Macroeconomics LP4 Assignment A price ceiling is a sort of price control governments have imposed to control the price when the price is higher than it should be. Sellers try to sell more of their product because the price is high. But buyers do not want to buy at that price. Price ceilings commonly lead to shortages and are typically associated with long lines. When a new toy or video game comes out there is usually some kind of wait‚ whether in line or on a waiting list. When “tickle me
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Demonstration Problem 6-1 Special Order Davis Driveways‚ Inc. (DDI) pours concrete driveways for single family homes. DDI uses a cost-plus pricing approach. The company’s accountant prepared the following report showing how DDI established the price per driveway at $350. A new builder in town‚ Rachel Rodgers‚ has acquired a large tract of land upon which she intends to build 200 single family homes. Ms. Rodgers offers to purchase all 200 driveways from DDI. However‚ she is willing to pay
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3 price discrimination With the rapid development of economy and market‚ the price discrimination phenomenon is more and more universal and the form is more and more multiple. Price discrimination refers to companies selling exactly the same or similar production to different customers at different prices. 1In November 2006‚ the major IT Web site noted‚ Lenovo in the United States launched a holiday promotion‚ and four models of ThinkPad were under undercut. TP R60 price was down from $
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Price discrimination in Broadway Theatre Phillip Leslie∗ A common thread in the theory literature on price discrimination has been the ambiguous welfare effects for consumers and the rise in profit for firms‚ relative to uniform pricing. In this study I resolve the ambiguity for consumers and quantify the benefit for a firm. A model of price discrimination is described which includes both second-degree and third-degree price discrimination. The model is designed to analyze ticket sales for a Broadway
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PRICE DISCRIMINATION : A pricing strategy that charges customers different prices for the same product or service. In pure price discrimination‚ the seller will charge each customer the maximum price that he or she is willing to pay. In more common forms of price discrimination‚ the seller places customers in groups based on certain attributes and charges each group a different price. Price discrimination involves market segmentation. A firm price discriminates when it charges different prices
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THE IMPORTANCE OF PRICES IN ECONOMIC SYSTEM A price is the amount of money a buyer must pay to a seller for a good or service. Price is not always the same as cost. In economics‚ cost means opportunity cost—all that is sacrificed to buy the good. While the price of a good is a part of its opportunity cost‚ it is not the only cost. For example‚ the price does not include the value of the time sacrificed to buy something. Buying a new jacket will require you to spend time traveling to and from the
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L. Cox The Price Is Unfair! A Conceptual Framework of Price Fairness Perceptions Recent news coverage on pricing portrays the importance of price fairness. This article conceptually integrates the theoretical foundations of fairness perceptions and summarizes empirical findings on price fairness. The authors identify research issues and gaps in existing knowledge on buyers’ perceptions of price fairness. The article concludes with guidelines for managerial practice. he issue of price fairness has
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Market Structure o Perfect (pure) competition Price–taking firms each with no influence over the ruling market price (see diagram below) Free entry and exist of businesses in the long run – drives down profits towards a normal profit equilibrium level Each supplier produces homogeneous products – each a perfect substitute – hence the perfectly elastic demand curve for the individual supplier Key factor - interdependent nature of pricing decisions between rival firms Each firm must consider
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Factors contributed to rising food price 2.1 Demand side factors: As there is a rising demand for meat in the fast growing economies countries such as China and India‚ this brought by the rising demand of grain‚ as large amount of grain are needed to feed chickens‚ pigs and cows to produce meat in the market. There is a derived demand between grain and meat‚ in which an increase demand for meat leads to a rise in demand for grain‚ which driven up the price of grains. Due to the rapid
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H&M Price H&M is known for its stylish clothing for low prices. H&M’s price strategy is based on their customers wants and needs. Low prices‚ high fashion! H&M uses physiological prices which is a very smart strategy that always works. This strategy means that the price of a shirt isn’t 20 euro’s but 19‚90. It seems much cheaper but the difference is just 10 cents. Normally at H&M you will not see clothes with a price higher than 80 euro’s. but sometimes a designer designs clothes for h&m for a
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