Material No. 3
Material No. 3
Material No. 3
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Chapter 1 - Nature and Scope of Managerial Economics
Reference:
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS 14TH EDITION BY: HIRSCHEY AND BENTZEN (2016)
Economic theory and methodology lay down rules for improving business and public
policy decisions.
For example, suppose a small business seeks rapid growth to reach a size that permits
efficient use of national media advertising, managerial economics can be used to identify
pricing and production strategies to help meet short-run objective quickly and
effectively.
Similarly, managerial economics provides production and marketing rules that permit
the company to maximize net profits once it has achieved growth or market share
objectives.
Managerial economics helps managers arrive at a set of operating rules that aid in the
efficient use of scarce human and capital resources.
For example, a grocery retailer may offer consumers a highly price-sensitive product,
such as milk, at an extremely low mark-up over a cost – say, 1% to 2% - while offering
less price-sensitive products, such as non-prescription drugs, at a mark-ups of as high
as 40% over cost.
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Managerial economics describes the logic of this pricing practice with respect to respect
to the goal of profit maximization. Similarly, managerial economics reveals that auto
import quotas reduce the availability of substitutes for domestically produced cars, raise
auto prices, and create the possibility of monopoly profits for domestic manufacturers.
It does not explain whether imposing quotas is good public policy; that is a decision
involving broader political considerations. Managerial economics only describes the
predictable economic consequences of such actions.
Firms are useful for producing and distributing goods and services.
The model of business is called as the theory of the firm. In its simplest version, the firm
is thought to have profit maximization as its primary goal. The firm’s owner-manager I
assured to be working to maximize the firm’s short-run profits.
Today, the emphasis on profit has been broadened to encompass uncertainty and the
time value of money. In this more model, primary goal of the firm is long-term expected
value maximization.
The value of the firm is the present value of the firm’s expected future net cash flows. If
cash flows are equated to profits for simplicity, the value of the firm today, or its present
value, is the value of expected profits, discounted back to the present at an appropriate
interest. This model can be expressed as follows:
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Constraints and the Theory of the Firm
Organization frequently face limited availability of essential inputs, such as skilled labor,
raw materials, energy, specialized machinery and warehouse space.
Managers often face limitations on the amount of investments funds available for a
particular project or activity.
In most instances, outputs must also meet quality requirements. Some common
examples of output quality constraints are nutritional requirement for feed mixtures,
audience exposure requirements for marketing promotions, reliability requirements for
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electronic products, and customer service requirements for minimum satisfaction
levels.
Legal restrictions, which affect both production and marketing activities, can also play
an important role in managerial decisions. Laws that define minimum wages, health and
safety standards, pollution emission standards, fuel efficiency requirements, and fair
pricing and marketing practices all limit managerial flexibility.
The role that constraints play in managerial decisions makes the topics of constrained
optimization a basic element of managerial economics.
Research shows that vigorous competition typically forces managers to seek value
maximization in their operating decisions. Competition in the capital markets forces
managers to seek value maximization in their financing decisions as well.
Moreover, recent studies show a strong correlation between firm profit and managerial
compensation. Managers has strong economic incentives to pursue value maximization
through their decisions.
It is sometimes overlooked that managers must consider all relevant costs and benefits
before they can make reasoned decision. It is unwise to seek the best technical solution
to a problem if the cost of finding such solution greatly exceed resulting benefits. As a
result, what often appear to be satisficing on the part of management can be interpreted
as value-maximizing behavior once the cost information gathering and analysis are
considered.
Similarly, short-run growth maximization strategies are often consistent with long-run
value maximization when the production, distribution and promotional advantages of
large firm size are better understood.
Finally, the value maximization model also offer insight into a firm’s voluntary ‘socially
responsible’ behavior. The criticism that the traditional theory of the firm emphasizes
profits and value maximization while ignoring the issue of social responsibility is
important.
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PROFIT MEASUREMENT
Free enterprise depends upon profits and the profit motive. Both play in the efficient
allocation of economic resources worldwide.
Profit is usually defined as the residual of sales revenue minus all the explicit costs of
doing business. It is the amount available to fund equity capital after payment for all
other resources used by the firm. This definition of profit is accounting profit or business
profit.
The economist also defines profit as the excess of revenues over costs. However, inputs
provided by owners, includi9ng entrepreneurial effort and capital, are resources that
must be compensated. The economists include a normal rate of return on equity capital
plus an opportunity cost for the effort of the owner-entrepreneur as costs of doing
business, just as the interest paid on debt and wages are costs in calculating business
profit.
The risk-adjusted normal rate of return on capital is the minimum return necessary to
attract and retain investment. Similarly, the opportunity cost of owner effort is
determined by the value that could be received in alternative employment. In economic
terms, profit is a business profit minus the implicit (noncash) costs of capital and other
owner-provided inputs used by the firm. This profit concept is economic profit.
Reported profit rates can overstate differences in economic profits if accounting error
or bias causes investments with long-term benefits to be omitted from the balance
sheet. Current accounting practice often fails to consider advertising and research and
development expenditures as intangible investments with long-term benefits. Because
advertising and research and development expenditures are immediately expensed
rather than capitalized and written off over their useful lives, intangibles assets can be
grossly understated for certain companies.
For example, the balance sheet of Coca Cola does not reflect the hundreds of millions
of dollars spent to establish and maintain the brand name recognition of Coca Cola. As
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a result, business profit rates for Coca Cola overstate the company’s true economic
performance.
One explanation of economic profits or losses is frictional profit theory. It states that
markets are sometimes in disequilibrium because of unanticipated changes in demand
or cost costs conditions. Unanticipated shocks produce positive or negative economic
profits for some firms.
Innovation profit theory describes above-normal profits that arise following successful
invention or modernization. For example, innovation profit suggests that Microsoft
Corporation has earned superior rates of return because it successfully introduced and
marketed the graphical user interface, a superior image-based rather than command-
based approach to computer software instructions.
Compensatory profit theory describes above-normal rates of return that reward firms
for extraordinary success in meeting customer needs and maintaining efficient
operations. Compensatory profit theory also recognizes economic profit as an important
reward to the entrepreneurial function of owners and managers. The opportunity for
economic profits is an important motivation for such entrepreneurial activity.
Just as above-normal profits signal the need for expansion and entry, below-normal
profits signal the need for contraction and exit. Economic profits are one of the most
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important factors affecting the allocation of scarce resources. Above-normal profits
also reward innovation and efficiency, just as below-normal profits penalize stagnation
and inefficiency. Profits play a pivotal role in providing incentives for innovation and
productive efficiency and in allocating scarce resources.
Business makes a big contribution to economic betterment in the country and around
the globe.
Firms exists because they are useful. They survive by public consent to serve social
needs. If social welfare could be precisely measured, business firms might be expected
to operate in a manner that maximizes some index of social well-being.
These are the most vital questions faced in free-enterprise system, and they are key
social issues.
Problems can also occur when, because of economies of scale or other barriers to entry,
a limited number of firms serve a given market. If firms compete with each other, no
difficulty arises. However, if they conspire with one another in setting prices, they may
be able to restrict output, obtain excessive profits, and reduce social welfare. Antitrust
laws are designed to prevent collusion.
The market economy sometimes faces difficulty when firms impose costs on others by
dumping wastes into the air or water. If factory pollutes the air, causing nearby residents
to suffer lung ailments, a meaningful cost is imposed on the people and society in
general. Failure to shift these costs back onto the firm and, ultimately, to the consumers
of its products, means that the firm and its customers benefit unfairly by not having to
pay the full costs of production. Pollution and other externalities may result in an
inefficient and inequitable allocation of resources. In both government and business,
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considerable attention is directed at the problem of internalizing these costs. Some of
the practices used to internalize social costs include setting health and safety standards
for products and work conditions, establishing emissions limits on manufacturing, and
imposing fines or closing firms that do not meet established standards.
What does all this mean with respect to the social responsibility of business? Is the value
maximization theory of the firm adequate for examining issues of social responsibility
and for developing rules that reflect the role of business in society?
As seen in Figure 1.3, firms are primarily economic entities and can be expected to
analyze social responsibility from within the context of economic model of the firm.
Figure 1.3 Value Maximization is a Complex Process that involves an ongoing sequences of
successful management decisions
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This is an important consideration when examining inducements used to channel the
efforts of business in directions that society desires. Similar considerations should also
be taken into account before applying political pressure or regulations to constrain
firm’s operations.
For example, from consumer’s standpoint it is desirable to pay low rates for gas,
electricity and telecom services. If public pressures drive rates down too low, however,
utility profits could fall below the level necessary to provide an adequate return to
investors. In that event, capital would flow out of regulated industries, innovation would
cease, and service would deteriorate.
When such issues are considered, the economic model of any firm provides useful
insights. This model emphasizes the close relation between the firm and the society, and
indicates the importance of business participation in the development and achievement
of social objectives.