Title: Lecture 2: Elasticity, Control on Prices
1Lecture 2 Elasticity, Control on Prices
Production
Dr. Rajeev Dhawan Director
Given to the EMBA 8400 Class Classroom South
608 January 6, 2007
2Chapter 5
3Elasticity Its Application
- Evaluating questions like-
- Banana Republic store manager/headquarters needs
to decide on sale on jeans vs. sale on shirts - Rain destroys strawberry crop, prices go ?. Does
it benefit growers ? - Why dont you ever see sale or discounts on pure
milk but see it on orange juice ? - These can be answered with the concept of
elasticity (or responsiveness of buyers sellers
to changes in market conditions)
4Elasticity
- Price elasticity of demand a measure of how much
the quantity demanded of a good responds to a
change in the price of that good
5Continued..
- Two types of demand
- Elastic responds a lot e.g. luxury cars (
luxuries) - Inelastic not much change e.g. milk, certain
food items, gasoline ( necessities) - Preferences Luxuries vs. Necessities
- Availability of close substitutes Elastic
- Butter margarine cars, booze
- Time horizon
- Gasoline necessity in short run
- Substitute long run (electric cars, walk, bike)
6Elasticity
- Inelastic Demand
- Quantity demanded does not respond strongly to
price changes. - Price elasticity of demand is lt one.
- Elastic Demand
- Quantity demanded responds strongly to changes in
price. - Price elasticity of demand is gt one.
7Demand Curves
- Question Can I tell from the graphical shape of
the demand curve what kind of elasticity the
curve has? - Answer Yes, but not all the time.
8Perfectly Inelastic Demand
Elasticity 0
Price
Quantity
0
3. . . . revenue goes from 4 x 100 to 5 x 100
9Inelastic Demand
Elasticity lt 1
Price
Quantity
0
3. . . . revenue goes from 4 x 100 to 5 x 90
10Unit Elastic Demand
Elasticity 1
Price
Quantity
0
3. . . . revenue goes from 4 x 100 to 5 x 80
11Elastic Demand
Elasticity gt 1
Price
Quantity
0
3. . . . revenue goes from 4 x 100 to 5 x 50
12Perfectly Elastic Demand
Elasticity Infinity
Price
Quantity
0
13Relationship Between Total Revenue (Sales)
Elasticity
- Total Revenue Price x Qty Sold P x Qty
- If demand is elastic, then a price decrease
increases revenue - If demand is inelastic, then a price increase
increases revenue - Example ? class to contribute
14Box Shows the 50 Drop of New Paying Customers
for the May August 2004 Conference Caused by
the Latest Price Hike
Conference Date Attendance New Paying of Total
Feb 01 72 6 8
May 01 66 10 15
Aug 01 101 31 31
Nov 01 163 49 30
Feb 02 189 28 15
May 02 160 42 26
Aug 02 195 62 32
Nov 02 169 44 26
Feb 03 260 55 21
May 03 196 37 19
Aug 03 220 43 20
Nov 03 222 40 18
Feb 04 238 48 20
May 04 201 25 12
Aug 04 211 23 11
1st Price Hike
2nd Price Hike
15Applications of Supply, Demand Elasticity
- Can good news for farmers be bad news for
farmers? - Wheat is inelastic Bumper crop ? bad news
16Increase In Supply In Market For Wheat
Price of
Wheat
Quantity of
0
Wheat
17 Chapter 6
18Controls on Prices
- Price Ceiling (e.g. rent control)
- A legal maximum on the price at which a good can
be sold. - If the price ceiling is set below the equilibrium
price, it leads to a shortage. - Price Floor (e.g. minimum wage)
- A legal minimum on the price at which a good can
be sold. - If the price ceiling is set above the equilibrium
price, it leads to a surplus.
19Price Ceiling
Beer Shortage
Rent Control Too
Beer
0
Pints
20Price Floor Beer Surplus
Price of
Beer
Quantity of
0
Beer
21Article Too Many Cars, WSJ by Paul Ingrassia
- Overcapacity is the biggest problem for any
automobile company in the world - GM buys Daewoo Motor, Fiat Auto, Saab
- Ford motor owns Mazda, Land Rover
- Daimler Chrysler is riding to rescue Mitsubishi
- Oldsmobile and Chryslers Plymouth, are the first
major automobile companies in 40 years - Why do ailing automobile companies who decry
overcapacity keep ailing car companies? - National pride plays a big role
- More brands mean more dealerships mean more
sales. - But this also means more costs and complexity in
business operations. - In reality, overcapacity is not really a problem.
- One mans overcapacity is others bargain.
- Thus, lower priced leases and generous rebates
abound in todays car market.
22Chapter 2
23Production
- What is production?
- The activity by which we convert inputs (labor,
land capital) into goods and services - What limits production?
- Inputs (resources)
- Technology
- Government interference
24Circular Flow Diagram
Circular Flow Diagram
Spending
Revenue
Income
Flow of inputs
Flow of inputs
and outputs
and outputs
Flow of dollars
Flow of dollars
25Production Possibilities Frontier
- Definition the amount of goods a firm or society
can produce given a fixed amount of land, labor
and other inputs.
26Production Possibilities Frontier
Quantity of
Pretzels
Produced
a
b
d .
c
Quantity of
0
Beer Produced
27Production Function I
Y (Production) F (Inputs)
Y I
Marginal Product it is the increase in output
that arises from an additional unit of input.
Marginal Product (MP) ? Output / ?Input
28Production Function II
Y I2
Marginal Product (MP) ? Output / ?Input
29Production Function III
Y vI
Marginal Product (MP) ? Output / ?Input
30Returns to Scale
- Returns to Scale the property of the production
function that when you double your inputs, your
output either doubles, more than doubles, or less
than doubles.
DRS
YI
MP ? ? IRS MP ? ? DRS
CRS
Y vI
YI2
IRS
31Article Japanese Auto Giants Accelerate Shift to
U.S. WSJ by Shirouzu, Zaun
- For Japanese auto giants Toyota, Honda, Nissan,
what American consumers want is becoming more
important than the wish lists of consumers in
Japans shrinking market - The Japanese are accelerating their shift away
from their home market, which they see headed for
long-term decline - Simple Math With the market shrinking back home,
even boosting your share of the pie might not
mean higher sales and profit for Japanese - Weak yen helps Japanese car makers
- Japanese companies don't have pension and
health-care costs - Customization for high demand products
- Quality takes a back seat?
32Automobile Industry
- Economic Analysis of
- General Motors Light Truck Sector
-
33 Strengths
- General Motors is currently a dominant force in
the North American light truck market. - Strong history and brand name
- Limited competition from foreign firms in the
past - Owns GMAC Financing, so can offer financing
incentives - Global automotive sales leader since 1931
34 Strengths
- 8.6 million cars and trucks sold in 2002
- 15 of global vehicle market
- Controls almost a third of the US market
- 2002 U.S. industry sales records for total trucks
and SUVs, 2003 may be the 3rd in a row of
increased market share in US - 341,000 employees, 32 countries
- Vehicles sold in over 190 countries
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37 Weaknesses
- GMs productivity at 24 labor hrs/vehicle is the
second lowest - GM has huge pension liabilities 1900 per
vehicle (retiree pension and health care) - Along with other US manufacturers Health care
costs for all employees vs. overseas mfg with
national health
38 Opportunities
- Efficiency improvements through flexible
manufacturing techniques, benchmarking Toyota to
reduce costs - Product differentiation through options, like
body styles, power packages, chassis. - Lead in Environment and Safety - Experimental
fuel hybrid that is more advanced than Honda and
Toyota
39Industry Costs
- Emissions, fuel efficiency, safety, performance,
and technology - Vehicle updates lead to increased design,
production, testing, marketing, and advertising
costs - Steel as input cost
- Pension costs
- Product liability lawsuits
40Economies of Scale
41Macroeconomic Factors
- Key macroeconomics factors that influence new
truck demand - Consumer income
- Unemployment level
- Personal income growth
- Inflation and interest rates
42Other Macroeconomics Factors
- Current GDP growth
- Recession
- Current Trade Deficit- FE Rates (U, )
- Monetary Fiscal Policy
- Extraneous forces - OPEC oil prices
- Labor Unions (UAW, etc)
43Comparative Efficiency of US Japanese
Automakers A Stochastic Frontier Production
Function Approach
Rajeev Dhawan Marvin Lieberman RCB The
Anderson School at UCLA
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52Table 1A. Comparison of OLS and SFPF Estimates
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56Observations from technical efficiency scatter
plot (Japanese producers)
- Technical efficiency increased 50 from the
mid-1960s to the mid-1980s. Little growth in
subsequent years, even a decline. - Toyota has the highest technical efficiency (A
close second is Honda). Toyotas lead in
technical efficiency is smaller than its lead in
labor productivity. - A number of the Japanese producers have
historical performance that is well below the
efficiency frontier. - Efficiency estimates fluctuate with business
cycle.
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58Observations from technical efficiency scatter
plot (US producers)
- GMs efficiency is slightly above the Japanese
level in the mid-1960s. By the 1990s, GMs
efficiency falls below that of all Japanese
producers except Fuji and Mazda. - Chryslers efficiency falls sharply in the late
1970s but recovers strongly in the 1980s. Ford
also shows strong improvement in the 1980s. Both
Chrysler and Ford have efficiency levels
comparable to the Japanese average in the late
1980s and 1990s.
59 Conclusion
- Get away from firm-size issue and focus on
cutting inventory (WIP) costs via flexible plants
and JIT inventory methods i.e. suppliers - Increase speed of new product introduction to
market - benchmark Toyota - Make cars that people in cities want not when you
go Pheasant hunting in South Dakota!