Title: British Petroleum
1British Petroleum
Group Presentation 6 Curt Kiebler, Joe Bond,
Brittney Trich
2Table of
Table of Contents
Joe Bond History of BP What is
Economics? Opportunity Cost Substitutions and
Complements
Brittney Trich Curt Kiebler Taxes
Perfect
Competition Substitution Effect
Price Discrimination Cost
Governments
Role Profit
3History
- BP started back in 1901 when William DArchy
obtained a concession from the Shah of Persia to
explore for oil resources of the country. - DArchys resources were diminished
- 1905 Burmah Oil Company.
- 1908 they struck oil in Southwest Persia for the
first time. - 1909 the Anglo-Persian Oil Company.
- Charles Greenway seeked out more revenue and
capital. - British Governement.
www.bp.com
4 - History Cont
- Greenway got his money and an outlet for his oil,
and the British got fuel for their navy. - Exploration extended from the Middle East,
Europe, Africa, South America and Canada. - 1935 the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company was formed.
- The postwar reconstruction of Europe, the high
demand for oil enabled them to expand greatly. - 1940s sales profits rose to record levels.
- There were arguments and conflicts among the
Iranian government and the Anglo-Iranian Oil
Company. - 1954 British Petroleum Company was formed.
www.bp.com
5 What is economics???
6 Economics Is
- That social science that deals with the way
society chooses to allocate scarce resources in
order to satisfy present and future wants and
desires
7 - The value of the best alternative given up in
order to get something. - Example
- BP loses revenue for BP express
if they choose to have more gasoline on hand and
pay for more gasoline, rather than having more
food, drinks, and various other products to sell
in BP Express.
Opportunity Cost
8Substitutes and Complements
9TAXES
- Specific Tax- set dollar amount per unit
- BP charges a current gas price of 1.37 per
gallon - In PA, the tax on gasoline is 0.44 per gallon
which
shifts BPs market supply curve upward by the
amount of the tax.
s
s
1.37
1
101.81
1.37
1
- New higher supply curve tells us BPs gross price
what they actually get before they pay the tax - Gross price is 1.81
- New supply curve also tells us BPs net price
the amount BP gets to keep - Gross price -TaxNet price
1.81-0.441.37
11Substitution Effect
- BP vs
Crossroads - BPs price per gallon Crossroads
price per gallon - 1.37 1.37
12If BP lowers its price to 1.36 The quantity
demanded for BP will increase
P
Q
The quantity demanded for Crossroads will decrease
P
Q
13COSTS
- Fixed costs - costs of fixed inputs
- includes plants, machinery, land, buildings
- Variable costs costs of variable inputs
- includes labor/hourly wages
- Fixed Costs Variable Costs Total Costs
14Total Revenue and Total Cost
- For the year 2002, BP earned a total revenue of
180,186,000 - For the year 2002, BP incurred a total cost of
158,267,000 - Total Revenue Total Costs Profit
- 180,186,000 - 158,267,000 21,919,000
TC
TR
P
www.morningstar.com
Q
15Two Definitions of Profit
- Accounting Profit
- Total Revenue - Accounting Costs
- (only Explicit)
- Economic Profit
- Total Revenue All Costs of Production
- (Explicit and Implicit)
16Perfect Competition
- BP fits the characteristics of
- Perfect Competition
- BP has a large number of buyers and sellers
- Sellers offer a standardized product
- Easy entry or exit from the market
- BP is a price taker
-
- BP treats the price of its output as given.
17BP Firm is assumed to be profit maximizers in a
perfectly competitive market
- Because of homogeneous product and perfect
knowledge assumptions - BP takes the market price as given and reacts to
it - Their objective is to maximize profits
- And profits are simply the difference between
Total Revenue and Total Costs - Profit is maximized when MRMC
18Price Discrimination
- Price Discrimination- is charging prices to
different customers for reasons other than
differences in cost. - Requirements for Price discrimination
- There must be a downward-sloping demand curve for
the firms output. - The firm must be able to identify consumers
willing to pay more. - The firm must be able to prevent low-price
customers from reselling to high price customers.
19Governments Role
- Government sets regulations on keeping the air
clean - EPA (The Environmental Protection Agency)- Has
the power to direct businesses to take specific
actions. They have detailed control over what
substances a business can release into the
atmosphere or into the water. -
- EPA Reduce Toxins and Carbon Monoxide
-
- Public utilities commissions set the prices for
gas. - The Government also sets limits on
Transportation Storage
20Government enforced taxes
- Excise tax- which is a tax on specific goods or
- services
- State Tax- tax paid by business to the state
- Federal Tax- tax paid by business to the
- Federal Government
21Questions?