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Economics 100B Microeconomics

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Title: Economics 100B Microeconomics


1
Economics 100BMicroeconomics
2
Announcements
  • Recall
  • Midterm on Monday, February 13 (class time)
  • Additional link to the course website
  • http//www.princeton.edu/costinot/100B/100B.htm
  • New on the course website
  • Solution to Problem Set 3
  • Problem Set 4 (solution will be posted Friday,
    February 10)
  • Additional office hours this week check
    Updates on the course website

3
Course Outline
4
Todays Plan
  • Monopoly (Chapter 13)
  • Review for Midterm
  • Oligopoly (Chapter 14)

5
I. Monopoly
  • Monopoly profit maximization (pp387-391)
  • Monopoly and welfare (pp387-391)
  • Price discrimination (pp397-404)
  • Regulation of monopoly (pp404-407)

6
A. Profits Maximization
  • How does a monopolist behave to maximize profit?

Price
P1P(Q1)
D
Quantity
Q1Q(P1)
7
Monopoly Profits
  • Profit Revenue - Cost

8
Profits Maximization (math)
  • Choose the quantity to maximize profit

9
Profits Maximization (graphical)
MC
Price
AC
D
MR
Quantity
10
Monopoly Mark-up
  • Elasticity of demand

11
Monopoly Mark-up
  • Assume C(Q) cQ
  • Choose price to maximize profit

12
Monopoly Mark-up
  • First-order condition

13
The Inverse Elasticity Rule
  • The percent mark-up over marginal cost is
    inversely related to the elasticity of demand

14
The Inverse Elasticity Rule
  • A monopolist will choose to operate only in
    regions where the market demand curve is elastic

15
Elasticity of Demand
Price
Is D or D' more elastic?
Has demand become more or less elastic if demand
increases from D to D''?
P
D''
D
D'
Quantity
Q
Q''
16
Example with Linear Demand
  • Consumer demand q100-(1/2)p
  • Monopolists cost function c(q)q225

17
B. Monopoly and Welfare
  • Monopolies are associated with inefficient
    production

18
Welfare Analysis
Price
Competitive market outcome (Q,P)
P
Monopoly outcome (Q,P)
MCAC
P
D
MR
Q
Q
Quantity
19
Deadweight Loss
Price
Consumer surplus would fall
Producer surplus will rise
P
There is deadweight loss
MCAC
P
D
MR
Q
Q
Quantity
20
C. Price Discrimination
  • A monopoly may be able to increase profits
    through price discrimination charging different
    prices to different buyers
  • Only feasible if can prevent arbitrage among
    buyers

21
Perfect (first-degree) Price Discrimination
  • The monopolist charges each buyer the maximum
    price he/she is willing to pay
  • extracts all consumer surplus
  • no deadweight loss

22
Perfect Price Discrimination
The first buyer pays P1 for Q1 units
Price
The second buyer pays P2 for Q2-Q1 units
P1
P2
Continues until the marginal buyer is no longer
willing to pay the goods marginal cost
MC
D
Quantity
Q
Q1
Q2
23
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • The monopolist separates its buyers into a few
    identifiable markets
  • follows a different pricing policy in each market

24
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • If the marginal cost is the same in all markets,

25
Third-degree Price Discrimination
Price
The market with the less elastic demand will be
charged the higher price
P1
P2
MC
MC
D
D
MR
MR
Quantity in Market 2
Quantity in Market 1
Q2
Q1
0
26
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • Profitability of the practice
  • Example
  • C(q) 800 4q
  • q1 1000 100p1
  • q2 1600 200p2

27
Third-degree Price Discrimination
  • Ambiguous welfare consequences relative to a
    single price policy

28
Second-degree Price Discrimination
  • Charge different prices for different quantities
  • price schedule provides incentives for demanders
    to separate themselves according to how much they
    wish to buy

29
Two-part Tariffs
  • Buyers pay a fixed fee for the right to consume a
    good and a uniform price for each unit consumed
  • T(q) a pq

30
Two-part Tariffs
  • Only feasible if those who pay low average prices
    cannot resell the good to those who must pay high
    average prices
  • p' T/q a/q p

31
Two-part Tariffs
  • One feasible approach
  • set p MC
  • set a equal to the consumer surplus of the least
    eager buyer

32
Two-part Tariffs
  • Suppose there are two different buyers with the
    demand functions
  • q1 24 - p1
  • q2 24 - 2p2
  • Could implement a two-part tariff by setting
  • p1 p2 MC 6

33
D. Regulation of Monopoly
  • Governments often create and then regulate
    natural monopolies
  • Trade-off Cost-efficiency versus Pareto
    inefficient output level

34
Marginal Cost Pricing
  • Require the firm to produce the socially-optimal
    output level and charge a price equal to marginal
    cost
  • Problem operating revenues will not cover total
    costs

35
Marginal Cost Pricing
An unregulated monopoly will maximize profit at
Q1 and P1
Price
If regulators force the monopoly to charge a
price of P2 and produce Q2, the firm will suffer
a loss
P1
C1
C2
AC
MR
MC
P2
Quantity
D
Q1
Q2
36
Multi-price System
Allowed to charge a price of P1 to some users
Price
Other users are offered P2
P1
Profits from high-price sales balance losses on
low-price sales
C1
C2
AC
MC
P2
Quantity
D
Q1
Q2
37
Average Cost Pricing
  • Allow the monopoly to charge a price above
    marginal cost that is sufficient to earn a fair
    rate of return on investment

38
Average Cost Pricing
Price
The equilibrium under average cost pricing would
be at Q3 and P3
P1
C1
P3C3
C2
AC
MR
MC
P2
Quantity
D
Q1
Q2
Q3
39
Average Cost Pricing
  • Regulator unlikely to have perfect information
    about costs
  • Problem low incentives for cost efficiency
  • Problem firm may over-capitalize

40
Average Cost Pricing
  • Suppose that a regulated utility has a production
    function of the form
  • q f (k,l)
  • The firm rate of return on capital is set by
    regulation to be

41
Average Cost Pricing
  • The Lagrangian for the firms constrained profit
    maximization problem is
  • L pf (k,l) wl vk ?wl s0k pf (k,l)
  • The first-order condition for capital is

42
Average Cost Pricing
  • The firm over-capitalizes
  • Because s0gtv and ?lt1, this means that
  • pfk lt v

43
Dynamic Views of Monopoly
  • Monopoly profits can play a beneficial role in
    the process of economic development

44
II. Review for Midterm
  • Logistics
  • Ledden Auditorium, class time
  • Exam lasts 90 minutes
  • No calculators or other aids allowed
  • Bring a blue book (we will reassign blue books
    before the exam)
  • Exam is worth a total of 100 points
  • Allocate your time wisely

45
Topics Covered
  • Consumer demand
  • Constrained utility maximization
  • Firm supply
  • Cost minimization
  • Profit maximization
  • Firm-level supply curve
  • Perfectly competitive market equilibrium
  • Very short run, short run, long run

46
Topics Covered
  • Social surplus
  • Deadweight loss of interventions
  • Taxes
  • Price ceilings and floors
  • Import tariffs and quotas
  • General equilibrium pricing
  • In an exchange economy
  • In a production economy

47
Topics Covered
  • Efficiency of perfect competition
  • Exchange efficiency
  • Technical (production) efficiency
  • Product-mix efficiency
  • Equity and perfect competition

48
Topics Covered
  • Monopoly
  • Profit maximization
  • Monopoly and welfare
  • Price discrimination
  • Regulation

49
III. Oligopoly Pricing of Homogenous Goods
  • A relatively small number of firms produce a
    single homogenous product
  • Consumers will always choose the lowest price
    product

50
Basic Model
  • The output of each of n identical firms is
  • qi (i1,,n)
  • Barriers to entry (n is fixed)
  • The inverse demand function depends on the level
    of industry output
  • P f(Q) f(q1q2qn)

51
Basic Model
  • Each firms goal is to choose the quantity to
    produce to maximize profits
  • ?i f(Q)qi Ci(qi)
  • ?i f(q1q2qn)qi Ci(qi)

52
Oligopoly Pricing Models
  • Quasi-competitive model assumes price-taking
    behavior by all firms
  • P is treated as fixed
  • Cartel model assumes that firms can collude
    perfectly in choosing industry output and price

53
Oligopoly Pricing Models
  • Cournot model assumes that firm i treats firm j
    s output as fixed in its decisions
  • ?qj /?qi 0
  • Conjectural variations model assumes that firm
    js output will respond to variations in firm is
    output
  • ?qj /?qi ? 0

54
A. Cartel Model
  • Assumes that firms coordinate their decisions so
    as to achieve monopoly profits

55
Cartel Model
  • Cartel chooses qi for each firm so as to maximize
    total industry profits

56
Cartel Model
  • The first-order conditions for a maximum are that

57
Cartel Model
Price
MC
D
MR
Quantity
58
Cartel Model
  • Three problems with the cartel solution
  • monopolistic decisions may be illegal
  • large informational requirement
  • unstable
  • each firm has an incentive to expand output
    because MRi gt MCi

59
Duopoly Example
  • Assume the following
  • Inverse demand curve f(Q) P 1 Q
  • Firm 1s cost function C(q1) 0
  • Firm 2s cost function C(q2) 0
  • Total output Q q1 q2

60
Duopoly Example
  • Cartel solution
  • Firms maximize joint profits

61
Duopoly Example
  • Cartel solution
  • Profits under equal division

62
Duopoly Example
  • Cartel solution
  • Incentive to expand output

63
B. Cournot Model
  • Firms make quantity choices simultaneously and
    independently

64
Cournot Model
  • Each firm recognizes that its own decisions about
    qi affect price
  • ?P/?qi ? 0
  • Each firm believes that its decisions do not
    affect those of any other firm
  • ?qj /?qi 0 for all j ?i

65
Cournot Model
  • The firms profit maximization problem
  • The first-order conditions for profit
    maximization are

66
Cournot Model
  • Each firms output will exceed the cartel output
  • the firm-specific marginal revenue is larger than
    the market marginal revenue
  • P(Q) qi ? (?P/?qi) gt P(Q) Q ? (?P/?qi)
  • Each firms output will fall short of the
    competitive output
  • qi ? ?P/?qi lt 0

67
Cournot Model
Under the Cournot solution, MRi MCi and an
intermediate output and price (QA , PA ) will
prevail
Price
PM
PA
MC
PC
D
MR
Quantity
QM
QC
QA
68
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution
  • The two firms profits are given by
  • ?1 P(Q)q1 (1 - q1 - q2)q1
  • q1 - q12 - q1q2
  • ?2 P(Q)q2 (1 - q1 - q2) q2
  • q2 - q22 - q1q2

69
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution

Price
Conditional on a given quantity for firm 2, firm
1 faces the residual demand
1
1-q2
P(Q)1-Q
P(q1q2)1-q1-q2
Quantity
1-q2
1
70
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution
  • First-order conditions for a maximum are
  • these equations are called reaction functions

71
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution
  • In Nash equilibrium (NE), each firm takes the
    action that maximizes its profits given the
    actions of all other firms
  • For two firms, (q1, q2) is a NE if
  • q1 maximizes p1 given q2
  • AND
  • q2 maximizes p2 given q1

72
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution

q1
1
q2(q1) (1-q1)/2
1/2
q1(q2) (1-q2)/2
1/2
1
q2
73
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution

q1
Nash equilibrium q1q1(q2) q2q2(q1)
1
q2(q1)
1/2
Nash equilibrium point
q1
q1(q2)
q2
1/2
1
q2
74
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution
  • Solve the reaction functions simultaneously

75
Duopoly Example
76
Duopoly Example
  • Cournot solution
  • Steps to solve for the Nash equilibrium
  • Find inverse demand p(q1q2)
  • Write pi p(q1q2)qi - c(qi)
  • Maximize profits to obtain reaction functions
    q1(q2) and q2(q1)
  • Find the combination of quantities that jointly
    solves these two equations

77
C. Conjectural Variations Model
  • In markets with only a few firms, we can expect
    there to be strategic interaction among firms
  • Consider the assumptions that firm i might make
    about how its decisions affect those of other
    firms
  • For each firm i, we are concerned with the
    assumed value of ?qj /?qi for i?j

78
Conjectural Variations Model
  • The first-order condition for profit maximization
    becomes

79
Price Leadership CV Model
  • Suppose that the market is composed of a single
    price leader (firm 1) and a fringe of
    quasi-competitors
  • firms 2,,n are price takers
  • firm 1 has a more complex reaction function that
    takes other firms actions into account

80
Price Leadership CV Model
Price
SC
SC represents the supply decisions of all of the
n-1 firms in the competitive fringe
Quantity
81
Price Leadership CV Model
The demand for the leader (D) is constructed by
subtracting what the fringe will supply from
total market demand
Price
SC
P1
PL
The leader will set MR MC and produce QL at a
price of PL
D
P2
MC
D
MR
Quantity
QL
82
Price Leadership CV Model
Price
Market price will then be PL
SC
P1
The competitive fringe will produce QC and total
industry output will be QT
PL
D
P2
MC
D
MR
Quantity
QL
QC
QT
83
Price Leadership CV Model
  • This model does not explain how the price leader
    is chosen or what happens if a member of the
    fringe decides to challenge the leader

84
Assignment
  • Read Nicholson Chapter 14
  • Problem Set 4
  • Available on the course website
  • Solution will be posted on Friday, February 10 in
    order to give you time to study before the
    midterm
  • Recall
  • Midterm MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13 (class time)
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