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Managerial Economics: Chapter 1 Introduction to Managerial Economics

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Title: Managerial Economics: Chapter 1 Introduction to Managerial Economics


1
Managerial Economics Chapter 1Introduction to
Managerial Economics
2
Chapter Objectives
  • Motivation Two cases
  • Boeing corporation
  • Walt Disney corporation
  • What is managerial economics?
  • Managerial decision-making process
  • Theory of the firm
  • Introduction to demand and supply analysis
  • Equilibrium price and quantity
  • Shifts in demand and supply curves
  • Reading material
  • Mansfield et al., Chapter 1, pp 3 -31.

3
Case study Boeing vs Airbus
  • Boeing is the largest producer of commercial
    aircraft carriers.
  • In 1996 it acquired McDonnell Douglas, the
    leading military contractor in the U.S.
  • Problem International competition from Airbus,
    the European producer of commercial carriers.
  • It has been argued by Boeing that Airbus is
    subsidized by European governments.
  • Airbus has claimed that Boeing has been
    subsidized by the U.S. government indirectly
    though defense spending.
  • How do companies formulate competitive
    strategies?
  • How do we deal with threats by other companies?
  • Is the fact that the market has only two firms
    important?

4
Case study The Ups and Downs of the Walt Disney
Company
  • Walt Disney company was founded in 1929.
  • Products produced Theme park services and
    movies.
  • Problem In the early 1980s attendance fell
  • 11.5 million visitors in 1980 9.9 million
    visitors in 1984
  • To what extend the decline in attendance had to
    do with demographics? What could be done about
    it?
  • Should prices at the theme parks be raised?
  • Solution
  • The company chose Michael Eisner to be the CEO.
  • Disney engaged in advertising to increase the
    demand for its services and park attendance.
  • Eisner team used simple and sophisticated pricing
    techniques to improve profits.

5
Case study The Ups and Downs of the Walt Disney
Company
  • Result
  • Profits rose from 100 million in 1984 to 1.9
    billion in 1997
  • Revenues increased tenfold to over 25 billion in
    2002.
  • Disney is one of the 100 largest global firms and
    the second largest media company (behind
    Time-Warner).
  • Disney holdings include the following ABC
    television and radio networks many radio and
    television stations several film and television
    studios theme parks in the US, Japan, France and
    Hong Kong etc.
  • Disney uses sophisticated pricing techniques
    based on managerial principles
  • Price discrimination to increase sales.
  • Bundling techniques.

6
Managerial Economics and Related Disciplines
  • Managerial economics develops the tools for
    better decision making by business executives.
  • It utilizes economic, mathematical, and
    statistical principles especially those used in
    microeconomics.
  • Managerial economics provides an integrating
    framework for executives by analyzing
  • How various functional areas of the firm must be
    combined to achieve the firms objectives.
  • How the external market environment affects the
    firms objectives and strategy.
  • In this class we will use cases to understand the
    principles that govern the behavior of firms and
    the evolution of markets.

7
The Theory of the Firm
  • To apply managerial economics to business
    decisions we need a theory of the firm.
  • A theory indicates how a firm behaves and what
    its goals are.
  • Economists are working with models.
  • A model is an analytical framework (formal or
    informal) which takes into account only the
    important (relevant) factors.
  • Models are used to illustrate the basic
    principles of managerial economics.
  • The basic theory of the firm (business
    enterprise) assumes that the firm maximizes
    profits, or more generally it maximizes its
    wealth or value.

8
Value of the Firm
  • The present value of the firms expected future
    cash flows
  • The numerator is profits per year and the
    denominator is the discount factor (one plus the
    relevant interest rate)

9
Present Value of Expected Future Profits
  • TRt the firms total revenue in year t
  • TCt the firms total cost in year t
  • i the interest rate
  • and t goes from 1 (next year) to n (the last year
    in the planning horizon)

10
What are Profits?
  • There is a difference between accounting and
    economic profits
  • When reporting profits the accountant is
    interested in various legal definitions and tax
    laws.
  • The economists calculates profits after taking
    out the labor and capital provided by the owners.
  • The accountant is concerned with controlling the
    firms day-to-day operations, whereas the
    economist is concerned primarily with decision
    making processes.

11
Why Do Profits Exist?
  • There are three important reasons for why
    economic profits exist.
  • Innovations
  • Process innovations result in producing a good
    or a service cheaper (e.g., quality circles,
    assembly line)
  • Product innovation is the introduction of new
    products or services (e.g., fax machine,
    internet, windows).
  • Risk in the presence of uncertainty
  • A good example is the stock marker.
  • Innovation is also associated with risk.
  • Monopoly power.
  • If markets are not perfectly competitive, prices
    exceed average costs (e.g., the market for
    commercial carriers)

12
Introduction to Demand and Supply
  • A market is an institution that allows a group of
    sellers and buyers to engage in economic
    transactions
  • An economic transaction consists of an exchange
    of two different objects.
  • A participant in a market can be in contact with
    a subset of other market participants.
  • Sellers or buyers can be individuals, firms, or
    institutions.

13
Introduction to Demand and Supply
  • The market does not have to be a physical place.
  • Market structure refers to the number of
    participants (Monopoly, oligopoly, perfect
    competition, etc)
  • The demand side of the market summarizes the
    behavior of buyers.
  • The supply side of the market summarizes the
    behavior of sellers.

14
Market demand curve
  • Shows the maximum amount of a commodity that
    buyers would like to purchase at various prices
  • The following figure shows the shape of a demand
    curve.

15
A Hypothetical Demand Curve for Coca Cola in the
US
Price (Cents per can)
  • Price is expressed in cents per can.
  • Quantity is measured in millions of Coca Cola
    cans per day.

A
65
B
55
C
45
0
Quantity
30
20
25
16
Properties of the Demand Curve
  • The demand curve can refer to an individual,
    firm, or to a whole market.
  • The demand curve refers to a particular period of
    time.
  • It is downward sloping implying that a lower
    price results in more quantity demanded.
  • Any demand curve is drawn based on the
    assumption that the following variables (or
    parameters) are constant
  • Prices of competing goods
  • Incomes of consumers
  • Number of consumers in the market
  • Tastes of consumers

17
Moving Along the Demand Curve
  • Any change in a variable (parameter) that appears
    in an axis of a graph causes a movement along the
    demand curve.
  • There are two movement parameters the price
    and quantity of the product itself (as opposed
    to substitute or complement products.

Price (Cents per can)
B
55
C
45
0
Quantity
30
25
18
Shifting the Demand Curve
  • Any change in prices of competing goods, income,
    number of consumers or tastes causes a rightward
    or a leftward shift in the demand curve.
  • The demand curve shifts if there is a change in
  • the price of a substitute product
  • the price of a complement product
  • consumer income
  • the number of consumers
  • consumer tastes.

19
Demand Shifts to the Right if the Price of a
Substitute Product Increases
Price (Cents per can)
New demand curve
0
Quantity
  • An increase in the price of Pepsi shifts the
    demand curve to the right.

20
Demand Shifts to the Right if the Price of a
Complement Product Declines
Price (Cents per can)
New demand curve
0
Quantity
  • A decline in the price of Big Mac shifts the
    demand curve to the right

21
The Supply Curve
  • The behavior of sellers is modeled by the supply
    curve
  • The market supply curve shows the maximum
    quantity sellers are willing to provide at any
    given price
  • The following figure illustrates the supply curve
    of Coca Cola

Price
Supply Curve
C
65
B
55
A
45
0
Quantity
28
25
18
22
Properties of the Supply Curve
  • A supply curve refers to a particular period of
    time
  • A day, a month, a year etc.
  • The supply curve can capture the behavior of
    firms, of an individual, or of the market as a
    whole.
  • The supply curve is upward-sloping.

23
Properties of the Supply Curve
  • The supply curves movement parameters are the
    variables in the two axes
  • The own price
  • The own quantity
  • The supply curves shift parameters are
  • Technological improvements
  • Prices of intermediate goods, capital, and labor

24
Any Change in Price or Quantity Causes a Movement
Along the Supply Curve
  • The following graph illustrates a move along the
    supply curve caused by an increase in the market
    price or quantity.

Price
B
A
0
Quantity
25
Shifting the Supply Curve
  • The supply curve shifts to the right if
  • There is technological progress
  • The price of labor, capital, land or raw
    materials declines.
  • The supply curve shifts to the left if
  • The price of labor, capital, land or raw
    materials increases.

26
Shifting the Supply Curve
  • The effect of an increase in the wage of labor on
    the supply curve of Coca Cola is illustrated
    below

Supply Curve
Price
Supply Curve
0
Quantity
27
Putting the Demand and Supply Curves Together
  • The market equilibrium price is a price that does
    not have a tendency to change.
  • At the equilibrium price the quantity demanded
    equals the quantity supplied.

Price
Supply Curve
E
55
Demand Curve
0
Quantity
25
28
Excess Demand and Supply
  • If the market price is higher than the
    equilibrium price (excess supply), there is
    pressure for the price to decline.
  • If the market price is lower than the equilibrium
    price (excess demand), there is pressure for the
    price to rise.
  • Therefore the actual price, which is the price
    that prevails in the market, tends to be close to
    the equilibrium price
  • Sometimes actual prices differ across firms, but
    these deviations are small and can be ignored.

29
Excess Demand and Supply for Coca Cola
  • If the price is 65 cents per can, there is an
    excess supply of 8 million cans per day
  • If the price is 45 cents per can, there is an
    excess demand of 12 million cans per day

Price
Supply Curve
65
45
Demand Curve
0
Quantity
18
20
28
30
30
If the Demand Curve Shifts Left, the Equilibrium
Price and Quantity Decline
  • In the case of Walt Disney, the demand shifted to
    the left due to demographic changes reducing the
    number of visitors from 11.5 million to 9.9
    million

Price
Supply Curve
Demand Curve
0
Quantity
11.5
9.9
31
If the Supply Curve Shifts Right, the price Falls
and the Quantity Increases
  • The entry of Russia in the world market for
    aluminum in the 1990s reduced its price from 80
    cents to 47 cents

Price
Supply Curve
New supply curve
Demand Curve
0
Quantity
32
If the Supply Curve Shifts Left, the Price Rises
and the Quantity Falls
  • An increase in malpractice insurance rates
    decreases the supply of medical services provided
    by doctors.

New supply curve
Price
Supply Curve
Demand Curve
0
Quantity
33
Summary
  • We used two case studies to motivate the study of
    managerial economics.
  • Courses in managerial economics provide the
    fundamental analytical tool to decisions made by
    executives.
  • To apply managerial economics to business
    management we need a theory of a firm describing
    its behavior and goals.
  • Economic profits versus accounting profits.
  • Economic profits exist because of innovation,
    risk, and monopoly power.
  • Managerial economists assume that firms maximize
    profits.

34
Summary
  • Every market has a demand side and a supply side
  • The market demand summarizes the behavior of
    buyers.
  • The market supply summarizes the behavior of
    producers.
  • The intersection of demand and supply curves
    determines the equilibrium price and quantity.
  • Both demand and supply curves shift over time as
    a result of changes in various parameters.
  • Rightward shifts in the demand curve and leftward
    shifts in the supply curve tend to increase the
    equilibrium price.
  • Leftward shifts in the demand curve and rightward
    shifts in the supply curve tend to reduce the
    equilibrium price.
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