microfoundations of supply & demand chap 8,9, and 11

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MICROFOUNDATION S OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11.

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Page 1: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY &

DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11.

Page 2: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

PREFERENCES & BUDGET

CONSTRAINTSChap 8,9

Page 3: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

FRUIT SALAD

Bananas cost $5 and Apples cost $10. What is the best fruit salad you can make with $60.

Page 4: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

BUDGET CONSTRAINT

Income creates limits on how much of each good can be purchased.

Deciding to purchase an amount of one, one is a decision not to purchase the other.

0 1 2 3 4 5 60

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

Apples

Bananas

Apple Banana

0 12

1 10

2 8

3 6

4 4

5 2

6 0

Page 5: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

UTILITY AND CHOICE

Many possible choices which is best.

We hypothesize another, more theoretical measure of overall happiness, called utility, which consumers are attempting to maximize.

Given their income, consumers choose a shopping basket of goods to get the most utility.

Page 6: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MARGINAL UTILITY: DIMINISHING RETURNS

The marginal utility of a good is the amount of extra utility that a consumer can get from consuming a bit more of the good (or the amount of utility they would lose by consuming a bit less of the good).

Marginal utility is not constant for any good. Utility is diminishing, meaning that the more of a good you consume, the less extra utility that you get from consuming a bit more of it.

Page 7: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 120

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

AppleΔUtilityΔapple 

240 

220 

200 

180 

160 

140 

    Apple Utility

0 0 

1 240 

2 460 

3 660 

4 840 

5 1000 

6 1140

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 120

50

100

150

200

250

300

ΔUtilityΔApple

Apples

Mar

gina

l Util

ity

Δapple

ΔUtility

Page 8: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

UTILITY CURVE: FRUIT SALAD

Apples BananasΔUtility ΔUtilityApple Utility Δapple Banana Utility Δbanana

0 0 0 01 240 240 1 122 1222 460 220 2 242 1203 660 200 3 350 1084 840 180 4 456 1065 1000 160 5 559 1036 1140 140 6 659 100

7 756 978 850 949 940 90

10 1028 8811 1112 8412 1192 8013 1268 7614 1340 7215 1408 68

Page 9: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MARGINAL UTILITY AS A GUIDE LINE FOR MAXIMIZATION. As consumers choose goods to maximize utility, they must ask how much goods add to their utility relative to how much they cost.

Choose to buy those goods for which you get the most bang for the buck (i.e. the most extra utility per $ cost).

If put more of good A into your market basket and take good B out of your market basket.

If put more of good B into your market basket and take good A out of your market basket.

A B

A B

U UP P

A B

A B

U UP P

Page 10: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

EQUILIBRIUM

A B

A B

U UP P

As you choose more goods with high bang-for-buck, their bang will diminish (diminishing marginal utility).

As you put low bang-for-buck goods back, their marginal utility will increase.

Eventually, will come to chose a market basket such that

Page 11: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MUB

808894

100106120

MUB/PB

1617.618.8

2021.2

2416

Utility11921028

850659456242

0

Total1192126813101319129612421140

Utility0

240460660840

10001140

Banana

1210

86420

Apple0123456

MUA

240220200180160140

MUA/PA

242220181614

Page 12: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Apples Bananas Total# Utility MUA MUA/PA # Utility MUB MUB/PB Utility

0 0 12 1192 80 16 11921 240 240 24 10 1028 88 17.6 12682 460 220 22 8 850 94 18.8 13103 660 200 20 6 659 100 20 13194 840 180 18 4 456 106 21.2 12965 1000 160 16 2 242 120 24 12426 1140 140 14 0 1140

Page 13: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

B

PB

PA

B

YP

A

YP

B

YB P

Budget Constraint

B

A

P

P

If B = 0A

YA P B

A

PB

P 0B

A

P

P

If B = PA

PA

BA

A

PP

P

A

YA PB

A

PB

P

BP

PB

For every extra PA of Bananas that you eat

you must give up PB Apples.

If A = 0

Slope:

Page 14: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

B

PB

PA

B

YP

A

YP

Budget Constraint

B

A

P

P

A

YA P B

A

PB

P

For every extra PA of Bananas that you eat

you must give up PB Apples.

Slope:

Page 15: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

INDIFFERENCE CURVES

Indifference Curves are a tool for describing trade-offsOften used to study trade-offs of risk and return.

Compare all possible combinations of goods and rank them according to the utility generated by a particular combo.In particular, find those combos which produce an identical level of welfare.

Page 16: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

BI1

I2

I3

Shape of Indifference Curves Indicate Properties of Consumer Demand

More is better – Higher indifference curves generate more utility. Indifference curves don’t cross

Goods are substitutes- To make you just as happy to give up one good you need to get more of the other. Indifference curves have negative slope.

Each good has diminishing marginal utility. To make you just as happy to give up increasing amounts of one good, you need to get an increasing amount of the other good. Indifference

curves are steep toward the left and flatter toward the right.

• (Negative) Slope of the Indifference Curve is the amount of A you need to

compensate you for giving up a unit of B. • (Negative) Slope is called the marginal

rate of substitution.

Page 17: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Income Good Time

I2

Income Bad Time

Risk Aversion

Page 18: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Return

I2

Risk

I1

I2

Risk Return Tradeoff

Page 19: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

BI1

I2

I3

Can Do Better

UnobtainableF

CD

E

COMPARE INDIFFERENCE CURVES

Indifference Curve 3 does not cross the budget constraint. No point is affordable.

Indifference Curve 1 crosses the budget constraint, points C and E are affordable.

However, by definition, these points are no better than point D and other points directly

below the budget constraint which are worse (in utility terms) than points on the

budget constraint directly above them.

Only an indifference curve that touches but does not cross the budget curve can contain the optimum combo at the tangency point, F.

F maximizes Utility

Page 20: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

OPTIMAL CHOICE

The consumer can maximize utility by being on the highest indifference curve that is in the budget curve set.

Best choice is to choose the point on an indifference curve that is tangent to the budget line.

At a point of tangency, two lines have the same slope.

B B

A A

U PMRS U P

Page 21: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

PRICE CHANGES AND DEMAND

A B B B

A B A A

U U U PP P U P

Assume we are at the optimal market basket, Now, assume that the price of bananas goes down, then either the marginal utility of apples must fall or the marginal utility of banana’s must fall. Either banana purchases must rise or apple purchases must fall or both. Substitution Effect Consumers buy two goods and have a limited amount of income Y. Price of apples goes up and this will reduce the spending power of Y. Either the consumer must drop demand for Apples or Bananas or both. Income Effect

A BP A P B Y

Page 22: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

PRICE OF B GOES DOWN

If Good B becomes cheaper, the amount of good A you can buy if you buy B = 0 is unchanged, but each extra unit of B costs more in relative terms.

The budget curve flattens and rotates around the vertical axis.

The new tangent point implies an optimum with more B. (Consumption of Good A may go up or down depending on complementarity).

Page 23: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

BI1

I2

FG

Equilibrium at point G

Price of B drops.

A

YP

𝑃𝐵

𝑃 𝐴

Becomes larger

B

YP

B

YP

Becomes flatter

Budget Curve Rotates

New Optimum with Higher B

Page 24: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MUB

687888

95.5103114

Utility140812301028

803559303

0

Banana

1210

86420

Utility0

240460660840

10001140

Banana15

12.510

7.55

2.50

Apple0123456

MUA

240220200180160140

MUB/PB

1719.5

2223.875

25.7528.25

MUA/PA

242220181614

Price of Bananas Goes to 4

Optimal Banana’s Rise, Optimal Apple’s Fall

Page 25: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Apples Bananas Total# Utility MUA MUA/PA # Utility MUB MUB/PB Utility

0 0 15 1408 68 17 14081 240 240 24 12.5 1230 78 19.5 14702 460 220 22 10 1028 88 22 14883 660 200 20 7.5 803 95.5 23.875 14634 840 180 18 5 559 103 25.75 13995 1000 160 16 2.5 303 114 28.5 13036 1140 140 14 0 1140

Page 26: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Apples

BananasI1

I2

H

G

Decompose into two parts

1. Move to a combination with a lower MRS

Pure Substitution Effect

F

2. Move to a higher indifference curve

Pure Income Effect

Page 27: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

D

I1

I2

I3

PB

P1

1

YP2

YP

3

YP4

YP

P2

P3

P4

I4

B

B

Foundation of Demand Curve

Page 28: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

A

B

I1

I2

F

D

B

YP

B

YP

Income Declines

A

YP

A

YP & Fall

Both Apples and Bananas fall

Consumer moves to lower indifference curve

Page 29: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Utility0

240460660840

10001140

Banana

1210

86420

Apple0123456

Utility11721008

830639436222

0

Total1172124812901299127612221140

MUB

808893

100109120

80

MUA

240220200180160140

MUB/PB

1617.618.6

2021.8

2416

MUA/PA

242220181614

Page 30: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Banana

420

Apple012

Utility0

240460

Utility436

2220

Total436

462460

MUA

240220

MUB

106120

MUA/PA

2422

MUB/PB

21.824

Apple0123456

Banana

1210

86420

Income falls to 20

Page 31: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Apple Banana Total# Utility MUA MUA/PA # Utility MUB MUB/PB Utility

0 0 4 456 106 21.2 4561 240 240 24 2 242 120 24 4822 460 220 22 0 0 460

Page 32: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

COSTS OF PRODUCTIONChapters 11

Page 33: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Costs: Explicit vs. Implicit

• Explicit Costs of Production: Direct payments for resources not owned by a firm (raw materials, wages, energy payments, interest payments).

• Opportunity Cost: Lost payment for best alternative use of input.

• Implicit Costs: Opportunity Costs of assets owned by firms• Ex. Owner of barbershop could earn $100 per hour working as a

barber. Implicit cost of the owners time is $100 per hour. • Opportunity cost of equity capital is return that could have been

earned elsewhere.

Page 34: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Accounting vs. Economic Profits

• Profits are revenues less costs.• Economic profits are revenues less explicit and implicit costs.• Economic profits attract competition so they typically

don’t last.

• Accountants do not fully incorporate all implicit costs including cost of equity capital or owner’s contribution of time or expertise. • Accountants do incorporate some implicit costs (such

as depreciation) into their profit& loss statements.

Page 35: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Short-Run vs. Long Run• Firms typically have several types of inputs that they can

adjust to adjust production.• Long-run - When firms are able to adjust all of their inputs

including physical plant.• Short-run – When firms are able to adjust only some of

their inputs (usually energy, labor, and raw material costs).

Page 36: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Productivity• Average Productivity of Labor is output per work unit.

• Marginal Productivity of Labor is the extra production that is obtained from an extra unit of labor.

Total ProductAPL

Labor

TPMPL

Labor

Page 37: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Short Run Production Function

TPMPL

Labor

ΔLabor

ΔTP

ΔLaborΔTP

Total

Product TP

Page 38: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Production in the Short-Run• Given a set of fixed inputs (like plant and capital equipment),

a firm can vary other inputs (typically labor) in order to vary production.

• Typically, as you add workers, you get more output.

• Up to a point, each additional worker adds synergy and adding more workers leads to more and more extra pay-off and marginal product may rise.

• But at some point, capacity constraints bind, diminishing returns sets in, and the addition of extra workers will generate less and less extra production.

Page 39: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Small Scale Schedule: Bakery

Average MarginalHours Loaves Product Product

0 00.10

2 0.20 0.100.32

4 0.83 0.210.58

6 2 0.331

8 4 0.53

10 10 1

Page 40: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Large Scale ScheduleAverage Marginal

Hours Output Product Product0 0

110 10 1

0.33333340 20 0.5

0.290 30 0.333333

0.142857160 40 0.25

0.111111250 50 0.2

0.090909360 60 0.166667

Page 41: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100

105

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Bakery

Hours

Lo

av

es

Page 42: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Productivity• Labor productivity depends on the number of workers

• First, increasing, then, decreasing• Average product of labor begins decreasing when

marginal product of labor drops below average.

Note: Marginal Product crosses through average product at the peak of average product.

As long as the next worker adds more product than the average worker, they will increase the average.

Once diminishing returns set in, additional workers may add less to output than the average worker, reducing the overall average.

Page 43: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MPL, APL

L

MPLAPL

Page 44: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Fixed Costs vs. Variable Costs• In short-run, we distinguish between the costs that are

adjustable as production level is adjusted (variable costs) and costs that are unchanged regardless of scale of production (fixed costs).• Variable costs (Wages of production workers, supply and raw

materials costs)• Fixed costs (Depreciation costs, Financial costs, wages of non-

production workers).

Page 45: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Types of Costs• Total Fixed Costs – Invariant to the number of goods

produced (in the short-run)• Average Fixed Costs – Decreasing in the number of goods

produced.

• Total Variable Costs- Increasing in the number of goods produced (once synergy point is passed).

• Total Costs: Fixed Costs + Variable Costs

Page 46: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Bakery: Wages $10 per Worker, $5 Wheat per Loaf

Output Fixed Workers Bakers Wheat Variable Total(Loaves) Costs Wages Costs Costs

2.00 1000 6 60 10.00 70.00 1070.00

10.00 1000 10 100 50.00 150.00 1150.00

20.00 1000 40 400 100.00 500.00 1500.00

30.00 1000 90 900 150.00 1050.00 2050.00

40.00 1000 160 1600 200.00 1800.00 2800.00

50.00 1000 250 2500 250.00 2750.00 3750.00

60.00 1000 360 3600 300.00 3900.00 4900.00

Page 47: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Total Variable Costs are increasing at an accelerating rate.

Reason: Diminishing returns to variable inputs.

2.00 10.00 20.00 30.00 40.00 50.00 60.000

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

Cost Schedule

Fixed Costs Variable Costs Total Costs

Page 48: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Costs: Average vs. Marginal• Total Costs are the sum of all relevant costs for a firm.• Average Costs: Costs per unit of output.• Marginal Cost: Extra Cost per Extra Unit of Output.

Page 49: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Cost SchedulesOutput Average Average Average

Total Fixed Variable Total Marginal(Loaves) Costs Costs Costs Costs Costs

2.00 1070.00 500 35 53510.00

10.00 1150.00 100 15 11535.00

20.00 1500.00 50 25 7555.00

30.00 2050.00 33.33333 35 6875.00

40.00 2800.00 25 45 7095.00

50.00 3750.00 20 55 75115.00

60.00 4900.00 16.66667 65 82

Page 50: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Average and Marginal CostsAverage Fixed Costs decreases as production increases

AVC, ATC, MC all increase as diminishing returns kick in

2.00 10.00 20.00 30.00 40.00 50.00 60.00

AFC NaN 100 50 33.33333333333

33

25 20 16.66666666666

67

AVC 35 15 25 35 45 55 65

ATC NaN 115 75 68.33333333333

33

70 75 81.66666666666

67

MC 35 10 35 55 75 95 115

10

30

50

70

90

110

130

Cost Curve

$

MC equals AVC and ATC when each of the latter are at their minimum level.

Page 51: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11
Page 52: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Long Run Costs• In the short-run, the size of a firms physical plant is a fixed

factor. • Over-time, the plant size can adjust. • In the bakery example, extra ovens can be added.

Page 53: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208 1 Oven

1 Oven

Output

Average Total Cost Schedules at Different Scales of Production

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

1 Oven

2 Ovens

Output

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

Output

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

4 Ovens

Output

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

4 Ovens

5 Ovens

Output

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

4 Ovens

5 Ovens

6 Ovens

Output

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

4 Ovens

5 Ovens

6 Ovens

7 Ovens

Output

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

228

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

4 Ovens

5 Ovens

6 Ovens

7 Ovens

8 Ovens

Output

Page 54: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Minimizing Costs in the Long Run• Consider average total cost schedules at different

numbers of ovens. • Each oven will have a production level that generates the

minimum average total cost. • To minimize average costs in the long-run, choose the

number of ovens which will have the lowest, minimum average total cost.

Page 55: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

10

0

11

0

12

0

48

68

88

108

128

148

168

188

208

228

1 Oven

2 Ovens

3 Ovens

4 Ovens

5 Ovens

6 Ovens

7 Ovens

8 Ovens

Output

Average Total Cost Schedules at Different Scales of Production

Minimum of the different cost Schedules

Connect the DotsLong Run Average Total Costs

Page 56: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

If we adjust capital scale continuously, the collection of minimum points is the Long Run Average Total cost curve

LR ATC

Short-run ATC

Output

Cost

MC

MC MC MC

MC

Page 57: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Economies of Scale• When firms are able to adjust all of their inputs, they can choose a size that will minimize costs.

• If a firm is able to achieve some economies of scale, increasing size will reduce the average total cost.

• Sources of Economies of Scale• Production requires major expenditure on items needed to

produce even zero products• Ex. Software, pharmaceuticals

• Production requires many specific steps which can be most efficiently done through specialization• Ex. Airplanes, automobiles

Page 58: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Long Run ATC increasing returns to scale.

Output

Costs

LR ATC

Economies of Scale

Page 59: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Returns to Scale• Scale Economies is not always likely to characterize production.

• If each production unit can act autonomously with identical costs then we may experience constant returns to scale.

• Firms at some point experience diseconomies of scale or increasing long run average total costs.

• Sources of diseconomies of scale• Limits of managerial attention. • Limits of some other fixed resource.

Page 60: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Long Run ATC decreasing returns to scale.

Output

Costs

LR ATC

Constant Returns

Scale Diseconomies

Page 61: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Overall Cost Function

LR ATC

Minimum Efficient Scale

Costs

Output

MES is smallest production level at which the firm can reach the lowest ATC

Page 62: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MES and Market Structure• If MES is relatively large in comparison with the market

demand:

$

Q

D

LRAC

The market is most efficiently served by a single firm---natural monopoly!

Page 63: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

MES and Market Structure• If MES is relatively small in comparison with market

demand:

$

Q

Many “small” firms in the market.

Page 64: MICROFOUNDATIONS OF SUPPLY & DEMAND Chap 8,9, and 11

Learning OutcomesStudents should be able to: • Examine an indifference curve and budget curve and explain which point maximizes utility and why.

• Define and calculate various types of economic costs.• Fixed, variable, total, average, marginal.

• Describe the shape of various relevant cost curves• Average Total (in LR and SR), Average Fixed, Marginal Costs

• Describe the relationship between production, productivity (marginal and average) and the law of diminishing returns.