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ECON 110 Introductory Microeconomics

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Title: ECON 110 Introductory Microeconomics


1
ECON 110Introductory Microeconomics
  • Lecture 10
  • Fall, 2009
  • William Chow

2
Highlights
  • Background of Firms Problem
  • Constraints firms face
  • Short and Long Run
  • Product Curves

3
The Firm
  • A firm is an institution that hires factors of
    production and organizes them to produce and sell
    goods and services.
  • The Firms Goal - A firms goal is to maximize
    profit.
  • If the firm fails to maximize profit, it is
    either eliminated or bought out by other firms
    seeking to maximize profit.

4
The Firm
  • Relationship between firms and markets
  • Firms coordinate production when they can do so
    more efficiently than a market.
  • Four key reasons might make firms more efficient.
  • Lower transactions costs
  • Economies of scale
  • Economies of scope
  • Economies of team production

5
The Firm
  • Transactions costs are the costs arising from
    finding someone with whom to do business,
    reaching agreement on the price and other aspects
    of the exchange, and ensuring that the terms of
    the agreement are fulfilled.
  • Economies of scale occur when the cost of
    producing a unit of a good falls as its output
    rate increases.
  • Economies of scope arise when a firm can use
    specialized inputs to produce a range of
    different goods at a lower cost than otherwise.
  • Firms can engage in team production, in which the
    individuals specialize in mutually supporting
    tasks.

6
The Firm
  • The above can be easily understood by imagining a
    society with no firms but only individual
    entities.
  • Suppose we have 2 tailors and 2 farmers, then
    resources will be better used and cost saved if
    we organize them into 1 clothing company and 1
    agricultural company. Overall efficiency will
    therefore be enhanced.

7
The Firm
  • In pursuing profit maximization, the firm also
    faces constraints
  • Technology
  • Information
  • Market
  • We will look at this objective and constraints
    separately.

8
Economic Profit
  • A firms decisions respond to opportunity cost
    and economic profit.
  • Note that they differ from accounting cost and
    accounting profit.
  • Opportunity cost includes both
  • Explicit costs - costs paid directly in money,
    e.g. wages you paid your employees.
  • Implicit costs - costs incurred when a firm uses
    its own capital or its owners time for which it
    does not make a direct money payment, e.g.
    forgone value of using your managerial skills.

9
Economic Profit
  • Economic Profit
  • Total Revenue Opportunity Cost
  • Total Revenue (Implicit Cost Explicit
    Cost)
  • Accounting Profit
  • Total Revenue Accounting Cost
  • Total Revenue Explicit Cost
  • Thus Economic Profit is usually smaller than
    Accounting Profit.
  • It still makes sense for firms to operate under
    situation where economic profit 0 ----- Why?

10
Implicit Cost
  • Capital
  • The firm can rent capital and pay an explicit
    rental cost reflecting the opportunity cost of
    using the capital.
  • The firm can also buy capital and incur an
    implicit opportunity cost of using its own
    capital, called the implicit rental rate of
    capital.
  • The implicit rental rate of capital is made up
    of
  • Economic depreciation
  • Interest forgone

11
Implicit Cost
  • Economic depreciation is the change in the market
    value of capital over a given period.
  • Interest forgone is the return on the funds used
    to acquire the capital.
  • Owners entrepreneurial ability and labor
    expended in running the business
  • The opportunity cost of entrepreneurial ability
    is the average return from this contribution that
    can be expected from running another firm. This
    return is called a normal profit.

12
Implicit Cost
  • The opportunity cost of the owners labor spent
    running the business is the wage income forgone
    by not working in the next best alternative job.
  • Normal profit is part of the firms opportunity
    costs, so economic profit is profit over and
    above normal profit.

13
Example
14
The Firms Constraints
  • Technology Constraints
  • Technology is any method of producing a good or
    service.
  • Technology advances over time.
  • Using the available technology, the firm can
    produce more only if it hires more resources,
    which will increase its costs and limit the
    profit of additional output.

15
The Firms Constraints
  • Information Constraints
  • A firm never possesses complete information about
    either the present or the future.
  • It is constrained by limited information about
    the quality and effort of its work force, current
    and future buying plans of its customers, and the
    plans of its competitors.
  • The cost of coping with limited information
    limits profit.

16
The Firms Constraints
  • Market Constraints
  • What a firm can sell and the price it can obtain
    are constrained by its customers willingness to
    pay and by the prices and marketing efforts of
    other firms. (Even if you are the sole producer,
    you cant force people to buy.)
  • The resources that a firm can buy and the prices
    it must pay for them are limited by the
    willingness of people to work for and invest in
    the firm.
  • The expenditures a firm incurs to overcome these
    market constraints will limit the profit the firm
    can make.

17
Technology and Economic Efficiency
  • Technological efficiency occurs when a firm
    produces a given level of output by using the
    least amount of inputs.
  • There may be different combinations of inputs to
    use for producing a given level of output.
    (Similar to the idea of indifference curves in
    consumption choices this time we consider
    combining different inputs to produce a fixed
    amount of output.)
  • If it is impossible to maintain output by
    decreasing any one input, holding all other
    inputs constant, then production is
    technologically efficient.

18
Technology and Economic Efficiency
  • Economic efficiency occurs when the firm produces
    a given level of output at the least cost.
  • The difference between technological and economic
    efficiency is that technological efficiency is
    concerned with the quantity of inputs used in
    production for a given level of output, whereas
    economic efficiency is concerned with the cost of
    the inputs used.

19
Example Technological Efficiency
20
Example Economic Efficiency
21
Information
  • A firm organizes production by combining and
    coordinating productive resources using a mixture
    of two systems
  • Command systems - commands pass downward through
    the managerial hierarchy and information
    (feedback) passes upward.
  • Incentive systems - uses market-like mechanisms
    to induce workers to perform in ways that
    maximize the firms profit.

22
Information
  • Most firms use a mix of command and incentive
    systems to maximize profit.
  • They use commands when it is easy to monitor
    performance or when a small deviation from the
    ideal performance is very costly.
  • They use incentives whenever monitoring
    performance is impossible or too costly to be
    worth doing.

23
The Principal-Agent Problem
  • The principal-agent problem is the problem of
    devising compensation rules that induce an agent
    to act in the best interests of a principal.
  • For example, the stockholders of a firm are the
    principals and the managers of the firm are their
    agents.
  • Also, the Enron Incident.
  • Three ways of coping with the principal-agent
    problem are
  • Ownership
  • Incentive pay
  • Long-term contracts

24
The Principal-Agent Problem
  • Ownership, often offered to managers, gives the
    managers an incentive to maximize the firms
    profits, which is the goal of the owners, the
    principals.
  • Incentive pay links managers or workers pay to
    the firms performance and helps align the
    managers and workers interests with those of
    the owners, the principals.
  • Long-term contracts can tie managers or workers
    long-term rewards to the long-term performance of
    the firm. This arrangement encourages the agents
    to work in the best long-term interests of the
    firm owners, the principals.

25
Decision Time Frames
  • The Short Run
  • The short run is a time frame in which the
    quantity of one or more resources used in
    production is fixed.
  • For most firms, the capital, called the firms
    plant, is fixed in the short run.
  • Other resources used by the firm (such as labor,
    raw materials, and energy) can be changed in the
    short run.
  • Short-run decisions are easily reversed.

26
Decision Time Frames
  • The Long Run
  • The long run is a time frame in which the
    quantities of all resourcesincluding the plant
    sizecan be varied.
  • Long-run decisions are not easily reversed.
  • A sunk cost is a cost incurred by the firm and
    cannot be changed.
  • If a firms plant has no resale value, the amount
    paid for it is a sunk cost.
  • Sunk costs are irrelevant to a firms decisions.

27
Short Run Technology Constraint
  • To increase output in the SR, a firm must
    increase the amount of labor employed (since
    capital is held fixed in the SR).
  • Three concepts describe the relationship between
    output and the quantity of labor employed
  • Total product is the total output produced in a
    given period.
  • The marginal product of labor is the change in
    total product that results from a one-unit
    increase in the quantity of labor employed, with
    all other inputs remaining the same.
  • The average product of labor is equal to total
    product divided by the quantity of labor employed.

28
Short Run Technology Constraint
  • Total product Q
  • Marginal product ?Q/?L
  • Average product Q/L

29
Total Product Curve
  • The total product curve shows how total product
    changes with the quantity of labor employed.
  • It separates attainable output levels from
    unattainable output levels in the short run.

30
Total Product Curve
  • The height of each bar measures the marginal
    product of labor.
  • For example, when labor increases from 2 to 3,
    total product increases from 10 to 13, so the
    marginal product of the third worker is 3 units
    of output.

31
Marginal Product Curve
  • To make a graph of the marginal product of labor,
    we can stack the bars in the previous graph side
    by side.
  • The marginal product of labor curve passes
    through the mid-points of these bars.

32
Marginal Product Curve
33
Marginal Product Curve
  • We observe from the previous slide the following
  • Initially, when the marginal product of a worker
    exceeds the marginal product of the previous
    worker, the marginal product of labor increases
    and the firm experiences increasing marginal
    returns.
  • Subsequently, when the marginal product of a
    worker is less than the marginal product of the
    previous worker, the marginal product of labor
    decreases and the firm experiences diminishing
    marginal returns.

34
Marginal Product Curve
  • Can we justify what we observed?
  • Increasing marginal returns arise from increased
    specialization and division of labor.
  • Diminishing marginal returns arises from the fact
    that employing additional units of labor means
    each worker has less access to capital and less
    space in which to work i.e. coordination and
    congestion problems.
  • The law of diminishing returns states that as a
    firm uses more of a variable input with a given
    quantity of fixed inputs, the marginal product of
    the variable input eventually diminishes.

35
Average Product Curve
  • How can we derive the Average Product Curve?
  • Note that AP by definition Q/L
  • Thus, if you draw a straight line from the point
    of origin to a point on the Total Product Curve,
    the AP for that point will equal to the slope of
    that straight line you drew.
  • By doing this successively, you obtain a
    hump-shaped Average Product Curve (The MP curve
    is also hump-shaped).

36
AP and MP
37
AP and MP
  • Important Observation
  • When marginal product exceeds average product,
    average product increases.
  • When marginal product is below average product,
    average product decreases.
  • When marginal product equals average product,
    average product is at its maximum.

38
AP and MP
  • Intuition with example
  • Class Size 100
  • Average midterm score for the other 99 students
    excluding yourself 70
  • If your score, the marginal (100th) score, is
    80, then the average for the whole class
  • (99 x 70) (1 x 80) / 100 70.1
  • Thus when the marginal is greater than the
    average (80 gt 70), then the average must increase
    ( from 70 to 70.1)

39
AP and MP
  • If your score, the marginal (100th) score, is
    60, then the average for the whole class
  • (99 x 70) (1 x 60) / 100 69.9
  • Thus when the marginal is smaller than the
    average (60 lt 70), then the average must decrease
    ( from 70 to 69.9)
  • It is easy to see that if the marginal score
    equals the existing average in this example,
    there will be no change in the average for the
    whole class.

40
Practical Example
  • Are all these observations valid from a practical
    perspective?
  • Consider a logistic company before you can
    anchor any business, you have to invest in a
    warehouse, a team of vans, an office and other
    fixtures, office equipments, and a team of
    workers to handle the delivery of items.
  • Some of these are obviously fixed in the SR.
    Initially, as you increase output, all you need
    is still one warehouse (provided it is big
    enough), one office, and a fixed number of
    vehicles.
  • You can vary the amount of labor you employ even
    in the SR.
  • Suppose we have the following hypothetical
    figures

41
Practical Example
42
Practical Example
  • Note that MP stops increasing after the
    employment of the 3rd worker. Thereafter, MP is
    still positive but becomes smaller with further
    employment.
  • This occurs because the number of trips that a
    van can make in any day and the corresponding
    load that it can carry will be limited.
  • You can still produce more by hiring more workers
    to deliver parcels. The van will still make a
    fixed amount of trip each day, and drop off these
    workers at a drop-off point from which the
    workers are to deliver the parcels by hand.

43
Practical Example
  • With 3 workers, the 3rd worker will be more
    productive marginally since he only has to wait
    for 2 colleagues before the van can take off for
    the next destination.
  • With 4 workers, the 4th worker will have to wait
    for 3 colleagues, resulting in a loss of time
    that can be used for other delivery job.
  • Well see how TP, MP and AP are related to Total
    Cost, Marginal Cost and Average Cost in the next
    lecture.
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