Copyright © 2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Managerial Economics, 9e Managerial Economics Thomas Maurice.

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Copyright © 2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Managerial Economics, 9e Managerial Economics Thomas Maurice ninth edition Copyright © 2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Managerial Economics, 9e Managerial Economics Thomas Maurice ninth edition Chapter 14 Advanced Pricing Techniques

Managerial Economics 14-2 Advanced Pricing Techniques Price discrimination Multiple products Cost-plus pricing

Managerial Economics 14-3 Capturing Consumer Surplus Uniform pricing Charging the same price for every unit of the product Price discrimination More profitable alternative to uniform pricing Market conditions must allow this practice to be profitably executed Technique of charging different prices for the same product Used to capture consumer surplus (turning consumer surplus into profit)

Managerial Economics 14-4 The Trouble with Uniform Pricing (Figure 14.1)

Managerial Economics 14-5 Price Discrimination Exists when the price-to-marginal cost ratio differs between two products:

Managerial Economics 14-6 Price Discrimination Three conditions necessary to practice price discrimination profitably: 1)Firm must possess some degree of market power 2)A cost-effective means of preventing resale between lower- and higher-price buyers (consumer arbitrage) must be implemented 3)Price elasticities must differ between individual buyers or groups of buyers

Managerial Economics 14-7 First-Degree (Perfect) Price Discrimination Every unit is sold for the maximum price each consumer is willing to pay Allows the firm to capture entire consumer surplus Difficulties Requires precise knowledge about every buyer’s demand for the good Seller must negotiate a different price for every unit sold to every buyer

Managerial Economics 14-8 First-Degree (Perfect) Price Discrimination (Figure 14.2)

Managerial Economics 14-9 Second-Degree Price Discrimination Lower prices are offered for larger quantities and buyers can self-select the price by choosing how much to buy When the same consumer buys more than one unit of a good or service at a time, the marginal value placed on additional units declines as more units are consumed

Managerial Economics Second-Degree Price Discrimination Two-part pricing Charges buyers a fixed access charge ( A ) to purchase as many units as they wish for a constant fee ( f ) per unit Total expenditure ( TE ) for q units is:

Managerial Economics Second-Degree Price Discrimination When consumers have identical demands, entire consumer surplus can be captured by: Setting f = MC Setting A = consumer surplus (CS) Optimal usage fee when two groups of buyers have identical demands is the level for which MR f = MC f

Managerial Economics Inverse Demand Curve for Each of 100 Identical Senior Golfers (Figure 14.3)

Managerial Economics Demand at Northvale Golf Club (Figure 14.4)

Managerial Economics Second-Degree Price Discrimination Declining block pricing Offers quantity discounts over successive discrete blocks of quantities purchased

Managerial Economics Block Pricing with Five Blocks (Figure 14.5)

Managerial Economics Third-Degree Price Discrimination If a firm sells in two markets, 1 & 2 Allocate output (sales) so MR 1 = MR 2 Optimal total output is that for which MR T = MC For profit-maximization, allocate sales of total output so that MR T = MC = MR 1 = MR 2

Managerial Economics Third-Degree Price Discrimination Equal-marginal-revenue principle Allocating output (sales) so MR 1 = MR 2 which will maximize total revenue for the firm ( TR 1 + TR 2 ) More elastic market gets lower price Less elastic market gets higher price

Managerial Economics Allocating Sales Between Markets (Figure 14.6)

Managerial Economics Constructing the Marginal Revenue Curve (Figure 14.7)

Managerial Economics Profit-Maximization Under Third-Degree Price Discrimination (Figure 14.8)

Managerial Economics Multiple Products Related in consumption For two products, X & Y, produce & sell levels of output for which MR X = MC X and MR Y = MC Y MR X is a function not only of Q X but also of Q Y (as is MR Y ) -- conditions must be satisfied simultaneously

Managerial Economics Multiple Products Related in production as substitutes For two products, X & Y, allocate production facility so that MRP X = MRP Y Optimal level of facility usage in the long run is where MRP T = MC For profit-maximization: MRP T = MC = MRP X = MRP Y

Managerial Economics Multiple Products Related in production as complements To maximize profit, set joint marginal revenue equal to marginal cost: MR J = MC If profit-maximizing level of joint production exceeds output where MR J kinks, units beyond zero MR are disposed of rather than sold Profit-maximizing prices are found using demand functions for the two goods

Managerial Economics Profit-Maximizing Allocation of Production Facilities (Figure 14.9)

Managerial Economics Profit-Maximization with Joint Products (Figure 14.11)

Managerial Economics Cost-Plus Pricing Common technique for pricing when firms do not wish to estimate demand & cost conditions to apply the MR = MC rule for profit-maximization Price charged represents a markup (margin) over average cost: P = (1 + m)ATC Where m is the markup on unit cost

Managerial Economics Cost-Plus Pricing Does not generally produce profit- maximizing price Fails to incorporate information on demand & marginal revenue Uses average, not marginal, cost

Managerial Economics Practical Problems with Cost-Plus Pricing (Figure 14.13)