in equilibrium) - In reality, all firms have some impact, but given
that this is small with many firms, a reasonable
assumption - Experimental support (Smith, 1982)
- Evolutionary rationale even with few firms
(Vega-Redondo, 1997, Ania and Ferrer, 2003) - Homogeneous good
6Assumptions
- Free entry and exit of firms
- Firms are profit maximizers
- Economic profit is not accounting profit
- Managers and owners interest may not coincide
(Parmalat, Enron) - As-if, evolutionary forces
- Consumers are utility maximizers
- A unique market price for each good
- Buyers and sellers know the prices
- Transaction costs are low
7Examples of Competitive Markets
- Agricultural markets corn, wheat, soy beans
- Natural Resource Commodities copper, gold,
silver, natural gas - Financial markets for many instruments
8Partial vs. General Equilibrium Analysis
- In this course we generally study the market for
a single good, assuming the prices and quantities
of all other goods remain fixed - This simplifies analysis and it is justified
when - There are limited wealth effects
?D1(p1,p2,W)/?W0 - There are limited price effects on other goods,
or the prices of a a group of goods move together
?D1(p1,p2,W)/?p20
9Partial vs. General Equilibrium Analysis
- Likely when total expenditure on the good is a
small fraction of total wealth - Both of the properties are satisfied if consumers
have quasi-linear utility functions U(x,m)mv(x)
10The Demand Curve A Competitive Firm Faces
- If the firm sets a price p lower than the market
price p, it faces the entire market demand - If it sets a price higher than the market price,
demand is zero - If pp the firm can sell any quantity up to the
market demand
11Profit Maximizing Level of Production
- This means that a price-taking firm takes the
market price p as given - It has revenue function R(x)px
- So the marginal revenue function is just MR(x)p
12Profit Maximizing Level of Production
- The firm solves maxx0 px-TC(x)
- Finding the solution is a two-step procedure
- First, find all outputs x such that pMC(x)
- Second, check whether the most profitable of such
outputs gives higher profit than shutting down
production
13Profit Maximizing Level of Production
- Remarks
- If MC(x) is decreasing at x, this cannot be a
solution - With a decreasing marginal cost function, there
may not exist any solution
14Firm Supply
- The firms supply function Si(p) is given by the
inverse of the upward-sloping part of its its
marginal cost curve above the price at which it
is better to shut down - Mathematically, MC(Si(p))p for ppsd and Si(p)0
otherwise - What is the shut-down level of price?
15Supply without Fixed Cost
16Firm Supply with Constant Marginal Cost
17Firm Supply with Unavoidable Fixed Costs
- Remember that fixed cost may be either avoidable
(TC(0)0) or unavoidable (TC(0)gt0) - If all of the firms fixed costs are unavoidable,
they are irrelevant for the firms production
decision and should be disregarded - The firm should produce at price p provided
px-VC(x)0 for some non-negative x, or
equivalently pminx0VC(x)/xminx0AVC(x)
18Firm Supply with Avoidable Fixed Costs
- If all of the firms fixed costs are avoidable,
they are relevant for the firms production
decision - The firm should produce at price p provided
px-TC(x)0 for some output x, or equivalently
pminx0TC(x)/xminx0AC(x)
19Supply with Fixed Cost
Unavoidable fixed cost
Avoidable fixed cost
20Example
- If the firm has total cost function TC(x)x2, the
supply function is_____ - If the firm has total cost function TC(x)x21
and unavoidable fixed costs, the supply function
is_____ - If the firm has total cost function x21 and
avoidable fixed costs, the supply function is____
21Short-Run Supply
- The firms short-run supply function SSi(p) is
given by its short-run marginal cost curve above
minimum average cost (net of average unavoidable
costs) - The short-run industry supply function is the
horizontal sum of the supply curves of the firms
in the market SS1(p)SSN(p)
22Short-Run Industry Supply
- Firm supply is given by the inverse of the firms
short-run marginal cost function for prices above
the shut-down level - Short-run industry supply is the horizontal sum
of firm supply
23Short-Run Equilibrium
- A short-run equilibrium is a price p and a
quantity x such that - Firms maximize profit given price
- Consumers maximize utility given price
- Short-run industry supply equals market demand
24Short-Run Equilibrium
Quantity
25Long-Run Supply
- In the long run, the firm has a flatter marginal
cost curve and all fixed costs are avoidable - The firms long-run supply curve SLi(p) is given
by the long-run marginal cost curve above minimum
average cost - The long-run industry supply function is the
horizontal sum of the supply functions of all
firms in the market - However, in the long run the number of firms in
the market varies with price due to exit and entry
26Long-Run Supply
- A firm enters the market if it can make an
economic profit and exits otherwise - Suppose
- All firms have equal technology,
- There is unlimited supply of firms who can enter
the market, - Input prices are constant,
- Then the long-run industry supply function is
flat at the level minx0AC(x) and all firms are
producing at their efficient scale
27Long-Run Supply
- Firms must be producing at this level since firms
would enter if economic profits where positive
and exit otherwise - What about if n firms make profits and n1 makes
a loss? - In theory repeated entry and exit, in practice
firms would learn and the n1 firm would stay out
28Reasons for Increasing Long-Run Supply Curve
- Limited number of firms
- Heterogeneous cost functions
- Varying input prices
29Definition of Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium
- A long-run equilibrium is a price p and a
quantity x such that - Firms maximize profit given price
- Consumers maximize utility given price
- Long-run industry supply equals market demand
- All firms are earning zero economic profit
30Long-Run Equilibrium
31Rents
- Suppose a price-taking farmer owns a particularly
fertile piece of land - Then he would be making positive profits in the
long run! - This is called economic rent and is consistent
with the long-run equilibrium using the following
argument
32Rents
- Suppose instead that the farmer rented the land
- The competitive bidding among farmers would
increase the price of the land until profits were
zero - Other examples patents, superior athletes,
superior technology in relatively fixed supply - Rents affects average but not marginal cost
33Conclusions
- In competitive market there is a unique market
price and consumers and producers are price
takers - Firm supply is given by the inverse of the
marginal cost function above minimum average cost
(minimum average variable cost with unavoidable
fixed costs) - Short-run industry supply is given by the
horizontal sum of firm supply functions - In the long-run firms enter the market until
profits are zero