Managerial Economics part 1 lecture1.ppt

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About This Presentation

Managerial Economics part 1 lecture1.ppt


Slide Content

INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION: ECONOMICS
(MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS, Part I)
Lecturer: Ekaterina Vladimirovna Sokolova
(Public Administration Department)
E-mail: [email protected]

Course Structure
(Economics or Managerial Economics, Part I)
•Topic 1. Basics of economic analysis
•Topic 2. Demand and supply
–Topic 2.1. Individual consumer demand
–Topic 2.2. Market demand and supply
•Topic 3. Production analysis and cost analysis
–Topic 3.1. Production policy
–Topic 3.2. Theory of cost
•Topic 4. Market structure analysis
–Topic 4.1. Perfect competition and monopoly
–Topic 4.2. Monopolistic competition and oligopoly

Grading Policy
MIB (Economics)MIB (Economics)
•70% - mid-term (or final) exam
•30% - individual in-class assignments
MITIM (Managerial Economics) 2 gradesMITIM (Managerial Economics) 2 grades
1
st
:
•70% - mid-term (final for MIB) exam
•30% - individual in-class assignments
2
nd
:
•70% - final exam (Winter session, Managerial Economics,
Part II)
•30% - individual in-class assignments (Managerial
Economics, Part II)
Final grade = 1
st
*1/3 + 2
nd
* 2/3

Economics (Managerial Economics, Part I),
Final Evaluation (Mid-term or final exam)
35 points
•for written mid-term exam (for MITIM
students)
or
• final exam (for MIB students)

Economics (Managerial Economics, Part I),
Current Evaluation
•15 points for 3 in-class assignments (5
points each)
–after the end of the corresponding group of topics
–each assignment includes 5 multiple choice questions
•The student can receive 5 points for each group of topics
and these points will be considered in final mark
–respectively the individual assignment can give 15
points

Economics (Managerial Economics, Part I),
Individual In-class Assignments
•Three individual assignments (after the end of the
corresponding group of topics)
•Each assignment includes 3 tasks
–The student can receive 3 points for each group of
topics and these points will be considered in final mark
•Respectively the individual assignments give 12
points for final mark

In-class Group Work
•In-class group work will take place at seminars
•Discussion of cases and answering given
questions
•Doesn’t give any points for final mark

Literature
•Microeconomics: Optimization, Experiments,
and Behaviour.
 Burkett, John P.  2006.
 
Oxford Univ. Press., Source:
http://
site.ebrary.com/
•Microeconomics Demystified.
  Depken, Craig. 
2005.
  The McGraw-Hill Companies., Source:
http://site.ebrary.com/
•Baye M. Managerial Economics and Business
Strategy [Text] / M. Baye. – McGraw-Hill,
2006. – 620 p.

Topic 1.
Basics of economic analysis
•Economics – the science of making
decisions in the presence of scarce
resources

Managerial Economics vs. Microeconomics:
Common and Different
Microeconomics Managerial Economics
How should the prices
be set?
In which way
were the prices
set?
Computer Manufacturer (e.g.: IBM)
Similar concepts

Opportunity Cost
•Def #1: the cost of the explicit and implicit resources
that are forgone when a decision is made
•Def #2: the value of the other products that the
resources used in its production could have produced
instead
•The opportunity cost of using a resource includes
both the explicit (or accounting) cost of the resource
and the implicit cost of giving up the next-best
alternative use of the resource

Economic vs. Accounting Profits
•Def : Accounting profit – the total amount of money
taken in from sales (total revenue, or prices times
quantity sold) minus the money cost of producing
goods or services
•Def : Economic profit – the difference between total
revenue (TR) and total opportunity cost (TC)

Reasons for the Existence of Profit
•Innovation
•Risk
•Monopoly power

The Five Forces Framework and
Industry Profitability
•Entry
•Power of input suppliers
•Industry (market) rivalry
•Substitutes and complements.
•Power of buyers

Incentives
•Def: Incentives – affect how resources are
used and how hard employees work
–E.g.: “A manager should be doing a good job” –
mistake
•But!: the effect of a per hour salary for workers to
increase output

Markets
•Consumer-producer rivalry
•Consumer-consumer rivalry
•Producer-producer rivalry
•Government and the market

Managerial Interests and Sales
Maximization
•Separation of ownership from control in large
corporations
•Sales represent a measure of management’s
success, especially since many observers focus
attention on a firm’s share of the market as an
indicator of its performance

Economic Optimization Process

Economic Optimization Process
•Choices involve benefits and costs
•Optimal decision – choice alternative that produces a
result most consistent with managerial objectives

Profit Maximization
•Maximizing profit means maximizing the value of the
firm, which is the present value of current and future
profits

The Role of Constraints
Value of firm
Input, legal, and
other constraints
Limited by


 

n
t
t
tt
i
TCTR
11
equals
The value of i
depends on:
Values of TR
t

depend on:
Values of TC
t

depend on:
1. Riskiness of firm
2. Conditions in
capital market
1. Demand and forecasting
2. Pricing
3. New product developing
1. Production techniques
2. Cost functions
3. Process development

Expressing Economic Relations
•spreadsheet – table of electronically stored data
•graph – visual representation of data
•equation – analytical expression of functional
relationship
•dependent variable – Y variable determined by X
values
•independent variable – X variable determined
separately from the Y variable

Total, Average, and Marginal Relations
(1)
•Marginal – change in the dependent variable caused
by a 1-unit change in an independent variable
–Marginal revenue
–Marginal cost
–Marginal profit

Total, Average, and Marginal Relations
(2)
Units of output,
Q
Total profits, Marginal profits,

Average
profits,
0 0 0 -
1 19 19 19
2 52 33 26
3 93 41 31
4 136 43 34
5 175 39 35
6 210 35 35
7 217 7 31
8 208 -9 26

Graphing Total, Marginal, and Average
Relations
•Marginal profit is the slope of the total profit curve
•Total profit is maximized when the marginal profit
equals zero
•Average profit rises (falls) when marginal profit is
greater (less) than average profit

Marginal Analysis in Decision Making
•Finding maximums or minimums
•Distinguishing maximums from minimums
•Maximizing the difference between two functions

Multivariate Optimization
•The marginal effect of each independent variable on
the dependent variable
–holding constant the effect of all other independent variables
•Partial derivatives
–The unchanged variables are treated as constants in the
differentiation process

Incremental Concept in Economic
Analysis
•Marginal relations measure only the effect associated
with unitary changes in variables
•The incremental concept is often used as the
practical equivalent of marginal analysis
•Def: Incremental change is the total change resulting
from a decision
–E.g.: Incremental profit is the profit gain or loss associated
with a given decision
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