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THE THEORY OF THE FIRM

THE THEORY OF THE FIRM. DANIEL CHEN. WITH SOME MINOR HELP FROM HIS COLLEAGUES AT HARVARD :. MICROECONOMICS. is a branch of economics that studies the behavior of how the individual modern household and firms make decisions to allocate limited resources(WIKIPEDIA.ORG)

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THE THEORY OF THE FIRM

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  1. THE THEORY OF THE FIRM DANIEL CHEN WITH SOME MINOR HELP FROM HIS COLLEAGUES AT HARVARD :

  2. MICROECONOMICS • is a branch of economics that studies the behavior of how the individual modern household and firms make decisions to allocate limited resources(WIKIPEDIA.ORG) • This unit examines the behavior of the individual firm and household in detail. You will learn the reasoning and incentives behind firms and their decisions. Ultimately, I am giving you the key, the key to understanding how the world responds to different situations. So, love it, learn it, memorize it. Twenty years from now, you will live it.

  3. The Costs of Production • So what is the main goal behind a firm’s decision: to reduce its costs and thereby increase its profit. • Therefore, to best understand microeconomics we must consider the costs and revenues each firm faces: • Total Cost– the market value of the inputs a firm uses in production • Explicit Costs: input costs that require an outlay of money by the firm • Implicit Costs: input costs that do not require an outlay of money by the firm

  4. COSTS OF PRODUCTION • Accounting profit: total revenue minus total cost, including both explicit costs • Economic profit: total revenue minus total cost, including both explicit and implicit costs • Marginal Product: The increase in output that arises from an additional unit of output • Diminishing Marginal Product: The property whereby the marginal product of an input declines as the quantity of the input increases • Fixed Costs: costs that do not vary with the quantity of output produced • Variable Costs: costs that vary with the quantity of output produced • Average Total Cost: total cost divided by the quantity of output • Average fixed cost: fixed cost divided by quantity of output • Marginal Cost: the increase in total cost hat arises from an extra of production

  5. Cost Curves and Their Shapes • ATC is U- shaped (This is because ATC = FC + VC and FC declines as output increases and VC increases as output increases) • Rising MC (diminishing marginal product)

  6. The Relationship Between MC and ATC • Whenever marginal cost is less than average total cost, average total cost is falling. When marginal cost is greater than average total cost, average total cost is rising. • Marginal Cost crosses Average Total Cost at it’s minimum point.

  7. PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE MARKET • So what makes a market perfectly competitive? • Consider the following: • Low entry and exit barriers • Identical products • No single buyer or seller has a large impact upon the market price: EVERYBODY IS A PRICE TAKER

  8. A PERFECTLY COMPETITIVE FIRM • So, now that we understand the basics and conditions behind a perfectly competitive market, we should be able to analyze the decisions and reasoning behind the individual firm:

  9. Profit Maximization • Firms produce at the output where the MC and MR curves cross. • This is because… • If MR is greater than MC, the firm will earn a profit by increasing output • If MC is greater than MR, the firm will earn a profit by decreasing output

  10. I’m Shutting YOU DOWN • So what influences a firm’s short run decision to shut down? • A firm shuts down if the revenue that it would get from producing is less than its variable costs of production • In other words, when TR<VC • Or by dividing both sides by Q when • P<AVC • In the short run fixed costs are a sunk cost: a cost that has already been committed and cannot be recovered.

  11. When does a firm EXIT? • So when does a firm make the long run decision to exit the market? • A firm exits the market if the revenue it would get from producing is less than its total costs. • This can be expressed as… • TR< TC or when dividing both sides by Q • As P<ATC • In the long run decision to exit the market, FC is no longer viewed as a sunk cost

  12. Measuring Profit • Profit= TR-TC • We can rewrite this definition as.. • (TR/Q-TC/Q) X Q All I did was factor Q out • Therefore Profit= (P-ATC) Q • So in a graph, to determine the profit a firm is making, simply go down from Price to the ATC and multiply this value by the Profit maximizing Q of output

  13. MONOPOLIES • monopoly :Market in which there is a sole supplier of a product with no close substitutes • An important characteristic of a monopolized market is barriers to entry new firms cannot profitably enter the market • Some things that can cause Barriers to entry are • Legal restrictions • Economies of scale • Control of an essential resource

  14. Revenue for the Monopolist • Because a monopoly is the single firm in the market, the demand curve for a monopolist is also the market demand • The demand curve for the monopolist’s output therefore slopes downward • MR is below demand in a Monopoly due to the output and price effects. • After MR crosses the x axis, Demand becomes inelastic 0 Elastic Unit elastic Inelastic D =Average revenue Marginal revenue

  15. Firm’s Costs and Profit Maximization • Because the monopolist controls the market price, we can say that the monopolist is a price maker • For the same reasons as that of a competitive firm, monopolies produce where MR=MC. They then move up to the demand curve to find the corresponding price to charge. Marginal cost The profit for a monopolistic firm is also found in the same manner as that of a perfectly competitive firm Average total cost a Profit b e D =Average revenue MR 0 32 10 16

  16. DEADWEIGHT LOSS YO! • A monopolist produces less than the socially efficient level of output because, not everybody that values the good at its marginal cost is able to purchase the good.

  17. Perfect Price Discrimination • If a monopolist could charge a different price for each unit sold, the firm’s marginal revenue curve from selling one more unit would equal the price of that unit and the demand curve would become the marginal revenue curve • A perfectly discriminating monopolist charges a different price for each unit of the good

  18. Perfect Price Discrimination A perfectly discriminating monopolist would maximize profits at point e where marginal revenue equals marginal cost  price set at pointe a P r o f i t Long-run average cost = marginal cost e c D = Marginal revenue 0 Q Quantity per period

  19. Increasing Competition • Governments institute antitrust laws when a monopoly grows to powerful, to encourage competition in the market

  20. Monopolistic Competition • Power to set prices somewhat like a monopoly • Face competition like that of a perfectly competitive firm • Large number of firms -- Each firm has relatively small market share • No barriers to entry or exit

  21. Characteristics of Monopolistic Competition • Product Differentiation – Each firm makes a product that is slightly different from the products of competing firms. • Firms compete in Quality, Price, and Marketing -- Quality: design, reliability, service provided to buyer and ease of access to product -- Price: determined by the downward sloping demand curve -- Marketing: firm must market and advertise to attract customers

  22. Profit Maximization • Due to the product differentiation within a monopolistically competitive firm, this type of firm operates very similarly to a monopoly in the short run. • To maximize profit, a monopolistically competitive firm produces at the output where MC equals MR and goes up to the demand curve to determine Price. • In the long run, due to no barriers to entry or exit, the firm earns zero economic profit. • A monopolistically competitive firm produces an excess capacity ( doesn’t produce at min. ATC) • A monopolistically competitive firm marks up its price over MC

  23. COST TO WELFARE • Because of the mark up in price over Marginal Cost in a monopolistically competitive firm, dead weight loss occurs. • However, reducing this deadweight loss is difficult since the firm already produces a zero profit.

  24. Advertising • To encourage consumers to purchase their products, Monopolistic firms use advertisement. • Firms that advertise tend to have higher quality goods and more loyal customers, than firms that don’t advertise. • Some may argue that advertising manipulates people’s tastes.

  25. Oligopoly • An Oligopoly is a market type in which: • A small number of firms compete. • Natural or legal barriers prevent the entry of new firms. • Small Number of Firms • In contrast to monopolistic competition and perfect competition, an oligopoly consists of a small number of firms. • Each firm has a large market share • The firms are interdependent • The firms have an incentive to collude

  26. Collusions and Cartels When a small number of firms share a market, they can increase their profit by forming a cartel and acting like a monopoly. • Cartel: a group of firms acting together to limit output, raise price, and increase economic profit. • Cartels are illegal but still do operate in some markets. • Despite the temptation to collude, cartels tend to collapse.

  27. Game Theory • Game theory examines the interdependence of firms in an oligopoly: • When a small number of firms compete in a market, they are interdependent in the sense that the profit earned by each firm depends on the firms own actions and on the actions of the other firms. • Before making a decision, each firm must consider how the other firms will react to its decision and influence its profit.

  28. Game Theory • To better depict Game Theory I will use an example: The Prisoner’s dilemma--A game between two prisoners that shows why it is hard to cooperate, even when it would be beneficial to both players to do so. • Art and Bob been caught stealing a car: sentence is 2 years in jail. • DA wants to convict them of a big bank robbery: sentence is 10 years in jail. • DA has no evidence and to get the conviction, he makes the prisoners play a game.

  29. PRISONERS DILEMMA • Rules • Players cannot communicate with one another. • If both confess to the larger crime, each will receive a sentence of 3 years for both crimes. • If one confesses and the accomplice does not, the one who confesses will receive a sentence of 1 year, while the accomplice receives a 10-year sentence. • If neither confesses, both receive a 2-year sentence. • Strategies • The strategies of a game are all the possible outcomes of each player. • The strategies in the prisoners’ dilemma are: • Confess to the bank robbery • Deny the bank robbery

  30. Dominant Strategies and Nash EQ Both Bob and Art reason that no matter the decision of the other, he or she will be better of confessing. Therefore both pursue their dominant strategies: a strategy that is best for a player in a game regardless of the strategies chosen by other players. As a result, both Bob and Art confess. This outcome, where dominant strategies are pursued is Nash Equilibrium.

  31. “DANIEL CHEN HAS DONE A PHENOMENAL JOB WITH HIS REPRESENTATION OF THE THEORY OF THE FIRM. HE DESERVES A NOBEL PRIZE FOR HIS ACCOMPLISHMENTS”-RUSS B.

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