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Published byStella Lambert Modified over 8 years ago
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Profits, Shutdown, Long Run and FC © 1998 by Peter Berck
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Profits We know that a firm maximizes its profits when p = mc or when q = 0. But which? Profits are Revenues less Costs Profits are PQ – C(Q) = Q { P – AC(Q) }
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P - AC(q*) AC AVC MC Q $/unit P q* AC(q*) P - AC(q*)
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Profit Box AC AVC MC Q $/unit P q* AC(q*) P - AC(q*) Box is P - AC(q*) high and q* wide q* {P - AC(q*) = Pq* - C(q*) =
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Categorizing Cost VC are costs exclusive of fixed capital FC is the financial obligation to pay for fixed capital FCB is the portion of FC financed with bonds. (includes interest costs) FCE is the portion financed with equity
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Shutdown Let q* given by mc(q*) = p be quantity that maximizes profit among those quantities that are nonzero. if q = 0, shutdown, profit is -FC if pq* - vc(q*) < 0 then profit is {pq* - vc(q*)} - FC < -FC firm maximizes profits by setting q = o called shutdown
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Shutdown Point pq* - vc(q*) = q* (p - avc(q*) ) so shutdown if p - avc(q*) <0 but the minimum point of the U shaped avc curve comes where mc(q) = avc(q), so the least price at which the firm operates is the minimum point of avc.
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Bankrupt legal term: can’t pay bills. pq* - vc(q*) < 0 bankrupt; can’t pay for any of FC. shutdown FCB< pq* - vc(q*) < FC not bankrupt. pay loans and some or all of equity. 0 < pq* - vc(q*) < FCB bankrupt: should operate; can pay some of loans. Court allows this. point of bankruptcy
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Shutdown Point, P s AC AVC MC Q $/unit PsPs q* At P s = {P s - AC(q*)} q*. By construction, P s =AVC(q*) so = {AVC(q*) - AC(q*)} q* and by definition of AFC = {-AFC(q*)} q* = -FC. For any lower price, profit is less so P s gives minimum point at which production is not zero.
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Firm’s Supply Curve A firm’s supply curve is its marginal cost curve above average variable cost
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Are all costs Present and Accounted for? Suppose firm uses clean air as part of production process and doesn’t pay for it??? suppose value of clean air used is t per unit of output. (value of lost breathing!) t is the external cost of making the output mc are the private or internal costs of making output where external (jargon: externality) means external to the firm
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Case for regulation firm sets p = mc doesn’t account for t cause doesn’t pay t social cost is private + external = mc +t correct answer is mc + t = p Charging a tax of t, the costs borne by society and not paid by firm, “internalizes the externality” (yuck) and makes the firm pay all the costs of its operation
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The picture D q p mc mc + t What happens to quantity of polluting output? Price to consumers, to firm? Tax revenue? Firms’ profits? q1q2 p1 pcpc p firm
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Long Run Each firm with U-shaped cost curves has a particular fixed capital stock In short run, capital stock is fixed and so is number of firms Long run, number of firms (hence capital) varies.
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Entry and Exit If profits are positive, firms enter If profits are negative firms exit Each firm is the same as the other firms Each firm has U shaped cost curves We define Long run supply and Long Run Competitive Equilibrium
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Supply from 4 Firms AC AVC MC Q $/unit S4S4 Supply from N identical firms is S N (p) = N S(p) where S is the supply curve for a single firm.
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Short run supply AC AVC MC Q $/unit S4S4 when there are 2, 3 or 4 firms S2S2 S3S3
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Short Run Equilibrium AC MC Q $/unit S3S3 P D Three firms, so supply is S 3 D = S 3 determines price, P Output per firm is q*, total output 3 q* Profits per firm are green box q* 3q*
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Firm enters; New supply S 4 S 4 = D at new lower price, p’ Profits = 0 Positive Profit means Entry AC MC Q $/unit S4S4 S3S3 p’ q’
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Since firms enter at prices above p’ and leave at prices below, p’ is the price in the long run and by adjusting number of firms any amount of output will be made at this price. Q= any and p = p’ is the long run supply curve Long Run Supply MC Q $/unit S4S4 S3S3 p’ q’
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P = MC(q’) for each firm (and p’ > AVC min ) P = D(N q’) Profits = 0 Long Run Competitive Equilibrium MC Q $/unit S4S4 S3S3 p’ q’
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Another LR-SR story A single firm can adjust its K only in long run Never appears in the literature Always appears in text books Chapter 9 in LC covers this. I won’t
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