chapter 8 profit maximization and competitive supply

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Chapter 8

Profit Maximization and Competitive Supply

Chapter 8 2©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Topics to be Discussed

Perfectly Competitive Markets

Profit Maximization

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

Choosing Output in the Short-Run

Chapter 8 3©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Topics to be Discussed

The Competitive Firm’s Short-Run Supply Curve

Short-Run Market Supply

Choosing Output in the Long-Run

The Industry’s Long-Run Supply Curve

Chapter 8 4©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Perfectly Competitive Markets

The model of perfect competition can be used to study a variety of markets

Basic assumptions of Perfectly Competitive Markets

1. Price taking

2. Product homogeneity

3. Free entry and exit

Chapter 8 5©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Perfectly Competitive Markets

1. Price Taking The individual firm sells a very small share

of the total market output and, therefore, cannot influence market price.

Each firm takes market price as given – price taker

The individual consumer buys too small a share of industry output to have any impact on market price.

Chapter 8 6©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Perfectly Competitive Markets

2. Product Homogeneity The products of all firms are perfect

substitutes. Product quality is relatively similar as well

as other product characteristics Agricultural products, oil, copper, iron,

lumber Heterogeneous products, such as brand

names, can charge higher prices because they are perceived as better

Chapter 8 7©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Perfectly Competitive Markets

3. Free Entry and Exit When there are no special costs that make

it difficult for a firm to enter (or exit) an industry

Buyers can easily switch from one supplier to another.

Suppliers can easily enter or exit a market. Pharmaceutical companies not perfectly

competitive because of the large costs of R&D required

Chapter 8 8©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

When are Markets Competitive

Few real products are perfectly competitive

Many markets are, however, highly competitive They face relatively low entry and exit costs Highly elastic demand curves

No rule of thumb to determine whether a market is close to perfectly competitive Depends on how they behave in situations

Chapter 8 9©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Profit Maximization

Do firms maximize profits? Managers in firms may be concerned with

other objectivesRevenue maximizationRevenue growthDividend maximizationShort-run profit maximization (due to bonus or

promotion incentive) Could be at expense of long run profits

Chapter 8 10©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Profit Maximization

Implications of non-profit objective Over the long-run investors would not

support the company Without profits, survival unlikely in

competitive industries

Managers have constrained freedom to pursue goals other than long-run profit maximization

Chapter 8 11©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

We can study profit maximizing output for any firm whether perfectly competitive or not Profit () = Total Revenue - Total Cost If q is output of the firm, then total revenue is

price of the good times quantity Total Revenue (R) = Pq

Chapter 8 12©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

Costs of production depends on output Total Cost (C) = Cq

Profit for the firm, , is difference between revenue and costs

)()()( qCqRq

Chapter 8 13©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

Firm selects output to maximize the difference between revenue and cost

We can graph the total revenue and total cost curves to show maximizing profits for the firm

Distance between revenues and costs show profits

Chapter 8 14©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

Revenue is curved showing that a firm can only sell more if it lowers its price

Slope in revenue curve is the marginal revenue Change in revenue resulting from a one-unit

increase in outputSlope of total cost curve is marginal cost

Additional cost of producing an additional unit of output

Chapter 8 15©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

If the producer tries to raise price, sales are zero.

Profit is negative to begin with since revenue is not large enough to cover fixed and variable costs

As output rises, revenue rises faster than costs increasing profit

Profit increases until it is maxed at q*Profit is maximized where MR = MC or where

slopes of the R(q) and C(q) curves are equal

Chapter 8 16©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Profit Maximization – Short Run

0

Cost,Revenue,

Profit($s per

year)

Output

C(q)

R(q)A

B

(q)q0 q*

Profits are maximized where MR (slope at A) and MC (slope at B) are equal

Profits are maximized where R(q) – C(q) is maximized

Chapter 8 17©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

Profit is maximized at the point at which an additional increment to output leaves profit unchanged

MCMR

MCMR

q

C

q

R

q

CR

0

0

Chapter 8 18©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marginal Revenue, Marginal Cost, and Profit Maximization

The Competitive Firm Price taker – market price and output

determined from total market demand and supply

Market output (Q) and firm output (q) Market demand (D) and firm demand (d)

Chapter 8 19©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Competitive Firm

Demand curve faced by an individual firm is a horizontal line Firm’s sales have no effect on market price

Demand curve faced by whole market is downward sloping Shows amount of good all consumers will

purchase at different prices

Chapter 8 20©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Competitive Firm

d$4

Output (bushels)

Price$ per bushel

100 200

Firm Industry

D

$4

S

Price$ per bushel

Output (millions of bushels)

100

Chapter 8 21©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Competitive Firm

The competitive firm’s demand Individual producer sells all units for $4

regardless of that producer’s level of output. MR = P with the horizontal demand curve For a perfectly competitive firm, profit

maximizing output occurs when

ARPMRqMC )(

Chapter 8 22©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output: Short Run

We will combine revenue and costs with demand to determine profit maximizing output decisions.

In the short run, capital is fixed and firm must choose levels of variable inputs to maximize profits.

We can look at the graph of MR, MC, ATC and AVC to determine profits

Chapter 8 23©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output: Short Run

The point where MR = MC, the profit maximizing output is chosen MR=MC at quantity, q*, of 8 At a quantity less than 8, MR>MC so more

profit can be gained by increasing output At a quantity greater than 8, MC>MR,

increasing output will decrease profits

Chapter 8 24©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

q2

A Competitive Firm

10

20

30

40

Price

50

MC

AVC

ATC

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11Outputq*

AR=MR=PA

q1 : MR > MCq2: MC > MRq0: MC = MR

q1

Lost Profit for q2>q*Lost Profit

for q2>q*

Chapter 8 25©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

A Competitive Firm – Positive Profits

10

20

30

40

Price

50

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11Outputq2

MC

AVC

ATC

q*

AR=MR=PA

q1

D

C B Profits are determined

by output per unit times quantity

Profit per unit = P-AC(q) = A to B

Total Profit = ABCD

Chapter 8 26©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Competitive Firm

A firm does not have to make profitsIt is possible a firm will incur losses if the

P < AC for the profit maximizing quantity Still measured by profit per unit times

quantity Profit per unit is negative (P – AC < 0)

Chapter 8 27©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

A Competitive Firm – Losses

Price

Output

MC

AVC

ATC

P = MRD

At q*: MR = MC and P < ATCLosses = (P- AC) x q* or ABCD

q*

A

BC

Chapter 8 28©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output in the Short Run

Summary of Production Decisions Profit is maximized when MC = MR If P > ATC the firm is making profits. If P < ATC the firm is making losses

Chapter 8 29©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Short Run Production

When should the firm shut down? If AVC < P < ATC the firm should continue

producing in the short runCan cover some of its fixed costs and all of its

variable costs so the loss is small than the fixed costs if no production

If AVC > P < ATC the firm should shut-down.Can not cover even its fixed costs

Chapter 8 30©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

A Competitive Firm – Losses

Price

Output

P < ATC but AVC so firm will continue to produce in short run

MC

AVC

ATC

P = MRD

q*

A

BC

Losses

EF

Chapter 8 31©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Some Cost Considerations for Managers

Three guidelines for estimating marginal cost:

1. Average variable cost should not be used as a substitute for marginal cost.

2. A single item on a firm’s accounting ledger may have two components, only one of which involved marginal cost

3. All opportunity costs should be included in determining marginal cost

Chapter 8 32©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Competitive Firm – Short Run Supply

Supply curve tells how much output will be produced at different prices

Competitive firms determine quantity to produce where P = MC Firm shuts down when P < AVC

Competitive firms supply curve is portion of the marginal cost curve above the AVC curve

Chapter 8 33©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

A Competitive Firm’sShort-Run Supply Curve

Price($ per

unit)

Output

MC

AVC

ATC

P = AVC

P2

q2

The firm chooses theoutput level where P = MR = MC,

as long as P > AVC.

P1

q1

S

Supply is MC above AVC

Chapter 8 34©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

A Competitive Firm’sShort-Run Supply Curve

Supply is upward sloping due to diminishing returns.

Higher price compensates the firm for higher cost of additional output and increases total profit because it applies to all units.

Chapter 8 35©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

A Competitive Firm’sShort-Run Supply Curve

Over time prices of product and inputs can change

How does the firm’s output change in response to a change in the price of an input. We can show an increase in marginal costs

and the change in the firms output decisions

Chapter 8 36©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

MC2

q2

Input cost increases and MC shifts to MC2

and q falls to q2.

MC1

q1

The Response of a Firm toa Change in Input Price

Price($ per

unit)

Output

$5

Savings to the firmfrom reducing output

Chapter 8 37©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Short-Run Market Supply Curve

Shows the amount of product the whole market will produce at given prices

Is the sum of all the individual producers in the market

We can show graphically how we can sum the supply curves of individual producers

Chapter 8 38©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

MC3

Industry Supply in the Short Run$ perunit

MC1

SSThe short-runindustry supply curve

is the horizontalsummation of the supply

curves of the firms.

Q

MC2

15 21

P1

P3

P2

1082 4 75

Chapter 8 39©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Short-Run Market Supply Curve

As price rises, firms expand their productionIncreased production leads to increased

demand for inputs and could cause increases in input prices

Increases in input prices cause MC curve to riseThis lowers each firm’s output choiceCauses industry supply to be less responsive to

change in price than would be otherwise

Chapter 8 40©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Elasticity of Market Supply

Elasticity of Market Supply Measures the sensitivity of industry output to

market price The percentage change in quantity supplied,

Q, in response to 1-percent change in price

)//()/( PPQQEs

Chapter 8 41©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Elasticity of Market Supply

When MC increase rapidly in response to increases in output, elasticity is low

When MC increase slowly, supply is relatively elastic

Perfectly inelastic short-run supply arises when the industry’s plant and equipment are so fully utilized that new plants must be built to achieve greater output.

Perfectly elastic short-run supply arises when marginal costs are constant.

Chapter 8 42©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Producer Surplus in the Short Run

Price is greater than MC on all but the last unit of output.

Therefore, surplus is earned on all but the last unit

The producer surplus is the sum over all units produced of the difference between the market price of the good and the marginal cost of production.

Area above supply to the market price

Chapter 8 43©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

ProducerProducerSurplusSurplus

Producer surplus is area above MC

to the price

Producer Surplus for a FirmPrice($ per

unit ofoutput)

Output

AVCAVCMCMC

AABB

PP

qq**

At q* MC = MR.Between 0 and q ,

MR > MC for all units.

Chapter 8 44©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Short-Run Market Supply Curve

Sum of MC from 0 to q*, it is the sum o the total variable cost of producing q*

Producer Surplus can be defined as difference between the firm’s revenue and it total variable cost

We can show this graphically by the rectangle ABCD Revenue (0ABq*) minus variable cost

(0DCq*)

Chapter 8 45©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Producer surplus is also ABCD = Revenue minus variable costs

Producer Surplus for a Firm

Price($ per

unit ofoutput)

Output

ProducerProducerSurplusSurplus

AVCAVCMCMC

AABB

PP

qq**

CCDD

Chapter 8 46©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Producer Surplus versus Profit

Profit is revenue minus total cost (not just variable cost)

When fixed cost is positive, producer surplus is greater than profit

VC- R PS Surplus Producer

FC - VC- R - Profit

Chapter 8 47©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Producer Surplus versus Profit

Costs of production determine magnitude of producer surplus Higher costs firms have less producer

surplus Lower cost firms have more producer surplus Adding up surplus for all producers in the

market given total market producer surplus Area below market price and above supply

curve

Chapter 8 48©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

DD

PP**

QQ**

ProducerProducerSurplusSurplus

Market producer surplus isthe difference between P*

and S from 0 to Q*.

Producer Surplus for a MarketPrice

($ perunit of

output)

Output

SS

Chapter 8 49©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output in the Long Run

In short run, one or more inputs are fixed Depending on the time, it may limit the

flexibility of the firm

In the long run, a firm can alter all its inputs, including the size of the plant.

We assume free entry and free exit. No legal restrictions or extra costs

Chapter 8 50©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output in the Long Run

In the short run a firm faces a horizontal demand curve Take market price as given

The short-run average cost curve (SAC) and short run marginal cost curve (SMC) are low enough for firm to make positive profits (ABCD)

The long run average cost curve (LRAC) Economies of scale to q2

Diseconomies of scale after q2

Chapter 8 51©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

q1

BC

AD

In the short run, thefirm is faced with fixedinputs. P = $40 > ATC.Profit is equal to ABCD.

Output Choice in the Long RunPrice

Output

P = MR$40

SACSMC

q3q2

$30

LAC

LMC

Chapter 8 52©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Output Choice in the Long RunPrice

Outputq1

BC

ADP = MR$40

SACSMC

q3q2

$30

LAC

LMC

In the long run, the plant size will be increased and output increased to q3.

Long-run profit, EFGD > short runprofit ABCD.

FG

Chapter 8 53©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium

For long run equilibrium, firms must have no desire to enter or leave the industry

We can relate economic profit to the incentive to enter and exit the market

Need to relate accounting profit to economic profit

Chapter 8 54©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Competitive Equilibrium

Accounting profit Difference between firm’s revenues and

direct costs

Economic profit Difference between firm’s revenues and

direct and indirect costs Takes into account opportunity costs

Chapter 8 55©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Competitive Equilibrium

Firm uses labor (L) and capital (K) with purchased capital

Accounting Profit & Economic Profit Accounting profit: = R - wL Economic profit: = R = wL - rK

wl = labor costrk = opportunity cost of capital

Chapter 8 56©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Competitive Equilibrium

Zero-Profit A firm is earning a normal return on its

investment Doing as well as it could by investing its

money elsewhere Normal return is firm’s opportunity cost of

using money to buy capital instead of investing elsewhere

Competitive market long run equilibrium

Chapter 8 57©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Competitive Equilibrium

Zero Economic Profits If R > wL + rk, economic profits are positive If R = wL + rk, zero economic profits, but the

firms is earning a normal rate of return; indicating the industry is competitive

If R < wl + rk, consider going out of business

Chapter 8 58©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Competitive Equilibrium

Entry and Exit The long-run response to short-run profits is

to increase output and profits. Profits will attract other producers. More producers increase industry supply

which lowers the market price. This continues until there are no more profits

to be gained in the market – zero economic profits

Chapter 8 59©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium – Profits

S1

Output Output

$ per unit ofoutput

$ per unit ofoutput

LAC

LMC

D

S2

$40 P1

Q1

Firm Industry

Q2

P2

q2

$30

•Profit attracts firms•Supply increases until profit = 0

Chapter 8 60©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium – Losses

S2

Output Output

$ per unit ofoutput

$ per unit ofoutput

LAC

LMC

D

S1

P2

Q2

Firm Industry

Q1

P1

q2

$20

$30

•Losses cause firms to leave•Supply decreases until profit = 0

Chapter 8 61©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Competitive Equilibrium

1. All firms in industry are maximizing profits

MR = MC

2. No firm has incentive to enter or exit industry

Earning zero economic profits

3. Market is in equilibrium QD = QD

Chapter 8 62©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output in the Long Run

Economic Rent The difference between what firms are willing

to pay for an input less the minimum amount necessary to obtain it.

When some have accounting profits are larger than others, still earn zero economic profits because of the willingness of other firms to use the factors of production that are in limited supply

Chapter 8 63©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Choosing Output in the Long Run

An Example Two firms A & B that both own their land A is located on a river which lowers A’s

shipping cost by $10,000 compared to B. The demand for A’s river location will

increase the price of A’s land to $10,000 = economic rent

Although economic rent has increased, economic profit has become zero

Chapter 8 64©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Firms Earn Zero Profit inLong-Run EquilibriumTicketPrice

Season TicketsSales (millions)

$7$7

1.01.0

A baseball teamin a moderate-sized city

sells enough tickets so that price is equal to marginal

and average cost(profit = 0).

LACLMC

Chapter 8 65©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

1.31.3

$10$10

Economic Rent

TicketPrice

$7.20$7.20A team with the samecost in a larger citysells tickets for $10.

Firms Earn Zero Profit inLong-Run Equilibrium

Season TicketsSales (millions)

LACLMC

Chapter 8 66©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Firms Earn Zero Profit inLong-Run Equilibrium

With a fixed input such as a unique location, the difference between the cost of production (LAC = 7) and price ($10) is the value or opportunity cost of the input (location) and represents the economic rent from the input.

Chapter 8 67©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Firms Earn Zero Profit inLong-Run Equilibrium

If the opportunity cost of the input (rent) is not taken into consideration it may appear that economic profits exist in the long-run.

Chapter 8 68©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Industry’s Long-Run Supply Curve

The shape of the long-run supply curve depends on the extent to which changes in industry output affect the prices of inputs.

Chapter 8 69©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Industry’s Long-Run Supply Curve

Assume All firms have access to the available

production technology Output is increased by using more inputs, not

by invention The market for inputs does not change with

expansions and contractions of the industry.

Chapter 8 70©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Industry’s Long-Run Supply Curve

To analyze long-run industry supply, will need to distinguish between three different types of industries

1. Constant-Cost

2. Increasing-Cost

3. Decreasing-Cost

Chapter 8 71©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Constant-Cost Industry

Industry whose long-run supply curve is horizontal

Assume a firm is initially in equilibrium Demand increases causing price to increase Individual firms increase supply Causes firms to earn positive profits in short-

run Supply increases causing market price to

decrease Long run equilibrium – zero economic profits

Chapter 8 72©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Constant-Cost Industry

ACMC

q1

D1

S1

Q1

P1

D2

P2P2

q2

S2

Q2Output Output

$$

P1SL

Q1 increases to Q2.Long-run supply = SL = LRAC.

Change in output has no impact on input cost.

Increase in demand increases market price and firm outputPositive profits cause market

supply to increase and price to fall

Chapter 8 73©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Supply in aConstant-Cost Industry

Price of inputs does not change Firms cost curves do not change

In a constant-cost industry, long-run supply is a horizontal line at a price that is equal to the minimum average cost of production.

Chapter 8 74©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Increasing-Cost Industry

Prices of some or all inputs rises as production is expanded when demand of inputs increases

When demand increases causing prices to increase and production to increase Firms enter the market increasing demand

for inputs Costs increase causing an upward shift in

supply curves Market supply increases but not as much

Chapter 8 75©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Supply in an Increasing-Cost Industry

Output Output

$$

D1

S1

q1

P1

Q1

P1

SSLL

SMC1

LAC1

SMC2

LAC2

P3

S2

P3

Q3q2

P2

D2

Q2

P2

Due to the increase in input prices, long-run equilibrium occurs at a higher price.

Long Run Supply is upward Sloping

Chapter 8 76©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Supply in aIncreasing-Cost Industry

In a increasing-cost industry, long-run supply curve is upward sloping.

More output is produced, but only at the higher price needed to compete for the increased input costs

Chapter 8 77©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Decreasing-Cost Industry

Industry whose long-run supply curve is downward sloping

Increase in demand causes production to increase Increase in size allows firm to take

advantage of size to get inputs cheaper Increased production may lead to better

efficiencies or quantity discounts Costs shift down and market price falls

Chapter 8 78©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-run Supply in a Decreasing-Cost Industry

S2

SL

P3

Q3

P3

SMC2

LAC2

Output Output

$$

P1

D1

S1

P1

Q1q1

SMC1

LAC1

q2

P2

D2

Q2

P2

Due to the decreasein input prices, long-runequilibrium occurs at

a lower price.

Long Run Supply is Downward Sloping

Chapter 8 79©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Industry’sLong-Run Supply Curve

The Effects of a Tax In an earlier chapter we studied how firms

respond to taxes on an input. Now, we will consider how a firm responds to

a tax on its output.

Chapter 8 80©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Effect of an Output Tax on a Competitive Firm’s Output

Price($ per

unit ofoutput)

Output

AVC1

MC1

P1

q1

The firm willreduce output to

the point at whichthe marginal cost

plus the tax equalsthe price.

q2

tt

MC2 = MC1 + tax

AVC2

An output taxraises the firm’s

marginal cost by theamount of the tax.

Chapter 8 81©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Effect of an OutputTax on Industry Output

Price($ per

unit ofoutput)

Output

DD

P1

SS1

Q1

P2

Q2

SS2 = S1 + t

t

Tax shifts S1 to S2 andoutput falls to Q2. Price

increases to P2.

Chapter 8 82©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Elasticity of Supply

1. Constant-cost industry Long-run supply is horizontal Small increase in price will induce an

extremely large output increase Long-run supply elasticity is infinitely large Inputs would be readily available

Chapter 8 83©2005 Pearson Education, Inc.

Long-Run Elasticity of Supply

2. Increasing-cost industry Long-run supply is upward-sloping and

elasticity is positive The slope (elasticity) will depend on the rate

of increase in input cost Long-run elasticity will generally be greater

than short-run elasticity of supply

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