Title: Introductory Microeconomics
1Introductory Microeconomics
The Quest for Profit and the Invisible Hand
2Example 8.1.
For the supply and demand curves shown, suppose a
tax of 6/lb is levied on sellers. What share of
the burden of this tax be borne by buyers? By
sellers?
3Example 8.1.
The equilibrium price, including the tax, will
rise from 6/lb to 10/lb.
Buyers pay 10/lb (including the tax), 4 higher
than before. So the buyers share of the tax is
(10-6)/6 2/3.
(as seen by the buyers)
Sellers receive 4/lb (net of the tax), 2 less
than before. So the sellers share of the tax is
(6-4)/6 1/3.
4Example 8.2.
- How would your answers to Example 8.1 have been
different if the tax had been collected from
buyers instead of sellers?
5Example 8.2.
At a quantity of 8 million lb/month, the buyer is
willing to pay 10/lb. With a tax of 6/lb, the
most he would be willing to pay the seller, net
of the tax, is only 4/lb. So the demand curve
as seen by the sellers is the original demand
curve shifted down by 6/lb.
6Example 8.2.
So, as before, the buyer pays 10/lb and the
seller receives 4/lb in equilibrium. As before
the buyers share of the tax is 2/3 and the
sellers share is 1/3.
7Example 8.3.
If the supply curve is completely elastic, what
share of a tax of 1/lb is borne by buyers? By
sellers?
- To get an answer for this question, do we need to
consider the two possibilities? - Tax collected from the buyers
- Tax collected from the sellers
8Example 8.3.
For this empirically most relevant case, the tax
is borne entirely by buyers.
When supply is perfectly elastic, taxing sellers
because they can afford the tax more easily than
buyers makes no economic sense at all. The
burden of a tax falls where it can, not where it
is placed.
9Different Types of Profit
- Profit Total revenue - Total cost
- Accounting profit Total revenue - Explicit
costs - Economic profit Total revenue - All costs
(implicit and explicit) - Normal profit the opportunity cost of the
resources owned by the firm
10Different Types of Profit
Normal profit
Opportunity cost of resources supplied by owners
of firm
Accounting profit
Economic profit
Total Revenue
Explicit costs
Explicit costs
11Example 8.4.
Cullen Buffet runs a miniature golf course in
Odessa, Texas.
12Example 8.4.
- He rents the course and equipment from a large
recreational supply company, for which he pays a
monthly fee of 1000. - He supplies his own labor, and considers the job
of running the golf course just as attractive as
his only other employment opportunity, working in
a grocery store at a salary of 800/mo. - Monthly revenue from ticket sales is 2000/mo.
- What at is Cullen's accounting profit? His
economic profit?
13Example 8.4.
- He rents the course and equipment from a large
recreational supply company, for which he pays a
monthly fee of 1000. - He supplies his own labor, and considers the job
of running the golf course just as attractive as
his only other employment opportunity, working in
a grocery store at a salary of 800/mo. - Monthly revenue from ticket sales is 2000/mo.
- What at is Cullen's accounting profit? His
economic profit?
Accounting profit 2000 - 1000
1000/mo. Economic profit 2000 - 1000 - 800
200/mo.
14Example 8.5.
Now suppose Cullen learns that his Uncle Warren
has died and left him this parcel of land in New
York City.
15Example 8.5.
- The land has been cleared, and Cullen discovers
that a construction company is willing to install
and maintain a miniature golf course on it for a
payment of 4000/month. - A market survey reveals that he would collect
16,000/month in revenue by operating a miniature
golf course there. - The cost of living in New York is the same as in
Odessa. - If Cullen opens a golf course on the Manhattan
site, what will be his accounting profit?
Accounting profit 16,000 - 4000 12,000/mo
16Example 8.6.
- Suppose Cullen's land would sell for 100,000,000
in today's real estate market, and suppose that
the interest rate is 1/month. - What is Cullens economic profit from running the
Manhattan golf course? - Should he relocate to Manhattan?
17Example 8.6.
- 1. The opportunity cost of devoting the land to a
miniature golf course is the interest that Cullen
could have earned from the money he could have
gotten from selling the land - (0.01)x(100,000,000) 1,000,000/mo.
- 2. The opportunity cost of his time is 200/mo
(economic profit he could have earned). - So his monthly economic profit in Manhattan is
- 16,000 - 4000 - 200 - 1,000,000 -978,200
lt 0. - So Cullen should stay in Odessa.
18Example 8.6.
- 1. The opportunity cost of devoting the land to a
miniature golf course is the interest that Cullen
could have earned from the money he could have
gotten from selling the land - (0.01)x(100,000,000) 1,000,000/mo.
- 2. The opportunity cost of his time is 800/mo
(the amount he could have earned at the grocery). - So his monthly economic profit in Manhattan is
- 16,000 - 4000 - 800 - 1,000,000 -978,800
lt 0. - So Cullen should stay in Odessa.
19Example 8.6.
- 1. The opportunity cost of devoting the land to a
miniature golf course is the interest that Cullen
could have earned from the money he could have
gotten from selling the land - (0.01)x(100,000,000) 1,000,000/mo.
- 2. The opportunity cost of his time is 800/mo
(the amount he could have earned at the grocery)
200/mo (economic profit he could have earned). - So his monthly economic profit in Manhattan is
- 16,000 - 4000 - 800 - 200 - 1,000,000
-979,000 lt 0. - So Cullen should stay in Odessa.
20Competition tends to drive economic profit down
to zero
- When a firm is making positive economic profit,
it is earning more than the cost of all the
resources required to produce the goods it sells.
- This means that another firm could produce the
same goods and in the process increase its
owners' wealth. - Entry by new firms will cause price to fall until
economic profit is driven down to zero.
21Competition tends to drive economic profit down
to zero
- Likewise, an industry in which firms are earning
negative economic profit is one in which firms
are failing to cover all the costs of the
resources they use. - If this situation is expected to persist, some
firms will go out of business. - Exit will continue until price rises to cover all
resource costs. - So in long-run equilibrium in a competitive
industry, firms will earn zero economic profit.
22Example 8.7. (Rent)
- Normal agricultural land yields 50 bushels of
corn per acre each year. - Corn sells for 1/bushel, and a farmer can farm
500 acres with an equivalent amount of physical
and psychological effort as is demanded by a
factory job, which pays 10,000/yr and is the
only other job available. - If labor and land are the only farm costs, how
much will normal agricultural land rent for?
23Example 8.7. (Rent)
- Normal agricultural land yields 50 bushels of
corn per acre each year. - Corn sells for 1/bushel, and a farmer can farm
500 acres with an equivalent amount of physical
and psychological effort as is demanded by a
factory job, which pays 10,000/yr and is the
only other job available. - If labor and land are the only farm costs, how
much will normal agricultural land rent for?
Total revenue from farming 25,000/yr Total
costs 10,000 500x(land rent per
acre) Economic profit 0 implies rent for 500
acres 15,000/yr implies rent 30 per
acre.
24Example 8.8. (Rent)
Suppose there is one 500 acre plot that yields
twice as much corn as the normal farmland that
rents for 30 per acre.
How much will this plot rent for?
25Example 8.8. (Rent)
- How much will this plot rent for?
- Total revenue 100(500) 50,000/yr
- Total cost 10,000 land rent
- Economic profit TR TC
- 50,000/yr - 10,000/yr land rent
Farmers will bid for the fertile patch until it
is no longer possible to earn positive economic
profit from farming it. Economic Profit 0
implies land rent 40,000, or 80 per acre
26Example 8.9.
Imagine yourself a member of the California state
legislature. You have been asked by the governor
to vote for a bill whose purpose is to alleviate
poverty among farm workers in a rural county.
27Example 8.9.
- Farm workers in that county rent their farmland
from landowners and are allowed to keep the
proceeds from the sale of the crops they grow. - Because of limited rainfall, their crops are
usually meager, resulting in very low incomes for
the average worker. - The bill under consideration would authorize
public funds to construct an irrigation system
that would double the crop yields on the land in
the county. - Will this bill achieve its desired purpose of
- raising farmers' incomes?
28Example 8.9.
The bill under consideration would authorize
public funds to construct an irrigation system
that would double the crop yields on the land in
the county.
Limited rainfall
Irrigation system
29Example 8.9.
- Will this bill achieve its desired purpose of
- raising farmers' incomes?
- With the introduction of the irrigation project
grain yields are now twice as high as before, so
total revenues will double. - If the land rent remained at its original level,
a farm worker would then earn more than he could
by working in a factory.
30Example 8.9.
- Will this bill achieve its desired purpose of
- raising farmers' incomes?
- What the supporters of the bill have failed to
recognize is that land rents will not remain the
same. - Both factory workers and farmers would bid
vigorously for farm parcels, and the rental price
of farmland will continue to rise until it
reaches a level that equalizes the incomes of
farmers and factory workers. - The beneficiaries of the state supported
irrigation project would be not the impoverished
farm workers but the owners of the land.
31Example 8.9.
- Will this bill achieve its desired purpose of
- raising farmers' incomes?
- The beneficiaries of the state supported
irrigation project would be not the impoverished
farm workers but the owners of the land. - These owners already have high incomes.
- Why should tax dollars be spent to
- increase their incomes further?
32Example 8.10.
- Suppose one firm is like all others except that
it employs an extraordinarily efficient manager. - This manager is so efficient that the firm earns
500,000 of economic profit each year. - The firm operates in an industry in which the
economic profit of other firms hovers very close
to zero.
If this manager received the same salary as all
other managers, the firm that employed her would
have much lower costs than all other firms in the
industry. Is this a stable outcome?
33Example 8.10.
Is this a stable outcome?
- There would be a strong incentive for some other
firm to bid this manager away by offering her a
higher salary. - Suppose a new firm offered her 300,000 more than
her current annual salary and she accepted. - That new firm would then earn an economic profit
of 200,000/year. - That's not as good as an economic profit of
500,000/year. But it's 200,000/year better
than the normal profit her original employer will
earn without her.
34Example 8.10.
Is this a stable outcome?
- Still other firms would have an incentive to
offer even more for this manager. - Theory tells us that the bidding should continue
until the cost savings for which she is
responsible are entirely incorporated into her
salary. - If her salary is 500,000/year higher than the
salary of an ordinary manager, her employer will
earn zero economic profit. - Once her salary is bid up to that level, the firm
that hires her will no longer enjoy a cost
advantage over the other firms in the industry.
35Example 8.11.
- The owner of the team that wins the NBA
Championship receives additional television
revenues of 40 million.
36Example 8.11.
- Whichever team hires Shaquille ONeal wins the
Championship.
37Example 8.11.
- There is free agency and teams can bid openly for
any player's services. - By how much will ONeal's salary exceed
- the salaries of other players?
- Suppose ONeal received only a 39 million salary
premium from his current team. - Some other team could increase its wealth by
bidding ONeal away with a higher salary. - Only when ONeal's salary premium is 40 million
will there be no further tendency for bidding.
38Example 8.12.
- Ford has sued GM for 1 billion for infringement
on Ford's patent on a revolutionary new engine
technology. - GM has a reasonable claim that it developed an
equivalent technology independently.
versus
39Example 8.12.
- The legal issues are complex, and experts regard
the case as too close to call. - Whichever side hires the better lawyer is sure to
win.
40Example 8.12.
- Smith and Jones are the best two patent lawyers
in the world. - Both are outstanding but Jones is ever so
slightly better.
Smith
Jones
What are the equilibrium fees for Smith and Jones
in this case?
41Example 8.12.
What are the equilibrium fees for Smith and Jones
in this case?
- Fees aside, whichever side hires Jones will be
1 billion better off than if it hadn't hired
Jones. - So in equilibrium Jones's fee will be 1 billion,
Smith's zero.
42Although competition drives economic profit to
zero, economic rent can persist indefinitely.
43The function of price
- The rationing function of price to distribute
scarce goods to those consumers who value them
most highly. - The allocative function of price to direct
resources away from overcrowded markets and
toward markets that are underserved.
44Price -- Adam Smiths Invisible Hand
45Carrot and stick
- The carrot of economic profit and the stick of
economic loss are the only forces necessary to
assure not only that - existing supplies in any market will be allocated
efficiently,but also that - resources will be allocated across markets to
produce the most efficient possible mix of goods
and services.
46Zero economic profit in long run
Consider an industry in which the current market
price enables firms to earn a positive economic
profit.
47Economic profit in short and long run
Price falls, making each firms economic profit
smaller than before.
The existence of positive economic profits
attracts new firms, shifting supply outward
48Economic profit in short and long run
As long as price remains above the minimum value
of ATC, profits lure new entrants. Supply
continues to shift out until . .
49Economic profit in short and long run
Supply continues to shift out until price falls
to min ATC. At that point economic profit is zero
and there is no further incentive to enter.
50Economic profit in short and long run
What if the firms are originally earning economic
losses?
51Economic profit in short and long run
Supply continues to shift inward until price
rises to min ATC.
52Example 8.13. Present Value and the Time Value
of Money
- Suppose the annual interest rate on bank deposits
is 10 percent. If you deposit 100 on January 1
of this year, how much will it be worth by
January 1 of next year? - 100 (1.10) 110.
53Present value
- For any given interest rate, the present value of
a sum of money that you will receive at a
specific time in the future is the amount of
money you would have to put in the bank today at
that interest rate in order to have exactly the
required sum on the future date.
54Example 8.14.
- If the annual interest rate is 10 percent, what
is the present value of 110 to be received one
year from now? - As we saw in the previous example, 100 deposited
today at 10 percent interest will be worth 110 a
year from now. - So the present value of 110 a year from now is
100.
55Example 8.15.
- If the annual interest rate is 5 percent, what is
the present value of 52.50 a year from now? - Let PV the present value of 52.50 to be
received in 1 year. - PV (1.05) 52.50.
- So PV 52.50/ 1.05 50.
If you put 50 in the bank today at 5 percent
interest, in a year's time you will have 52.50.
56Present value
- More generally, when the interest rate (expressed
as a proportion) is r, the present value of M
one year from now is given by - PV M/(1r).
57Example 8.16.
- When the annual interest rate is 10 percent, what
is the present value of a payment of 121 to be
received 2 years from now? - Put 100 in the bank today at 10 percent
interest. - After one year 100(1.1) 110
- After two years 110 (1.10) 100 (1.1)2
121 - That is, PV 121/(1.1)2 100
58Present value
- More generally, if annual interest rate is r,
present value of M dollars delivered T years from
now - PV M/(1 r)T
59Time value of money
- The time value of money exists because money can
be used to purchase real assets that generate
increased output over time. - For example, a 12 foot tree 6 years from now is
equivalent to a 5 foot tree right now.
60(No Transcript)
61Compound interest
- Present value in reverse the miracle of compound
interest - 1000 deposited at 7 percent interest by Ben
Franklin in late 1700s 3 trillion today - 1000 deposited at 7 percent interest in 1945
64,000 today
62The miracle of compound interest
Assume annual income of 100000.
63Example 8.17.
- Jones can enter a business whose revenues and
costs occur through time as follows
Revenue Costs
Now 0 300
1 year hence 0 0
2 year hence 363 0
3 year more 0 0
Present value of economic profit present value
of revenue - present value of costs 363/(1.1)2
- 300 300 - 300 0.
64Example 8.18.
- Should Jones enter this business if the interest
rate is 12 percent?
Revenue Costs
Now 0 300
1 year hence 0 0
2 year hence 363 0
3 year more 0 0
Enter only if PV of economic profit gt 0. At 12
percent, PV of revenue 363/(1.12)2 289.38 PV
of economic profit 289.38 - 300 -10.62 lt 0,
so don't enter.
65Example 8.19.
- Should Jones enter this business if the interest
rate is 8 percent?
Revenue Costs
Now 0 300
1 year hence 0 0
2 year hence 363 0
3 year more 0 0
PV of revenue 363/(1.08)2 311.21 PV of
economic profit 311.21 - 300 11.21gt 0, so
Jones should enter.
66Interest rate and investment
- Almost all investment projects require that costs
be incurred in the short run in order that
benefits accrue in the long run. - The higher the interest rate, the lower is the
present value of benefits received in the future.
- So as a general rule, an investment project is
less likely to be worthwhile when interest rates
are high than when interest rates are low.
67Interest rate and investment
Why does the Fed lower interest rates during a
recession?
Alan Greenspan, Chairman of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve of the United
States from 1987 to 2006
Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve of the United States since
February 1, 2006
68Stocks
- A stock is an ownership claim to the present
value of the accounting profits in a company. - If you own 100 of a company's 1000 shares
outstanding, you own one-tenth of the present
value of the company's earnings.
69Buying a stock involves risk
April 15, 1912
70Example 8.20.
- A company's accounting profits are 100,000 per
year. - If the annual interest rate is 10 percent, what
is the present value of this firm's accounting
profit? - PV 100,000/(1.1) 100,000/(1.1)2
100,000/(1.1)3 .... - 100,000/(1.1) 1 1/1.1 1/(1.1)2 1/(1.1)3
.... - 100,000/(1.1) 1/(1-1/1.1) 100,000/(1.1)
1.1/0.1 - 1,000,000
- (If you put 1,000,000 in the bank at 10 percent,
you would generate a flow of earnings of
100,000/yr)
Note on infinite geometric sum 1 x x2 x3
. 1/(1-x)
71Example 8.21.
- If this company has 1000 shares of stock
outstanding, how much will each one sell for? - 1,000,000/1000 1,000/share
72Example 8.22.
- Suppose accounting profit from the firm in the
preceding example were to double. How would the
value of its stock price change? - PV of profit 2,000,000
- Price per share 2,000,000/1000 2000/share
73The Efficient Markets Hypothesis
- At any moment, the market price of a firms stock
reflects all relevant available information about
the present value of the firms current and
future accounting profits.
74The Efficient Markets Hypothesis
- Suppose the efficient markets hypothesis were
false. - For example, suppose Genentechs current share
price is 100 when it comes up with a cancer cure
that will double its accounting profit from now
on. - What would happen if the firms stock price
failed to adjust right away to 200? - Someone with no talent, no luck, and no
willingness to work hard could get rich just by
buying shares of Genentech.
75Example 8.23.
- The Ace Investment Advisory Group has put
together a special stock fund that includes only
shares of monopolies that earn profits at least
50 percent higher than the overall industrial
average. - If you invest in this fund, do you expect to do
better than if you had invested in non-monopolies?
If investing in monopolies yielded a higher
payoff, the prices in their stocks would be bid
up until the return was brought into balance with
the return on stock in other companies.
76Is investing in Microsoft a good bet?
77Is investing in Microsoft a good bet?
78Example 8.24.
- Consider a perpetual bond that pays 120/yr to
its owner (a perpetual bond entitles the bearer
to the same annual payment forever). - By how much would the price of this bond rise if
the interest rate fell from 10 percent to 5
percent?
The price at 10 percent is 120/0.101200. At
5 percent the price will be 120/0.052400. So
the rise in price is 1200.
79Example 8.25. Price Supports as a Device for
Saving Family Farms
- Family farms tend to have higher costs than large
corporate farms. - As more and more family farms give way to
corporate farms, lower costs lead to lower
prices, which result in economic losses for
family farms. - To ease the plight of the family farmer, Congress
has passed legislation that pegs prices of farm
products higher than market-clearing levels. - Will this policy help tenant farmers in the long
run?
80Example 8.25. Price Supports as a Device for
Saving Family Farms
- When the price of farm products rises, farms that
were earning zero economic profit will now earn
positive economic profit. - The lure of positive profit causes others to bid
for agricultural land, which causes land prices
to rise. - The long-run effect of agricultural price
supports was thus to drive up the rent for
farmland, which does nothing to assure the
survival of tenant farmers.
81Example 8.25. Price Supports as a Device for
Saving Family Farms
We are not sure how we can benefit from the price
support.
- A much more direct and efficient way to aid
family farmers would be to reduce their income
taxes. - In the case of more extreme need, farmers could
be given outright cash grants.
82Example 8.26.
- A trucker gets 5000 for driving a trailer full
of cargo from New York to San Francisco, a trip
that takes him one week. - The rent for his rig is 3000/wk and he spends
1000 on gas. - Meals and other expenses come to another 500/wk.
- His alternative employment is to work as a local
deliveryman at a salary of 500/wk, a task he
finds equally attractive as trucking. - What is this trucker's economic profit?
83Example 8.26.
- A trucker gets 5000 for driving a trailer full
of cargo from New York to San Francisco, a trip
that takes him one week. - The rent for his rig is 3000/wk and he spends
1000 on gas. - Meals and other expenses come to another 500/wk.
- His alternative employment is to work as a local
deliveryman at a salary of 500/wk, a task he
finds equally attractive as trucking. - What is this trucker's economic profit?
Total revenue 5000 Total cost 3000
1000 500 500 5000 Economic profit
5000 - 5000 0
84Example 8.27.
- Now suppose the trucker from the previous example
installs an airfoil on the roof of the cab of his
rig, resulting in a fuel savings of 25 percent. - If the airfoil rents for 50/wk,
- what is the trucker's new economic profit?
85Example 8.27.
- If the airfoil rents for 50/wk,
- what is the trucker's new economic profit?
- Total revenue 5000/wk, the same as before.
- Total cost 5000 - 250 50 4800
- So economic profit 5000 - 4800 200.
86Example 8.28.
- Suppose all truckers but one have installed the
airfoil described in the preceding example. - What will be the economic profit of the lone
holdout?
- As more and more truckers install the airfoils,
costs go down and this places downward pressure
on trucking prices. - By the time all truckers have installed the
airfoils, trucking rates will have fallen by the
full 200 in net cost savings made possible by
the airfoil. - Thus the lone trucker without an airfoil will
suffer an economic loss of 200/wk.
87Example 8.28.
Moral Early adopters of cost-saving innovations
tend to earn positive economic profits. Late
adopters tend to earn negative economic profits.
88Example 8.29.
- On April 24, 2003, the Commissioner for Transport
(HKSAR), Mr Robert Footman, announced a scheme to
relax general stopping restrictions for taxis to
provide immediate relief to the trade under the
difficult operating environment with the outbreak
of atypical pneumonia. - To whom does the scheme benefit? Drivers or
owners of taxi operating licenses?
89Example 8.29.
- In Hong Kong it is easy to become a taxi driver.
Thus, in a recession, the supply of drivers is
essentially perfectly elastic, possibly with the
best alternative of unemployment benefits as the
reservation wage. - The relaxation of road restrictions for taxis is
supposed to increase the demand for taxis and
hence revenue. - When the revenue is higher, more people will try
to enter the trade of taxi drivers, bidding up
the rental rate of taxis. - Higher rental rate leads to higher taxi operating
license premium. - Thus, the relaxation benefits the taxi operating
license owner (who are relatively rich) but not
the taxi drivers (who are relatively poor).
90End