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Managerial Economics & Business Strategy Chapter 1 The Fundamentals of Managerial Economics
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Opportunity Cost Accounting Costs n The explicit costs of the resources needed to produce produce goods or services. n Reported on the firm’s income statement. Opportunity Cost n The cost of the explicit and implicit resources that are foregone when a decision is made. Economic Profits n Total revenue minus total opportunity cost.
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Why use opportunity cost? Situation: You are able to open a pizza shop in a building that you own. During the year Uncle Vinnie offers you a job with his pizza shop (he wants to eliminate the competition) which will pay $30,000 and Aunt Judy offers you $100,000 to rent the building for a year for her new hair salon. You decide to continue with your pizza shop. At the end of the year you calculate the following on your income statement. n Revenue = $100,000 n Cost of Supplies = $20,000 Did you make a good decision???
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Did you??? Accounting profit n 100,000 - 20,000 = 80,000 n Looks like you did!!! Economic profit n 100,000 – 20,000 – 30,000 – 100,000 = -$50,000 n You could have done better by taking them up on their offers
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Sustainabl e Industry Profits Power of Input Suppliers Supplier Concentration Price/Productivity of Alternative Inputs Relationship-Specific Investments Supplier Switching Costs Government Restraints Power of Buyers Buyer Concentration Price/Value of Substitute Products or Services Relationship-Specific Investments Customer Switching Costs Government Restraints Entry Entry Costs Speed of Adjustment Sunk Costs Economies of Scale Network Effects Reputation Switching Costs Government Restraints Substitutes & Complements Price/Value of Surrogate Products or Services Price/Value of Complementary Products or Services Network Effects Government Restraints Industry Rivalry Switching Costs Timing of Decisions Information Government Restraints Concentration Price, Quantity, Quality, or Service Competition Degree of Differentiation The Five Forces Framework
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Market Interactions Consumer-Producer Rivalry n Consumers attempt to locate low prices, while producers attempt to charge high prices. Consumer-Consumer Rivalry n Scarcity of goods reduces the negotiating power of consumers as they compete for the right to those goods. Out-bid or under-bid Producer-Producer Rivalry n Scarcity of consumers causes producers to compete with one another for the right to service customers. Better customer service, higher quality, perks… The Role of Government n Disciplines the market process. n Firms “tell on each other” to try to get the government to intervene
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In order to make decisions in the future you need to know what the future holds…. Is a dollar today worth the same as a dollar in three years??
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The Time Value of Money How much do I have to invest today to have $1,000 in three years if the interest rate is 10%?? Present value (PV) of a lump-sum amount (FV) to be received at the end of “n” periods when the per-period interest rate is “i”: Example: n Lotto winner choosing between a single lump-sum payout of $104 million or $198 million over 25 years.
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How much do I have to invest then??
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So… Present Value is the difference between the Future Value and the Opportunity Cost of waiting n PV = FV – OCW i OCW PV
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Present Value of a Series What if you are “promised” different amounts every year?? Present value of a stream of future amounts (FV t ) received at the end of each period for “n” periods:
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