Microeconomics WA3 1. At its current level of production‚ a profit-maximizing firm in a competitive market receives $12.50 for each unit it produces and faces an average total cost of $10. At the market price of $12.50 per unit‚ the firm’s marginal cost curve crosses the marginal revenue curve at an output level of 1000 units. What is the firm’s current profit? What is likely to occur in this market‚ and why? Total rev | 12500 | Total costs | 10000 | TC=ATC(Q) = 10 ( 1000) = 10000 Profit=TR-TC
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EGT1 Task 1 Bachelor of Science‚ Business Management Student ID: Mentor: The scope of this paper is to define how firms maximizing their profit and identify what their ideal output levels should be and how profit maximizing businesses often react to marginal revenue of varying levels. The definition of Marginal revenue is the extra revenue that will be made when one additional unit of any given product is sold
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ECO 550: Managerial Economics and Globalization Assignment #2 1. Office building maintenance plans call for the stripping‚ waxing‚ and buffing of ceramic floor tiles. This work is contracted out to office maintenance firms‚ and both technology and labor requirements are very basic. Supply and demand conditions in this perfectly competitive service market are: QS = 2P - 20 | (Supply) | QD = 80 - 2P | (Demand) | Where Q is thousands of hours of floor reconditioning per month and
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Monopolistic Competition and Efficiency Recall that: • productive efficiency is P= min ATC • Allocative efficiency is P= MC I. A monopolistic competition industry has neither productive nor allocative efficiency A. Marginal revenue curve will never coincide with D=AR=P • in monopolistically competitive market‚ Demand is relatively elastic. Products are somewhat substitutable. B. Firms produce at a point where P>MC‚ meaning that resources are underallocated; not allocatively efficient
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PUTTING THE SERVICE – PROFIT CHAIN TO WORK Group - 5 Introduction: Factors that drives profitability Investment in people Leadership Vision – Patina of spirituality‚ importance of mundane Profitability Technology supporting frontline workers Successful service companies: Banc One‚ Intuit‚ Southwest Airlines‚ Service Master‚ USAA‚ Taco Bell‚ and MCI Compensation linked to performance Recruiting and training practices The Service - Profit Chain • Establishes relationships
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Vimal Kumar Rai A0067543B BMU5003 Economic Analysis For Managers Dr. Ivan Png Individual Assignment 21 April 2010 1. Fertility (D12010‚ #1) a. Referring to the linear trend : (i) If the literacy rate is 60%‚ what is the fertility rate? (ii) If the literacy rate is 100%‚ what is the fertility rate? Answer (i) : 7.8 Answer (ii) : 1.4 b. A large cost of having a baby is the time that a mother must invest to bear and rear the child. For a more educated
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Revenue Management WorkShop 1 Module Name: Planning 2011-2012 WS Objective After attending workshop 1 you should be able to: Provide examples of market segments and sub segments; Explain the relation between segmentation and revenue management; Describe the role of price fencing within revenue management; Describe various terms & conditions used within revenue management; Explain the relation between price‚ purchase conditions & availability; Explain the factors that influence
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Why might a business firm pursue other objectives besides the objective of maximum profits? What objectives other than profit maximisation might a firm pursue? Is this possible in a competitive world? The traditional theory of business behaviour tends to make a general assumption that businesses possess the information‚ market power and motivation to set a price and output that maximises profits. Profits being defined as the difference between the total revenue received by a firm and the total
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Tutorial 1: Markets and Organizations Q1. Case Study [pic] Managing external influences First Group (First) is the UK’s largest transport operator‚ employing more than 137‚000 people in the UK and the USA. In the UK‚ it runs rail services carrying around 275 million passengers a year. It is the UK’s largest bus operator and also runs a rail freight business. In the US‚ it operates school transport for nearly four million students a day. The company is seeking to extend it operation in UK
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Companies should strive to develop unique resources in order to gain a lasting competitive advantage. Competitive advantage‚ whatever is source‚ can ultimately be attributed to the ownership of valuable resources that enable the company to perform activities efficiently at comparatively lower costs than its competitors. Superior performance will therefore be based on developing a competitively distinct set of resources and deploying them in a well-conceived strategy. Companies should abandon the
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