FNR 407 Forest Economics William L. (Bill) Hoover Professor of Forestry 494-3580 743-4120

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Presentation transcript:

FNR 407 Forest Economics William L. (Bill) Hoover Professor of Forestry

Economics Allocation of scarce resources to unlimited wants –Market –Other, e.g.? Quantity (Q) Price (P) Demand (D) Supply (S)

Demand Curve Schedule of amounts consumers are willing and able to buy at various prices –Why is curve negatively sloped Declining marginal utility Substitution effect –Not same as consumption P Q P1P1 Q1Q1 P2P2 Q2Q2

Price Elasticity of Demand (Ep) % change in quantity demanded % change in price ∆Q/Q = ∆Q x P = ∆ Q P ∆ P/P Q ∆P ∆ P x Q Ep is function of (1) inverse of the slope of the demand curve and (2) the point on the demand curve

Relationship of Ep to Total Revenue When Ep > |1|, decreasing price increases total revenue (the elastic range of the demand curve) When Ep = 1, total revenue is maximized When Ep < |1|, decreasing price decreases total revenue (the inelastic range of the demand curve)

Marginality Given the function Y = f(X), –Marginal change is change in Y per unit change in X – ∆Y/ ∆X, or –dY/dX (first derivative of Y with respect to X Example –Y ≡ yield, X ≡ year –dY/dX = current annual increment –Y/X = mean annual increment

Supply Curve Schedule of amounts producers are willing and able to supply at various price levels –Marginal cost curve above average total cost P Q

Supply Curve Marginal cost (MC) curve above average total cost (ATC) Can’t cover all costs in long-run with price below ATC P1P1 MC ATC Price (P) P2P2 Q2Q2 Q1Q1