Title: Jarred Volek
1Jarred Volek Nicholas Rawlins Christina Merbedon
e
Kurt Lorenz Gillian Pavlek
2TABLE OF CONTENTS
Gillian History/Background Scarce Resources Op
portunity Cost
Jarred Monopoly Monopolistic Competition Oligo
poly
Kurt Supply/Demand Substitutes Factors of Supp
ly/Demand
Elasticity
Christina Profit Maximization Perfect Competiti
on
Two Types of Profit
Nick Budget Constraint Budget Line Benefits of
Employment
Type of Business
3History
- 1902 George Dayton opens Goodfellows in downtown
Minneapolis.
- 1954 J.L. Hudson opens Northland Center in
Detroit.
- 1962 Target becomes a new idea in discount
stores
- 1971 The Dayton Hudson Corporation is formed
through a merger of the Dayton Corporation and
the J.L. Hudson Company.
- 1979 Target Stores becomes the corporations top
revenue producer
- 1995 Target Stores launches the industrys first
discount store credit card.
- 1998 Revenues Top 30 billion
- 2000 Dayton Hudson Corporation celebrates its
name change to Target Corporation
4Background
First Target store opened on May 1, 1962 in
Roseville, Minnesota, 1,313 stores in 47 states
136/1,313 are super stores 22 distribution
centers 3 import warehouses Ranked 34th on the f
ortune 500 list Give over 2 million a week to th
e communities it serves
5Scarce Resources
- Less of something freely available from nature
than we would choose to consume
- Land
- Labor
- Capital
- Entrepreneurial Activity
6Land
The physical space on which production takes
place, as well as the natural resources found
beneath or on it
Headquarters Located in Minneapolis, MN Regional
Offices in LA, Dallas, Richmond, Minneapolis,
and Troy
7Labor
The time human beings spend producing goods and
services
- Approximately 192,000 employed
8Capital
Physical capital buildings, machinery, and
equipment Human capital the skills and tr
aining that workers possess
9Entrepreneurial Activity
- Recognizes opportunity and then proceeds to take
advantage of that opportunity
- George Dayton
- J.L. Hudson
10Opportunity Cost
- what you give up versus what you gain
- the value of the best alternative which must be
given up in order to get something
- item at Target 5-200
- time to shop 1 to 2 hours
- gas money 5.00
- Total opportunity cost 10-205
11Law of Demand
- Inverse relationship
- As price increases, quantity demanded decreases
Decrease in Demand
12Law of Supply
- Direct Relationship
- As the price increases, the quantity supplied
increases
Increase in Supply
13Factors of Supply and Demand
- Supply
- Input Prices
- Number of Sellers
- Expectations of Sellers
- Prices of Alternate Goods
- Technology
- Demand
- Income
- Number of Consumers
- Expectations of Buyers
- Prices of Related Goods
- Tastes
14Price Elasticity of Demand
- Measures how sensitive quantity demanded is to a
change in price
- Determinates of Elasticity
- Availability of Substitutes
- Importance in the Buyers Budget
- Time Period
15Short-Run vs. Long-Run Elasticity
- Short-Run
- Response measured shortly after price change-a
few months
- Some inputs are fixed
- Long-Run
- Response measured in a years time or longer
- All inputs are variable
16Substitutes
17Budget Constraint-identifies which combinations
of goods and services the consumer can afford
with a limited budget, at given prices. -For
example, Tommy Target, has a maximum purchase
expenditure of a 150 - Typical DVD 15-Typical
CD 10
18(No Transcript)
19CHANGES IN THE BUDGET LINE
Budget Line
Increase in Income
CDs
CDs
DVDs
DVDs
CDs
CDs
DVDs
DVDs
Decrease in Price of CD
Decrease in Price of DVD
20WHAT TYPE OF BUSINESS FIRM IS TARGET?
CORPORATION
Ownership is divided among those who buys shares
of stock. Each share entitles its owner to a vote
for the board of directors, which in turn hires
the corporations top manager.
Some other types of corporations you are familiar
with are
21THE BENEFITS OF EMPLOYMENT
22Different Types of Profit
- Accounting Profit
- Total revenue total costs
- Economic Profit
- Total revenue ALL costs of production
- Total revenue-( Explicit costs Implicit Costs)
23Targets Profit2003
- Accounting Profit
- 48,163 million- implicit costs (cost of
sales-wages- general expenses-income taxes)
- Final Accounting Profit
- 1,841 million
- Economic Profit
- 48,163 million implicit costs-explicit costs
(investment forgone-rent forgone-salary forgone)
24Profit Maximization
- Every firms key GOAL
- Marginal Revenue Marginal Costs
- Profit Total Revenue- Total Costs
25Perfect Competition
- Large number of buyers and sellers
- Each buys or sells only a tiny fraction of the
total quantity in the market.
- Sellers offer a standardized product
- Sellers can easily enter into or exit from the
market
26Targets Market Structure
- Competitive Market??
- NO
- Why?
- Few Competitors
- Some barriers exist
27Monopoly
- Target is not a pure monopoly.
- Is Target monopolistic in nature?
28Monopolistic Competition
- Many buyers and sellers
- Sellers offer a differentiated product
- Easy entrance and exit
Yes
No
Yes
29Oligopoly
- Few firms producing either a
- Homogeneous or a
- Heterogeneous Product
30Oligopoly
- Target, Wal-Mart, K-Mart, and Costco Wholesale
make up the Oligopoly
31What have you learned today..
- The History of Target
- Scarce Resources
- Opportunity Cost
- Supply/Demand
- Substitutes
- Factors of Supply and Demand
- Elasticity
- Budget Constraint
- Budget Line
- Benefits of Employment
- The Type of Business Target Is
- Profit Maximization
- Perfect Competition
- The Two Types of Profit
- Monopoly
- Monopolistic Competition
- Oligopoly
32Keep Your Eye On The Target
GOOD LUCK ON YOUR FINALS