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Managerial Economics

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Title: Managerial Economics


1
Managerial Economics
  • Lecture Three
  • Other theories of price competition
  • The Entrepreneurial Role

2
Recap
  • Blinders research
  • 90 of firms have constant or falling marginal
    cost
  • Therefore price must be above marginal (and
    variable) cost for firms to be profitable.
  • Dont think in terms of marginal revenue, cost
  • 50 of firms change prices only once or less a
    year
  • 70 of sales to other businesses 85 to repeat
    customers
  • 70 have inelastic demand
  • So a good deal of microeconomic theory is
    called into question (p. 302)
  • Confirms over 140 similar previous surveys
  • So conventional (neoclassical) micro cant
    explain output and pricing decisions of firms

3
Other theories of pricing
  • If rising costs of production falling dont
    determine how much firms produce, what does?
  • According to some economists, things conventional
    (neoclassical) theory of firm omits
  • Product differentiation
  • Theory assumes firms compete only on price
  • Uncertainty
  • Theory assumes costs, demand, etc., known by
    firms
  • Also probably no one size fits all pricing
    model
  • Different price models needed for different
  • Industries (Ag Mining vs Manufacturing)
  • Products (established vs new)
  • Uses (consumables vs assets houses, shares,
    etc.)

4
Manufacturing Operation within capacity
  • Alternative theories of manufacturing pricing
    emphasise
  • Uncertainty
  • Cant know future
  • Excess capacity gives room to react to
    unforeseeable events
  • Rivalry with other producers
  • Output not homogeneous
  • Firms compete on product differentiation
  • Try to steal market share from competitors by
    non-price competition
  • Extra sales profitable because
  • Marginal revenue high Price doesnt have to
    drop when non-price competition expands sales
  • Marginal cost low fixed costs high

5
Segmented demand heterogeneous goods
  • Not a demand curve for a homogeneous commodity,
    but segmented markets for related but very
    different products
  • Product made priced for one target income
    group/taste pattern very hard to shift demand.
  • Cant do it just by reducing price

Luxury
Price
Sports
Midrange
Standard
Economy
Quantity
6
Manufacturing Operation within capacity
  • Product differentiation limits sales because
  • Business men, who regard themselves as being
    subject to competitive conditions, would consider
    absurd the assertion that the limit to their
    production is to be found in the internal
    conditions of production in their firm, which do
    not permit of the production of a greater
    quantity without an increase in cost. The chief
    obstacle against which they have to contend
    does not lie in the cost of productionwhich,
    indeed, generally favours them in that
    directionbut in the difficulty of selling the
    larger quantity of goods without reducing the
    price, or without having to face increased
    marketing expenses. (Sraffa 1926)
  • Main constraint on sales not conditions of
    supply but conditions of demand

7
Manufacturing Operation within capacity
  • Neoclassical model of capitalism supply
    constrained
  • Unlimited wants
  • Scarce resources
  • Post-Keynesian economist Janos Kornai argues
    modern capitalism demand constrained
  • Excess capacity the rule
  • Not waste but opportunity
  • In growing economy, new factory must have much
    more capacity than needed now
  • In uncertain world, excess capacity needed to
    react to opportunities
  • E.g., 2001 recall of Firestone tyres in USA

8
Firestone recall
  • Bridgestones (Japan) Firestone tyres supplied
    with Ford Explorers

The night before...
  • Several deaths due to blowouts
  • Recall 6.5 million tyres in 2000/2001
  • Goodyear (US ) 31 of market Bridgestone 23
    Michelin (French) 23
  • Big consumer shift from Bridgestone to Goodyear
  • How would supply demand economics analyse
    this?

The morning after...
9
Firestone recall
  • Fall in supply (Bridgestone temporarily out of
    market)
  • Rise in demand (normal demand plus refit of 6.5
    million tyres)

Supply
  • Price should rise, not much change in output

Pe
  • What actually happened?
  • Much more complex case study in
  • Actual competitive dynamics and
  • What not to do!

Demand
Qe
10
Firestone recall
  • The Firestone recall briefly swamped Goodyear
    with more business than it could handle. It also
    convinced Goodyear executives that their brand
    carried a reassurance of safety for which
    Americans would pay a premium price But once the
    Firestone recall fell out of the headlines, the
    public did what it has increasingly been doing
    buying whatever was on sale.
  • Goodyear's sales deflated Its North American
    market share fell last year to 28.4 from nearly
    31 in 2001. Japan's Bridgestone Corp., whose
    market share slipped only about two percentage
    points to 21 as a consequence of the recall,
    managed to stem a further decline in part by
    launching a massive advertising campaign under
    the slogan "Making It Right." (Wall Street
    Journal 19th February 2003)

11
Firestone recall
  • No diminishing marginal productivity rise in
    cost of production
  • Goodyear simply increased output to capacity
  • But firm tried to profit from Firestone recall by
    increasing its markup
  • Rivals (including Firestone) fought back with
    non-price competition
  • Goodyear lost market share
  • Analysts argued worst mistake was increasing price

12
Firestone recall
  • Goodyear's biggest mistake appears to be its
    effort to capitalize on the Firestone recall by
    raising its prices. Starting in January 2001,
    Goodyear boosted prices on its passenger and
    light-truck tires up to 7, and followed up with
    another hefty increase the following June.
    Partly, the company saw itself asserting its
    right to charge prices closer to those of
    Michelin, which generally had the highest in the
    market.
  • But in the eyes of many customers, Goodyear
    failed to justify the increases. To charge a
    premium, a tire maker has to offer some
    advantage, even if it's just an aura of
    qualitywhich Michelin has historically
    promoted. (Wall Street Journal 19th February
    2003)

13
Firestone recall
  • Price response with no matching non-price
    compensation brought Goodyear undone despite
    windfall from Firestone
  • Strategic responses of rivals not on price but
    design, image, availability
  • In the tire industry, innovations are quickly
    copied, so it's hard to retain a genuine edge for
    long. But Goodyear has underspent its rivals on
    research and development. Goodyear spent 376
    million on RD in 2001, while Bridgestone spent
    476 million and Michelin spent about 645
    million.
  • In years past, Goodyear made up for that through
    muscular sales and marketing and a network of
    dealers that pushed its products with
    near-religious zeal. But Goodyear's price
    changes came at a time when dealers were already
    in near-rebellion over a host of other
    complaints. (Wall Street Journal 19th February
    2003)
  • Need model of manufacturing competition that fits
    situations like these

14
Alternative models of firm behaviour
  • In manufacturing
  • Few very large firms
  • Differentiated products quality and feature
    variation
  • Competition mainly on product development,
    marketing, services (availability, after-sales
    support)
  • Price banding price reflects quality so market
    segmented
  • Product diversity non-price competition limit
    output, not costs
  • Income distribution also limits potential sales
  • Main problem not producing with DMP, but
    selling output given constrained effective demand

15
Alternative models of firm behaviour
  • Conventional economic supply demand model based
    on small, price taking firms
  • Model doesnt fit data any alternative model
    must!
  • Basic fact wide dispersion of firm sizes, but
  • Most industries dominated by few large firms
  • E.g., US industry aggregate data
  • Lets break that down by percentages

16
Alternative models of firm behaviour
  • 95 of firms earn less than 5 million
  • Less than 1 in 400 earns more than 100 million
    but
  • Bottom 95 of firms responsible for only 25 of
    salaries 15 of sales
  • Top 0.25 responsible for 51 of salaries and
    62 of sales
  • Its a big world out there Model of big
    pricing needed

17
Galbraith Institutional Analysis
  • One alternative Institutional economics view
  • Focuses on institutions of society
  • Sees dominant institution as large manufacturing
    firm
  • Some competition good necessary
  • Restrains prices (e.g., Goodyears experience)
  • Encourages innovation (Apple v IBM v Dell)
  • But small firms/competitive industries not
    automatically superior to concentrated industries
  • Too small scale of operation
  • Inability to plan for technology/market
  • Institutionally inferior to large firms because
    less effective manager of vagaries of market

18
Galbraith Institutional Analysis
  • Focus of Galbraiths institutional analysis of
    firms
  • Nothing so characterizes the industrial system
    as the scale of the modern corporate enterprise.
    In 1969, the five largest industrial
    corporations, with combined assets of 59
    billion, had just under 11 per cent of all assets
    used in manufacturing. The 50 largest
    manufacturing corporations had 38 per cent of all
    assets. The 500 largest had 74 per cent (89)
  • Companies achieve scale because it facilitates
    planning of technology, and control of the
    market

19
Galbraith Institutional Analysis
  • The firm must be large enough to carry large
    capital commitments of modern technology. It must
    also be large enough to control its markets. But
    the present view also explains what the older
    explanations don't explain. That is, why General
    Motors is not only large enough to afford the
    best size of automobile plant but is large enough
    to afford a dozen or more of the best size and
    why it is large enough to produce things as
    diverse as aircraft engines and refrigerators,
    which cannot be explained by the economies of
    scale and why, though it is large enough to have
    the market power associated with monopoly,
    consumers do not seriously complain of
    exploitation. The size of General Motors is in
    the service not of monopoly or the economies of
    scale but of planning. And for this planning -
    control of supply, control of demand, provision
    of capital, minimization of risk - there is no
    clear upper limit to the desirable size. It could
    be that the bigger the better. The corporate form
    accommodates to this need. Quite clearly it
    allows the firm to be very, very large. (91)
  • How large? Check Fortune 500 list of Americas
    top companies

20
Fortune 500 Top 26
21
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Post Keynesian School focuses on
  • Manufacturing prices for established products
  • Input prices raw materials, agriculture
  • Several variants, but basic ideas
  • Manufacturing prices average cost at target
    output a markup
  • Target historic market share growth objective
  • Markup reflects degree of competition in
    industry
  • Manufacturing supply flexible
  • Production well within capacity
  • Subject to constant/falling marginal costs
  • Demand fluctuations covered mainly by changes in
    stocks

22
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Prices set by markup on input costs
  • Price is set by adding together direct
    material and labor costs per unit output, plus
    overhead costs determined at standard volume
    output, plus a predetermined (conventional)
    profit margin. Because the pricing procedure is
    not explicitly designed to maximize profits, the
    full cost price is no a profit maximizing price
    or, in fact, a price that maximizes anything.
    Rather the pricing procedure is designed to
    enable the firm to reproduce itself and grow.
    (Lee 1984 1108)

23
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • View of firms costs
  • Based on empirical data
  • High fixed costs
  • Constant variable costs
  • Costs fall to full capacity
  • Planned output within capacity

Andrews 1950 61
  • Emphasis on realism
  • Post Keynesians often stunned that model not
    accepted by economists

24
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Granted that the principle is so generally
    adhered to in manufacture, the mystery is that it
    has not yet emerged as a postulate of economic
    analysis. It should obviously be an accepted
    principle in pricing-theory. Those economists who
    have thought about it have been too concerned
    with trying to explain it on the basis of the
    existing theory, instead of accepting it
    Scientific method would suggest that the right
    thing to do at the existing state of knowledge
    would be at least to accept the principle as a
    basis for further theory in its own fieldthe
    analysis of price-policy. (Andrews 1950 82)
  • Main danger for firm is that target sales will
    not be met
  • If sales below target then costs (including debt
    servicing) can exceed revenue
  • Sales above target greatly increase profit

25
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Main focus of competition between firms then
    non-price
  • Attempt to alter profile of demand towards own
    product and away from competitors
  • Hence advertising, marketing, etc.
  • Attempt to lower/control costs increase quality
  • Research development key focus of firm
  • Non-manufacturing prices quite different
  • Minerals, foodstuffs etc. subject to very
    different dynamics
  • Products much more homogeneous than manufactures
  • Supply less under control of producer (esp.
    agriculture)
  • Often more difficult to stockpile
  • Productive capacity more difficult to alter

26
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • As a result, manufacturing prices administered
    while minerals/agriculture market
  • Administered
  • Price set by firm on target output costs plus
    markup
  • Changed rarely
  • Changes in demand met by changes in output
  • Increase in output can allow drop in markup
  • Market
  • Price set by some market mechanism, mainly
    demand-determined
  • Changed often
  • Changes in demand initially met by change in
    price
  • Change in supply only after sustained change in
    demand
  • Prices will rise fall with the trade cycle

27
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • In PK theory, volatile market prices tend to rise
    in boom, fall in slump relative to stable
    administered prices
  • Distinction between administered and market
    prices set by frequency of price changes
  • 1935 study (Means)
  • Administered lt 3 changes/year or less
  • Market 1 change/month or more
  • On this basis, following classification of
    administered vs market prices by industry

28
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Means concluded majority of prices were
    administered
  • Manufactured goods account for 85 of turnover,
    so majority of most important prices administered

29
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Empirically valid theory but
  • Limited model of how markups etc. set
  • Limited development of implications
  • makes some predictions re inflation, cycles
  • Increase in administered prices mainly reflects
  • Changes in distribution of income (higher wages
    passed on in higher prices) increase during
    booms
  • Change in cost of raw materials inputs increase
    during booms
  • Change in economic activity (increase means lower
    markups needed for same profit) fall during
    booms
  • Market prices take brunt of fall during slumps
  • But lacks real theory of interaction between
    different prices, etc.

30
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Interesting example of ideas from recent
    newspaper
  • The 71.5 per cent price rise achieved by iron ore
    producers this week ... the rest of us should be
    bracing for a dose of cost-of-living reality as
    those prices flow through the production chain.
    Everything ... will be affected. Or, at least,
    they would be affected if the price rises were
    passed down the chain.

31
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • The iron ore producers and steel makers can raise
    prices almost at will. But the story is different
    as the metal gets closer to the price-sensitive
    customer. Here price rises can become more a
    dream than a reality...
  • The price rises reflected a world shortage ...
    Steel prices have been jumping at an alarming
    rate, with the most common industrial feedstock,
    ... rising from US330 to US630 a tonne in the
    past 14 months.
  • The pain has been obvious during this profit
    season. At least it was if companies could secure
    steel supplies
  • "We have all been struggling, not just with
    prices, but a lack of availability," "The
    problem was a lack of notice from BlueScope
    Steel. There is a three-month lag for us to
    recover steel price rises." And that's only if
    Hills can raise prices. "There is a fine line
    between recovering prices and being able to
    retain the business," Mr Simmons said. "If you
    raise the price, a retailer is just as likely to
    say Well, we'll get it offshore'."

32
Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Post Keynesian Price Theory
  • Similar to institutional in that emphasises
    decision-making power of firm
  • Firm sets markup thus price
  • With some constraint from degree of monopoly
  • Different to neoclassical
  • Argues market sets price, argues decision-making
    power of firm limited to non-existent
  • But theory flawed and empirically invalid
  • Another pricing theory Sraffian or Classical
  • Similar to Post Keynesian in that empirically
    valid (constant marginal costs)
  • Similar to neoclassical in that argues prices set
    by markup

33
Sraffian Price Theory
  • Based on work of Piero Sraffa
  • Sraffa used model to critique neoclassical price
    theory
  • Followers extend model to alternative theory of
    price, output
  • Prices based on
  • Cost of production (input costs)
  • Markup (like Post Keynesian) but
  • In equilibrium, markup
  • Constant across industries (uniform rate of
    profit)
  • Constrained by need to enable each industry to
    reproduce itself
  • Reproduce Sell output at price that lets it
    buy inputs and make uniform rate of profit

34
Sraffian Price Theory
  • Basic idea
  • In equilibrium, price of output must equal price
    of inputs times a profit margin
  • Equation expressed using Matrix notation
  • P vector of prices one for each commodity in
    economy
  • Q matrix each element shows fraction of one
    input needed to produce one unit of relevant
    output
  • Mathematics puts limits on markup (profit
    rate)
  • Generalised to include Labour inputs needed
  • Labour needed also vector labour-time needed to
    produce one unit of each commodity in economy

35
Sraffian Price Theory
  • Many macroeconomic ideas extracted from model
  • One crucial idea distribution of income (between
    wages and profits) affects prices
  • Model rejects neoclassical argument that wage
    equals marginal product of labour
  • Marginal product theory key link between
    neoclassical micro and macroeconomics
  • Undermined already by empirical finding that
    marginal product constant for vast majority of
    firms
  • Instead see wage/profit split reflecting relative
    political strength of workers vs capitalists
  • Sees legitimate role to industrial relations, etc.

36
Sraffian Price Theory
  • Neoclassical theory
  • only one set of relative prices will clear market
  • wage rate simply another price, as is rate of
    profit
  • Sraffian
  • Income distribution not determined by market but
    by social/political forces
  • Except that productivity of economy sets maximum
    feasible rate of profit
  • Many different sets of relative prices will clear
    market
  • One for each feasible distribution of income

37
Summing up alternatives
  • Some guidance from Post Keynesians Sraffians re
    pricing for managers
  • Supply demand cant explain 95 of prices
  • In general, prices set by markup on costs
  • Markup constrained by
  • Competitive pressures
  • Productivity of industry
  • Minerals/agriculture largely demand-determined
    prices
  • But theories dont explain all prices
  • Pricing theory for new products
  • Pricing theory for assets (Finance section of
    subject)

38
New products
  • Doesnt fit Post Keynesian or Sraffian models
    because
  • Both refer to established products
  • Sraffian (in particular) considers equilibrium
    positions
  • Cant fit into neoclassical model either
  • Model flawed for all products
  • More importantly, even if model was OK
  • Model fits equilibrium only when new products are
    disequilibrium phenomena
  • In equilibrium, profits are zero
  • Best understood by Austrian school of economics
  • In particular, Joseph Schumpeter in an exchange
    economy the prices of all products must, under
    free competition, be equal to the prices of the
    services of labor and nature embodied in them
    (30)

39
New products
  • Schumpeter accepted neoclassical general
    equilibrium as accurate model of unchanging
    economy
  • Defines profit as surplus of receipts over cost
  • In equilibrium, receipts exactly equal cost in
    all industries
  • All products sold at marginal cost (assuming
    rising MC)
  • Wages equal marginal product of labour
  • Return to capital equals marginal product of
    capital
  • But capital (machinery) itself an assembly of
    products
  • All paid for at marginal cost
  • Hence profit zero

40
New products
  • The businessman considers as his costs those
    sums of money which he must pay to other
    individuals, in order to procure his wares or the
    means of producing them, that is his expenses of
    production. We complete his calculation in that
    we also include in costs the money value of his
    personal efforts. Then costs are in their essence
    price totals of the services of labor and of
    nature. And these price totals must always equal
    the receipts obtained for the products. To this
    extent, therefore, production must flow on
    essentially profitless. (31)
  • But profit the driving motive of production in
    capitalist economy!
  • Yes, but not in equilibrium (argues Schumpeter)

41
New products
  • In Schumpeters vision, profit arises out of
    change
  • Conventional (neoclassical) economic model
    describes system in static equilibrium
  • Describes state of rest given one set of data
  • Ignores process of change to new state of rest
    after change
  • Schumpeter argues profit arises in the process of
    change from one state of rest to another
  • Hence conventional economics unable to understand
    profit
  • Also unable to understand pricing or strategy
  • Need model of discontinuous change that disturbs
    equilibrium

42
New products
  • Neoclassical economics describes economic life
    from the standpoint of the economic system's
    tendency towards an equilibrium position, which
    tendency gives us the means of determining prices
    and quantities of goods, and may be described as
    an adaptation to data existing at any time These
    tools only fail where economic life itself
    changes its own data by fits and starts. Static"
    analysis is not only unable to predict the
    consequences of discontinuous changes in the
    traditional way of doing things it can neither
    explain the occurrence of such productive
    revolutions nor the phenomena which accompany
    them. It can only investigate the new equilibrium
    position after the changes have occurred. (62-63)

43
New products
  • Schumpeter builds model of economic development
    that
  • Uses neoclassical as description of equilibrium
  • Adds process of qualitative change
  • Explains profit as outcome of one of 5 types of
    qualitative change caused by entrepreneurial
    activity
  • (1) The introduction of a new good
  • (2) The introduction of a new method of
    production
  • (3) The opening of a new market
  • (4) The conquest of a new source of supply of raw
    materials or half-manufactured goods
  • (5) The carrying out of the new organisation of
    any industry (66)
  • Explains introduction ( pricing) of new products
  • In doing so, overturns many conventional economic
    beliefs not as false, but as only applying in
    equilibrium

44
Schumpeters model
  • Simplifying assumptions
  • All innovation done by new firms
  • it is not essential to the matter - though it
    may happen - that the new combinations should be
    carried out by the same people who control the
    productive or commercial process which is to be
    displaced by the new. (66)
  • All resources (land, labour, machinery) currently
    fully employed
  • we must never assume that the carrying out of
    new combinations takes place by employing means
    of production which happen to be unused. In
    practical life, this is very often the case...
    This certainly is a favorable condition ...
    But as a rule the new combinations must draw
    the necessary means of production from some old
    combinations we shall assume that they always
    do so. (67-68)
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