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Published byHenry Beere Modified over 10 years ago
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Price discrimination Definition: charging different prices for the same product to different consumers Examples –senior citizen discounts –airfares: business versus vacation travelers –student version of software (e.g.mathematica) –different prices in foreign markets –volume discounts
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When can price discrimination occur? First, in order price discriminate, a firm must have some market power (as in the case of a monopoly) Second, in order to price discriminate, a firm must be able to separate buyers of a good into categories and prevent them from trading the goods with each other
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Why does price discrimination occur? Because a firm can increase its profits by charging –a higher price to people who have a low elasticity of demand –a lower price to people who have a high elasticity of demand Intuitively, the low elasticity users are willing to pay the higher price while the high elasticity users would not be willing
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Price Discrimination: 2 Groups
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Volume Discounts
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Elasticity and the substitution effect/income effect (Chapter 5) –income effect: amount by which the quantity demanded falls because of the decline in real income from the price increase –substitution effect: the amount by which the quantity demanded falls, exclusive of the income effect (other goods become relatively more attractive) Are there close substitutes? Is the good a big part of the budget?
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Wrap up
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Unifying Theme: people make purposeful choices with limited resources –scarcity –opportunity costs –illustrated with the production possibilities curve
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supply and demand model equilibrium price and quantity shifts vs. movements along curves price ceilings and price floors
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competitive equilibrium model consumers maximize utility (consumer surplus) firms maximize profits (producer surplus) Pareto efficient
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cost curves long run vs short run at a firm ACT, Cost per Unit economies of scale
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long run competitive equilibrium model entry and exit makes model dynamic cost per unit is minimized in long run
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model of monopoly market power market failure (deadweight loss)
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At The Margin, it is fun –marginal product of labor –marginal cost (MC) –marginal utility (MU) –marginal benefit (MB) –marginal revenue (MR) –firm: MC = MR (MC = P if competitive) –consumer: MB= P –market (competitive) MB = MC = P –market (monopoly) MB = P > MC
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