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Performance and Strategy in Competitive Markets. Chapter 11. Chapter 11 OVERVIEW . Competitive Market EfficiencyMarket FailureRole for GovernmentSubsidy and Tax PolicyTax Incidence and BurdenPrice ControlsBusiness Profit RatesMarket Structure and Profit RatesCompetitive Market Strategy. C
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1. MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS12th Edition By
Mark Hirschey
2. Performance and Strategy in Competitive Markets Chapter 11
3. Chapter 11OVERVIEW Competitive Market Efficiency
Market Failure
Role for Government
Subsidy and Tax Policy
Tax Incidence and Burden
Price Controls
Business Profit Rates
Market Structure and Profit Rates
Competitive Market Strategy
4. Chapter 11KEY CONCEPTS welfare economics
social welfare
producer surplus
consumer surplus
deadweight loss problem
welfare loss triangle
market power
market failure
failure by market structure
externalities
failure by incentive
economic efficiency
economic regulation
social equity
consumer sovereignty
limit concentration
subsidy policy
tradable emission permits deadweight loss of taxation
tax incidence
tax burden
price floor
price ceiling
return on stockholders’ equity (ROE)
profit margin
total asset turnover
leverage
reversion to the mean
disequilibrium profits
disequilibrium losses
economic luck
competitive strategy
economic rents
5. Competitive Market Efficiency Why is it Called Perfect Competition?
Competitive markets balance supply and demand.
Competitive markets maximize social welfare
Deadweight Loss Problem
Deadweight losses occur when market imperfections reduce transaction volume.
Any benefit enjoyed by consumers or producers that is not transferred but lost due to market imperfections is a deadweight loss.
8. Market Failure Structural Problems
Failure can occur in markets with few participants.
If above-normal profits reflect the raw exercise of market power they can be unwarranted.
Incentive Problems
Externalities create incentive problems due to differences between private and social costs or benefits.
A negative externality is an unpaid cost.
A positive externality is an unrewarded benefit.
9. Role for Government How Government Influences Competitive Markets
Tax policy or regulation is efficient if expected benefits exceed expected costs.
Fairness must be carefully weighed.
Broad Social Considerations
Consumer sovereignty is an important benefit of competitive markets.
Public policy can control unfairly gained market power.
Tax and regulatory policy limit concentration of economic and political power.
10. Subsidy and Tax Policy Subsidy Policy
Subsidies can be indirect, like government highway spending that benefits the trucking industry.
Subsidies can be direct, as in agricultural programs.
Deadweight Loss From Taxes
Taxes reduce economic activity and cause deadweight losses.
Pollution taxes explicitly recognize the public's right to a clean environment.
12. Tax Incidence and Burden Tax Incidence and Burden
Tax incidence is the point of tax collection.
Tax burden is borne by party who ultimately pays the tax.
Role of Elasticity
Who pays the economic burden of a tax or operating control depends on the elasticities of supply and demand.
Customers pay tax when demand is inelastic (supply constant).
Producers pay tax when demand is elastic (supply constant).
Elasticity affects the deadweight loss of taxation.
Deadweight loss is small when supply (or demand) is inelastic.
Deadweight loss is large when supply (or demand) is elastic.
14. Price Controls Price Floors
Price floors cause surplus production.
Price floors persist because of special interests.
Price Ceilings
Price ceilings cause shortages.
Price ceilings are an ineffective means for restraining excess demand in some housing rental markets, e.g., New York City.
17. Business Profit Rates Return on Stockholders’ Equity
ROE is net income divided by stockholders’ equity.
ROE = Net Income/Sales × Sales/Total Assets × Total Assets/Stk. Equity
High margins, rapid turnover or leverage boost ROE.
Typical Profit Rates
ROE averages 10% to 15% per year for successful companies.
Sustained ROE = 20% per year is very rare.
18. Market Structure and Profit Rates Profit Rates in Competitive Markets
Competitive markets have low profit margins.
During economic booms, competitive firms can earn disequilibrium profits.
During economic recessions, competitive firms can suffer disequilibrium losses.
Mean Reversion in Profit Rates
Expansion from entry and firm growth cause above-normal profits to regress toward the mean.
Contraction from bankruptcy and exit allow below-normal profits to rise toward the mean.
In long-run equilibrium, profit rates for typical firms reflect only a risk-adjusted normal rate of return.
19. Competitive Market Strategy Short-run Firm Performance
Profits reflect transitory influences.
Disequilibrium profits and losses reflect adjustment costs.
Long-run Firm Performance
If above-normal returns persist for extended periods, elements of uniqueness are at work.
The search for economic advantage is called competitive strategy.
Uniquely productive firms earn above-normal profits.