Title: Modeling Firms
1Modeling Firms Behavior
- Most economists treat the firm as a single
decision-making unit - the decisions are made by a single dictatorial
manager who rationally pursues some goal - profit-maximization
2Profit Maximization
- A profit-maximizing firm chooses both its inputs
and its outputs with the sole goal of achieving
maximum economic profits - seeks to maximize the difference between total
revenue and total economic costs
3Output Choice
- Total revenue for a firm is given by
- TR(q) P(q)?q
- In the production of q, certain economic costs
are incurred TC(q) - Economic profits (?) are the difference between
total revenue and total costs - ? TR(q) TC(q) P(q)?q TC(q)
4Output Choice
- The necessary condition for choosing the level of
q that maximizes profits can be found by setting
the derivative of the ? function with respect to
q equal to zero
5Output Choice
- To maximize economic profits, the firm should
choose the output for which marginal revenue is
equal to marginal cost
6Profit Maximization
revenues costs
TC
TR
output
7Marginal Revenue
- If a firm can sell all it wishes without having
any effect on market price, marginal revenue will
be equal to price - If a firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve,
more output can only be sold if the firm reduces
the goods price
8Marginal Revenue
- If a firm faces a downward-sloping demand curve,
marginal revenue will be a function of output - If price falls as a firm increases output,
marginal revenue will be less than price
9Marginal Revenue
- Suppose that the demand curve for a sub sandwich
is - q 100 10P
- Solving for price, we get
- P -q/10 10
- This means that total revenue is
- TR Pq -q2/10 10q
- Marginal revenue will be given by
- MR dTR/dq -q/5 10
10Profit Maximization
- To determine the profit-maximizing output, we
must know the firms costs - If subs can be produced at a constant average and
marginal cost of 4, then - MR MC
- -q/5 10 4
- q 30
11Average Revenue Curve
- If we assume that the firm must sell all its
output at one price, we can think of the demand
curve facing the firm as its average revenue
curve - shows the revenue per unit yielded by alternative
output choices
12Marginal Revenue Curve
- The marginal revenue curve shows the extra
revenue provided by the last unit sold - In the case of a downward-sloping demand curve,
the marginal revenue curve will lie below the
demand curve
13Marginal Revenue Curve
As output increases from 0 to q1, total revenue
increases so MR gt 0
price
As output increases beyond q1, total revenue
decreases so MR lt 0
P1
D (average revenue)
output
q1
MR
14Marginal Revenue Curve
- When the demand curve shifts, its associated
marginal revenue curve shifts as well - a marginal revenue curve cannot be calculated
without referring to a specific demand curve
15Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
price
SMC
SATC
SAVC
output
16Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
price
SMC
SATC
P MR
SAVC
output
q
17Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
price
SMC
SATC
P MR
SAVC
output
q
18Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
price
SMC
SATC
P MR
SAVC
profit maximization requires that P SMC and
that SMC is upward-sloping
output
q
? lt 0
19Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
- The positively-sloped portion of the short-run
marginal cost curve is the short-run supply curve
for a price-taking firm - it shows how much the firm will produce at every
possible market price - firms will only operate in the short run as long
as total revenue covers variable cost - the firm will produce no output if P lt SAVC
20Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
- Thus, the price-taking firms short-run supply
curve is the positively-sloped portion of the
firms short-run marginal cost curve above the
point of minimum average variable cost - for prices below this level, the firms
profit-maximizing decision is to shut down and
produce no output
21Short-Run Supply by a Price-Taking Firm
price
SMC
SATC
SAVC
output
22Supply Function
- The supply function for a profit-maximizing firm
that takes both output price (P) and input prices
(v,w) as fixed is written as - quantity supplied q(P,r,w)
- this indicates the dependence of output choices
on these prices
23Supply Function
- The supply function provides a convenient
reminder of two key points - the firms output decision is fundamentally a
decision about hiring inputs - changes in input costs will alter the hiring of
inputs and hence affect output choices as well
24Producer Surplus in the Short Run
- A profit-maximizing firm that decides to produce
a positive output in the short run must find that
decision to be more favorable than a decision to
produce nothing - This improvement in welfare is termed (short-run)
producer surplus - what the firm gains by being able to participate
in market transactions
25Producer Surplus in the Short Run
SMC
price
output
26Producer Surplus in the Long Run
- By definition, long-run producer surplus is zero
- fixed costs do not exist in the long run
- equilibrium profits under perfect competition
with free entry are zero