Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power BEC 30325 Managerial Economics.
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Transcript of Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power BEC 30325 Managerial Economics.
![Page 1: Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power BEC 30325 Managerial Economics.](https://reader035.fdocuments.us/reader035/viewer/2022062222/5697bf901a28abf838c8de54/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Managerial Decisions for Firms with Market Power
BEC 30325Managerial Economics
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Market Power• Ability of a firm to raise price without losing all
its sales– Any firm that faces downward sloping demand has
market power• Gives firm ability to raise price above average
cost & earn economic profit (if demand & cost conditions permit)
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Monopoly
• Single firm• Produces & sells a good or service for which
there are no close substitutes• New firms are prevented from entering
market because of a barrier to entry
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Measurement of Market Power• Degree of market power inversely related to price
elasticity of demand– The less elastic the firm’s demand, the greater its
degree of market power– The fewer close substitutes for a firm’s product, the
smaller the elasticity of demand (in absolute value) & the greater the firm’s market power
– When demand is perfectly elastic (demand is horizontal), the firm has no market power
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• Lerner index measures proportionate amount by which price exceeds marginal cost:– Equals zero under perfect competition– Increases as market power increases– Also equals –1/E, which shows that the index (& market power), vary
inversely with elasticity– The lower the elasticity of demand (absolute value), the greater the
index & the degree of market power
Measurement of Market Power
Lerner index P MC
P
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• If consumers view two goods as substitutes, cross-price elasticity of demand (EXY) is positive– The higher the positive cross-price elasticity, the
greater the substitutability between two goods, & the smaller the degree of market power for the two firms
Measurement of Market Power
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• Entry of new firms into a market erodes market power of existing firms by increasing the number of substitutes
• A firm can possess a high degree of market power only when strong barriers to entry exist– Conditions that make it difficult for new firms to
enter a market in which economic profits are being earned
Barriers to Entry
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Common Entry Barriers
• Economies of scale– When long-run average cost declines over a wide
range of output relative to demand for the product, there may not be room for another large producer to enter market
• Barriers created by government– Licenses, exclusive franchises
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• Essential input barriers– One firm controls a crucial input in the production
process• Brand loyalties
– Strong customer allegiance to existing firms may keep new firms from finding enough buyers to make entry worthwhile
Common Entry Barriers
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• Consumer lock-in– Potential entrants can be deterred if they believe
high switching costs will keep them from inducing many consumers to change brands
• Network externalities– Occur when benefit or utility of a product
increases as more consumers buy & use it– Make it difficult for new firms to enter markets
where firms have established a large base or network of buyers
Common Entry Barriers
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Demand & Marginal Revenue for a Monopolist
• Market demand curve is the firm’s demand curve• Monopolist must lower price to sell additional
units of output– Marginal revenue is less than price for all but the first
unit sold• When MR is positive (negative), demand is elastic
(inelastic)• For linear demand, MR is also linear, has the same
vertical intercept as demand, & is twice as steep
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Demand & Marginal Revenue for a Monopolist
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Short-Run Profit Maximization for Monopoly
• Monopolist will produce where MR = SMC as long as TR at least covers the firm’s total avoidable cost (TR ≥ TVC)– Price for this output is given by the demand curve
• If TR < TVC (or, equivalently, P < AVC) the firm shuts down & loses only fixed costs
• If P > ATC, firm makes economic profit• If ATC > P > AVC, firm incurs a loss, but continues to
produce in short run
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Short-Run Profit Maximization for Monopoly
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Short-Run Loss Minimization for Monopoly
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Long-Run Profit Maximization for Monopoly
• Monopolist maximizes profit by choosing to produce output where MR = LMC, as long as P LAC
• Will exit industry if P < LAC• Monopolist will adjust plant size to the
optimal level– Optimal plant is where the short-run average cost
curve is tangent to the long-run average cost at the profit-maximizing output level
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Long-Run Profit Maximization for Monopoly
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Profit-Maximizing Input Usage• Profit-maximizing level of input usage
produces exactly that level of output that maximizes profit
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• Marginal revenue product (MRP)– MRP is the additional revenue attributable to hiring
one more unit of the input
• When producing with a single variable input:• Employ amount of input for which MRP = input price
• Relevant range of MRP curve is downward sloping, positive portion,
for which ARP > MRP
Profit-Maximizing Input Usage
TRMRP MR MP
L
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Monopoly Firm’s Demand for Labor
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Profit-Maximizing Input Usage• For a firm with market power, profit-
maximizing conditions MRP = w and MR = MC are equivalent– Whether Q or L is chosen to maximize profit,
resulting levels of input usage, output, price, & profit are the same
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Monopolistic Competition• Large number of firms sell a differentiated
product– Products are close (not perfect) substitutes
• Market is monopolistic– Product differentiation creates a degree of
market power• Market is competitive
– Large number of firms, easy entry
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• Short-run equilibrium is identical to monopoly
• Unrestricted entry/exit leads to long-run equilibrium– Attained when demand curve for each producer
is tangent to LAC– At equilibrium output, P = LAC and
MR = LMC
Monopolistic Competition
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Short-Run Profit Maximization for Monopolistic Competition
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Long-Run Profit Maximization for Monopolistic Competition
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Implementing the Profit-Maximizing Output & Pricing Decision
• Step 1: Estimate demand equation– Use statistical techniques from Chapter 7– Substitute forecasts of demand-shifting
variables into estimated demand equation to get
Q = a′ + bP
Where Rˆ ˆa' a cM dP
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• Step 2: Find inverse demand equation– Solve for P
Implementing the Profit-Maximizing Output & Pricing Decision
1a'P Q A BQ
b b
1Where and , R
a'ˆ ˆa' a cM dP , A Bb b
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• Step 3: Solve for marginal revenue– When demand is expressed as P = A + BQ, marginal
revenue is
Implementing the Profit-Maximizing Output & Pricing Decision
22
a'MR A BQ Q
b b
• Step 4: Estimate AVC & SMC• Use statistical techniques from Chapter 10
AVC = a + bQ + cQ2
SMC = a + 2bQ + 3cQ2
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• Step 5: Find output where MR = SMC– Set equations equal & solve for Q*
– The larger of the two solutions is the profit-maximizing output level
• Step 6: Find profit-maximizing price– Substitute Q* into inverse demand
P* = A + BQ*
Q* & P* are only optimal if P AVC
Implementing the Profit-Maximizing Output & Pricing Decision
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• Step 7: Check shutdown rule– Substitute Q* into estimated AVC function
• If P* AVC*, produce Q* units of output & sell each unit for P*
• If P* < AVC*, shut down in short run
Implementing the Profit-Maximizing Output & Pricing Decision
AVC* = a + bQ* + cQ*2
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• Step 8: Compute profit or loss– Profit = TR – TC
= P x Q* - AVC x Q* - TFC
= (P – AVC)Q* - TFC
– If P < AVC, firm shuts down & profit is -TFC
Implementing the Profit-Maximizing Output & Pricing Decision
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Multiple Plants
• If a firm produces in 2 plants, A & B– Allocate production so MCA = MCB
– Optimal total output is that for which MR = MCT
• For profit-maximization, allocate total output so that MR = MCT = MCA = MCB
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A Multiplant Firm