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Definition
· Study of optimum allocation of limited resources to satisfy our unlimited wants
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Term
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- Optimum allocation
- Limited resources
- Unlimited wants (happiness, profit, revenue)
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Term
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leads to Opportunity Cost
Graphical Analysis: Budget Line (y-intercept and slope)
Algebraic Analysis:
Budget = (Pa)(A) + (Po)(O)
y-intercept: (Budget/Po)
slope: -Pa/Po |
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Slope (change in oranges/change in apples) = -1.5 |
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Definition
for every additional apple, we must give up 1.5 oranges |
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- Value of your next best alternative you must give up
- slope of a budget line
- trade off
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Term
Unlimited Wants (Utility) |
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utils to measure happiness
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Utility level curves
In order to keep the same trend of U, trade off between A & O
decisions based on margins, not total |
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Marginal Revenue and Marginal Cost |
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MR = Δ Revenue / Δ Output
MC = Δ Cost / Δ Output |
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Marginal Rate of Substitution |
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The rate at which we trade off apples & oranges at the same level of happiness
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Opportunity Cost = Marginal Rate of Substitution |
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(ΔO / ΔA = PA / PO) = (MUA/MUO = ΔO / ΔA) |
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Achieve Optimum Consumption or Optimum Decision Making Rule |
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How to influence behavior: |
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- Incentive
- Value Creation
- Changing Preference
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Term
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- Make budget line flatter - changing opportunity cost
- examples: employee evaluation, pay system, recognition
- Another example: reduce opportunity cost between sales commission and honesty; honesty is cheaper to consume for the employee (relatively inexpensive)
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Term
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Definition
- value = what you are willing to pay, willingness goes high - value increases
- determine what employee is willing to pay (typically intangible) then provide it at no cost
- Examples: working environment, flexibility
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Education, training - used to change people's behavior |
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When consumers and producers get together and perform an exchange (transaction) |
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Provides information regarding consumer's willingness (value) to pay |
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Provides information regarding producer's willingness to charge (sell price) |
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Along demand curve, we observe utility maximization |
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Profit maximization behavior |
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Term
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Definition
Stable Market
When S = D, thus Qs = Qd |
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equals to consumer surplus + producer surplus |
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Definition
A market generates maximum surplus, market is at equilibrium point |
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Term
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Demand Expansion: demand curve shifts to the right (at every level of price, consumer buys more)
Supply Expansion: supply curve shifts to the right (at every level of price, seller wants to sell more) |
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Term
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Definition
When demand increases, P and Q increase
When demand decreases, P and Q decrease
When supply increases, P decreases and Q increases
When supply decreases, P increases and Q decreases
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Market Analysis when S&D change simultaneously |
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Definition
When D & S increase, Q increases, P?
When D & S decrease, Q decreases, P?
When S increases and D decreases, P decreases, Q?
When S decreases and D increases, P increases, Q? |
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Term
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Definition
Sales Volume = a (baseline) - 2P + 3 Pcomp + 1P..+4Online+...
Demand Equation: Q = a - 2P
Inverse Demand Equation: P= a/2 - 1/2 x Q (used to draw demand curve) |
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Term
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Definition
How sensitive is sales volume to each variable
ε = %ΔQ / %ΔP
ε =((Q2-Q1)/Q1)/((P2-P1)/P1)
ε = (ΔQ / ΔP) x (P/Q) = slope of demand eq. x (P/Q)
or 1/(slope of inverse demand eq.) x (P/Q)
ε = - 2/5 means that a 1% increase in price leads to 2/5% decrease in sales
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Term
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Definition
ε > 0 ---- Substitutes
ε < 0 ---- Complements
0 to <-1 implies Inelastic
-1 is Unit Elastic
Less than -1 implies Elastic
Price elasticity is always a negative #
In elastic condition, increase P, reduce Q, improve Rev |
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Term
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Definition
∏ = Revenue - Cost
∏ = (P - AC) x Q
Total Cost = Fixed Cost + Variable Cost
Average Cost (AC) = TC / Q |
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Profit Maximization Rules |
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Definition
MR = MC
MR > MC --- Q goes up (produce more - time to expand)
MR < MC ---- Q goes down - (Produce less)
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Term
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Definition
- Perfectly competitive market (baseline market structure)
- Imperfectly competitive market:
- Monopoly
- Monopolistically competitive
- Oligopoly
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Characteristics of Perfectly Competitive Market |
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Definition
- Many buyers
- Many sellers
- Homogeneous goods/services
- Complete Information/Symmetric Information
- Easy entry/exit
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Imperfectly Competitive Market |
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Sellers have the ability to set price (Market Power) then "Pricing Strategy" makes sense |
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Monopoly - Single Producer |
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Producer = Market
MR has slope twice greater than slope of D
Supply curve is producer's MR
Price is always set at demand curve not supply curve |
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Monopolistically Competitive Market |
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= Monopoly + Perfectly Competitive
- Goods not homegeneous through differentiation |
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Five elements to minimize competition |
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Definition
- Entry Barrier (lobby, patents, M&A, supply)
- Supply
- Buyer
- Substitution
- Rivalry
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Term
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Definition
- Simple Pricing - demand known and homogeneous
- Single Pricing (MR = MC)
- Multiple Pricing:
- Bulk (Block) Pricing
- Two Part Tariff (membership)
- Complex Pricing - demand known and heterogeneous
- Personalized (1st degree)
- Group (3rd degree)
- Menu (2nd degree)
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Used when demand is known and demand is homogeneous
Used for high ticket items |
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Used for product/service that
- Consumers use frequently
- Not so durable
- Replace frequently
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different with each customer
want to reach the highest point of demand |
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can identify what group a customer falls into
once identified - use pre-defined price for the group
with group pricing there is usually a slight differentiation on the product |
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can't identify the customer
set menu prices such that each customer selects a price in the menu themselves |
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