Price discrimination in practice First and third degree discrimination in the train tariffs‚ etc. Price discrimination basically involves charging a different price to different groups of people for the same good. It needs some conditions. First of all‚ the firm must operate in an imperfect competition‚ it must be a price maker with a negative sloping demand curve. Second‚ the firm must be able to separate markets and prevent black market. Third‚ there would exist different consumer groups who
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rare. As we learned earlier this year about the free market‚ price is determined by quantity of demand and supply‚ but with government intervention‚ prices may be controlled‚ quantity of supply may change because of subsidies‚ and demand may change if tax is added on products. Intervention may cause the market disordered‚ and also leads to unwanted harmful consequences. A several examples of government interventions are taxation‚ price control‚ and subsidizing. Tax is an amount of money placed on
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Price discrimination Price discrimination is the practice of selling the same product at different prices to different customers‚ when there is no difference in the cost to produce the product. Price discrimination is done to maximize profits. This occurs when market prices are set differently to different buyers‚ according to the willingness of each buyer to pay (demand curve) rather than setting a uniform price. It can be seen in the image below how if the seller kept the uniform price of Africa’s
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Effect of revenue increase to Ford Motor Company’s working capital policy. Ford Motor Company working capital is a measurement of efficiency and health in a short term. The working capital is Current Assets less the Current Liabilities‚ and 20% increase indicates Ford Motor Company should pay off short-term liabilities. Ford Motor Company shows a 20% increase in revenue that brings the revenue up from $128‚954 to $154‚745 million. With the increase Ford Motor Company should invest in labor
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Economy Outline the causes of a decrease in demand for the Australian dollar‚ and discuss the impacts on the Australian economy of a sustained depreciation of the Australian currency. The exchange rate is a measure of the value of a currency relative to another and is influenced by the demand and supply of the Australian Dollar (AUD). Changes in any of the factors that affect supply and demand causes the AUD to rise or fall. The demand for the AUD is derived from the demand of Australia’s goods‚ services
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analyze the factors that will lead to an increase in aggregate demand in an economy‚ and discuss whether this increase is more likely to have an impact on inflation or unemployment in that economy. [12] Aggregate demand is the total spending on an economy’s goods and services at different price levels in a given time period. It consists of 4 components which are consumption‚ investment‚ government spending and net exports. When curve for aggregate demand shifts to the right‚ it is an economic expansion
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Video on Demand 10 May 2004 1 Overview Video on Demand (VOD) enables subscribers to choose from a library of recorded films and TV programming‚ and watch them immediately on their TV set‚ usually via a set-top box. It is analogous to having an ‘online video or DVD store’. Most versions allow the user to pause‚ rewind or fast forward the programme. The customer pays a small fee to watch each programme‚ and has access for a limited time period‚ often 24 hours. Unlike conventional broadcast TV
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Assignment 2 Problem 3.1: QD = 317‚500 – 10‚000P (Demand) QS = 2‚500 + 7‚500P (Supply) Where Q is quantity measured in pounds of scrap aluminum and P is price in cents. Complete the following Price (1) | Quantity supply (2) | Quantity Demand (3) | Surplus (+) or shortage (-)(4) = (2) – (3) | 15¢ | 115‚000 | 167‚500 | -52‚500 (shortage) | 16 | 122‚500 | 157‚500 | -35‚000 (shortage) | 17 | 130‚000 | 147‚500 | -17‚500 (shortage) | 18 | 137‚500 | 137‚500 | 0 (Equilibrium) | 19
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Abstract Acetaldehyde is produced throughout the world primarily from ethylene‚ although some is still derived from ethanol and acetylene. Demand for acetaldehyde worldwide has continued to decrease primarily as a result of less consumption for acetic acid manufacture‚ as the industry continues to move toward the more efficient and lower-overall-cost carbonylation-of-methanol process. For example‚ all manufacture of acetic acid from acetaldehyde in North America has been discontinued and in
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Impact of Rising Fuel Price Fuel is another transportation system component. Rising of fuel price is one of the major issues facing the transportation industry in Malaysia. Fuel may be gasoline‚ natural gas‚ diesel fuel‚ ethanol‚ methanol‚ coal‚ etc. The costs and efficiency of transportation fuels are considerable interest. (Joseph Sussman; Introduction to Transportation Systems; Transportation System Components; 2000). Fuel price volatility along with overall price increases has been an issue with
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