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Explore concepts like pure price effect, bandwagon effect, framing in decision-making, and production analysis in Managerial Economics. Learn about short-run vs long-run production functions and Cobb-Douglas production function. Understand labor productivity and total cost calculations.
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Welcome to EC 209: Managerial Economics- Group ABy:Dr. Jacqueline Khorassani Week Six
Managerial Economics Week Six- Class 1 Monday, October 8 11:10-12:00Fottrell (AM)
This week’s Aplia Assignment IS DUE BEFORE 5:00 PM tomorrow
I received a question • I don't fully understand a question on pure price effect and bandwagon effect.The question for example says there is a fall in price from $70 to $30 andyou are told to get the change in quantity demanded and then you are askedwhat is the pure price effect and the bandwagon effect. I can't do that bit.I did the practice assignment first but i still can't answer this question.
My answer • The price effect refers to buying more because price goes down. • The bandwagon effect refers to buying more because others buy more. • The initial demand curve in the question shows the combined effect. • Then they tell you how much of the increase in quantity demand is because of price. • So what is left over is because of the bandwagon effect.
Framing: the importance of how choices are presented to individuals • Suppose there is a rare fatal disease that will kill 600 people. Individuals are asked to choose between 2 options for reducing the death rate. Group 1 is asked to choose between A and B. • A: Save 200 people with certainty • B: Save 600 people with a probability of 0.333 and save nobody with a probability of .666 • 72% of people would choose A • Yet there is no statistical difference between A & B
Framing: the importance of how choices are presented to individuals • Suppose there is a rare fatal disease that will kill 600 people. Individuals are asked to choose between 2 options for reducing the death rate. Group 2 is asked to choose between options C and D • C: 400 people will die • D: 0.333 chance that nobody will die while there is a 0.666 chance that all 600 people will die. • 78% of people would choose D. • Yet there is no statistical difference between C & D
How can predict people’s behaviour? Are they any rules? Yes, Rules of Thumb • Availability or Accessibility • If I remember it then it must have happened a lot • I remember most recent things better • People tend to assign too much weight to recent information when making decisions.
Rules of Thumb 2. Representative Bias. • If Kathleen is a shy person, what is the likelihood that she is a librarian rather than a sales person? • Very high • Most librarians are shy
Rules of Thumb 3. Valuations of familiar products are strongly influenced by arbitrary anchors such as the last two digits of one’s social security number.
Adding an Irrelevant Alternative C: Now which one? Studies show when you add C to the package, most people choose B
Chapter 5 of Baye: Production Analysis • What is a production function? • It is a function that show the maximum amount of output that can be produced with K units of capital and L units of labor. • Q = F(K,L)
How is short-run different from long run? • In short run there is at least one fixed factor of production (assumed to be K) • Example of Short run production function: Q = (16).5 L.5 = 4 L.5 • How much is output when 100 units of labor are used? Q = 4 (100).5 = 4(10) = 40 units
In long run all inputs (factors of production) are variable • Q = (16) .5 L .5 K 0.5
What is the difference between fixed /variable factors of production? • The amount of fixed factor of production can not be change quickly • The amount of variable factor of production can be changed quickly
What is a Cobb- Douglas production function? • Capital and labor are imperfect substitutes • Example: in production of wheat K and L are imperfect substitutes • Q = KaLb
What is a Leontief production function? • Capital and labor are perfect complements. • Example: in production of taxi service K and L are perfect complements • Q = min {bK, cL}
Managerial Economics- Group A • Week Six, Class 2 • Tuesday, October 9 • 15:10-16:00 • Cairnes • Aplia Assignment is due before 5PM today
Let’s produce widgets • Production in short run • Fixed input = stapler= K • Variable input = labor=L • Production per minute • I need one labor • Now let’s hire one more labor • And more
Managerial Economics • Week Six- Class 3 • Thursday, October 11 • 15:10-16:00 • Tyndall • Next Aplia Assignment is due before Wednesday, October 17 at 5 PM
We produced widgets in our last class. • Take your papers out and let’s check our numbers • We will go through everything but Part 3. • Go over part 3 on your own and ask me questions
Labor Productivity Figures APL = Q/L MPL = ΔQ/ΔL
Q AP L MP Productivity Graphs Increasing Marginal Returns Diminishing Marginal Returns Negative Marginal Returns 10 Q 8 5.7 6 3.5 1 1 4 2 3
Total Cost Figures Price of K = $20 Wage = $5/worker
Cost Graphs $ FC: Costs that do not change as output changes. Sunk Cost: A cost that is forever lost after it has been paid. TC = VC + FC VC(Q) 20 30 FC 20 10 Q 16
Average and Marginal Cost Figures MC = ΔTC/ΔQ= cost of additional unit of output AFC = FC/Q, AVC=VC/Q, ATC = TC/Q
MC $ ATC AVC AFC Q Cost Graphs 0.5 16
$ ATC AVC Q Note: FC = AFC * Q FC= $20 1.9 Fixed Cost AFC 0.6 16
$ ATC AVC Q Note: VC= AVC * Q VC = $10 0.6 Variable Cost 16
Revenue and Profit P widget = $4 Profits are maximized at Q = 16
How many workers should the manager hire? • In our example 2 • In general • The answer relies on the value of the marginal product of labor (VMP) • VMP = MPL * P widgets • The rule: hire labor until the value of marginal product of labor equals the wage:
In our example • When L = 2 • VMP = $4 * 10 = $40 • W = $5 • VMP> W • When L = 3 • VMP = $4 * 1 = $4 • W = $5 • VMP <W Need to hire somewhere between 2 to 3 workers