平狄克《微观经济学》(第7版)课后习题详解 第8章~第9章【圣才出品】
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第8章 利润最大化与竞争性供给一、名词解释1.可竞争市场(contestable market)(浙江大学2010研;厦门大学2012研)答:可竞争市场是一种假想的市场类型,在该市场内,潜在的进入企业可以通过竞争压力对市场内的供应者行为施以很强的限制。
可竞争市场内不存在明显的、较大的进入壁垒,市场达到均衡时,不存在额外的利润吸引其他企业进入市场;而且均衡价格以及产量在各企业间的分配都很有效率。
可竞争市场既可以只有一家垄断性企业,也可以拥有众多的竞争性企业。
因为它强调的是潜在进入企业的潜在竞争压力,而不是现存的供应商之间的竞争,而且这种潜在竞争压力能有效地制约市场均衡的形成。
2.完全竞争市场(中央财经大学2004研复试)答:从厂商数目、产品差别程度、厂商对价格控制的程度以及厂商进出一个行业的难易程度这些特点,按照竞争激烈程度,市场和市场中的厂商可分为四类:完全竞争、垄断竞争、寡头和完全垄断。
其中,完全竞争市场是竞争最为激烈的市场,其市场效率也是最高的。
完全竞争市场必须具备以下三个条件:①市场上有大量的买者和卖者,买者和卖者都是价格的接受者;②市场上每一个厂商提供的商品都是完全同质的,即厂商之间提供的商品是完全无差别的;③所有的资源具有完全的流动性,意味着厂商进入或退出一个行业是完全自由和毫无困难的。
由于在完全竞争市场上,厂商可以自由进出市场,因此长期均衡价格必定等于产品长期平均成本的最小值,也就是说厂商都具有相同的最高生产效率。
在现实经济生活中,真正意义上的完全竞争市场是不存在的。
虽然这种理想的完全竞争市场很难在现实中存在,但是完全竞争市场的资源利用最优、经济效率最高,可以作为经济政策的理想目标,所以经济学家总是把完全竞争市场的分析当做市场理论的主要内容,并把它作为一个理想情况,以便和现实比较。
3.停业原则(浙江大学2006研)答:停业原则(Shutdown price rule)是微观经济学中用于描述短期内厂商是否退出市场的一条原则。
第一章复习题1.市场是通过相互作用决定一种或一系列产品价格的买卖双方的集合,因此可以把市场看作决定价格的场所。
行业是出售相同的或紧密相关的产品的厂商的集合,一个市场可以包括许多行业。
2.评价一个理论有两个步骤:首先,需要检验这个理论假设的合理性;第二,把该理论的预测和事实相比较以此来验证它。
如果一个理论无法被检验的话,它将不会被接受。
因此,它对我们理解现实情况没有任何帮助。
3.实证分析解释“是什么”的问题,而规范分析解释的是“应该是什么”的问题。
对供给的限制将改变市场的均衡。
A中包括两种分析,批评这是一种“失败的政策”——是规范分析,批评其破坏了市场的竞争性——是实证分析。
B向我们说明在燃油的配给制下总社会福利的被损坏——是实证分析。
4.由于两个市场在空间上是分离的,商品在两地间的运输是套利实现的条件。
如果运输成本为零,则可以在Oklahoma购买汽油,到New Jersey出售,赚取差价;如果这个差价无法弥补运输成本则不存在套利机会。
5.商品和服务的数量与价格由供求关系决定。
鸡蛋的实际价格从1970年至1985年的下降,一方面是由于人们健康意识的提高而导致鸡蛋需求的减少,同时也因为生产成本的降低。
在这两种因素下,鸡蛋的价格下降了。
大学教育的实际价格的升高,是由于越来越多的人倾向于获得大学教育而导致需求提高,同时教育的成本也在升高。
在这两方面因素作用下,大学教育费用提高了。
6.日圆相对美圆来说,价值升高,升值前相比,兑换同样数量的日圆需要付出更多的美圆。
由汇率的变化引起购买力的变化,在日本市场出售的美国汽车,由于美圆贬值日圆升值,持有日圆的消费者将较以前支付较底的价格;而在美国市场出售的日本汽车,由于日圆升值美圆贬值,持有美圆的消费者将面对较以前提高的价格。
4.长期弹性和短期弹性区别在于消费者对价格变化的反映速度以及可获得的替代品。
对纸巾这样的非耐用品,价格上升,消费者在短期内的反映很小。
但在长期,对纸巾的需求将会变得富有弹性。
第一章复习题1.市场是通过相互作用决定一种或一系列产品价格的买卖双方的集合,因此可以把市场看作决定价格的场所。
行业是出售相同的或紧密相关的产品的厂商的集合,一个市场可以包括许多行业。
2.评价一个理论有两个步骤:首先,需要检验这个理论假设的合理性;第二,把该理论的预测和事实相比较以此来验证它。
如果一个理论无法被检验的话,它将不会被接受。
因此,它对我们理解现实情况没有任何帮助。
3.实证分析解释“是什么”的问题,而规范分析解释的是“应该是什么”的问题。
对供给的限制将改变市场的均衡。
A中包括两种分析,批评这是一种“失败的政策”——是规范分析,批评其破坏了市场的竞争性——是实证分析。
B向我们说明在燃油的配给制下总社会福利的被损坏——是实证分析。
4.由于两个市场在空间上是分离的,商品在两地间的运输是套利实现的条件。
如果运输成本为零,则可以在Oklahoma购买汽油,到New Jersey出售,赚取差价;如果这个差价无法弥补运输成本则不存在套利机会。
5.商品和服务的数量与价格由供求关系决定。
鸡蛋的实际价格从1970年至1985年的下降,一方面是由于人们健康意识的提高而导致鸡蛋需求的减少,同时也因为生产成本的降低。
在这两种因素下,鸡蛋的价格下降了。
大学教育的实际价格的升高,是由于越来越多的人倾向于获得大学教育而导致需求提高,同时教育的成本也在升高。
在这两方面因素作用下,大学教育费用提高了。
6.日圆相对美圆来说,价值升高,升值前相比,兑换同样数量的日圆需要付出更多的美圆。
由汇率的变化引起购买力的变化,在日本市场出售的美国汽车,由于美圆贬值日圆升值,持有日圆的消费者将较以前支付较底的价格;而在美国市场出售的日本汽车,由于日圆升值美圆贬值,持有美圆的消费者将面对较以前提高的价格。
第二章复习题1.假设供给曲线固定,炎热天气通常会引起需求曲线右移,在当前价格上造成短期需求过剩。
消费者为获得冰激凌,愿意为每一单位冰激凌出价更高。
第9章购买和销售9.1复习笔记1.禀赋(1)禀赋禀赋是指纯交换经济中每个消费者最初拥有的一定数量的一种或一组商品,通常记作()12,w w 。
(2)总需求总需求是指消费者对某种商品的实际最终消费量,记作()12,x x 。
(3)净需求净需求是指总需求与初始商品禀赋之间的差额,利用前面的符号,净需求可以表示为:()1122,x w x w --特别地,净需求可正可负,如果商品1的净需求是负数,就表明的消费者对商品1需求小于他所拥有的数量,从而消费者愿意在市场上卖出商品1。
(4)带有初始禀赋的预算约束在有初始禀赋的情况下,消费者的预算约束就变为:11221122p x p x p w p w +=+如图9-1所示,预算线就是经过初始禀赋点的一条直线。
图9-1带有初始禀赋的预算约束(5)禀赋变动对预算线的影响假设初始禀赋由()12,w w 变为()12,w w **,如果11221122p w p w p w p w **+<+,则预算线平行的向外移动(如图9-2所示);如果相反的不等式成立,则预算线平行的向内移动(如图9-3所示);如果不等式变为等式,则预算线不变(如图9-4所示)。
图9-2禀赋价值升高图9-3禀赋价值降低图9-4禀赋价值不变2.拥有初始禀赋时的消费者效用最大化(1)消费者效用最大化的必要条件在带有初始禀赋的预算约束下,消费者的效用最大化问题为:()1211221122max ,.. u x x s t p x p x p w p w +=+从而得到效用最大化的必要条件为:11,22p MRS p =(2)价格提供曲线的特点在消费者拥有初始禀赋的条件下,价格提供曲线与经过初始禀赋点的无差异曲线相切,且价格提供曲线始终位于该无差异曲线的右侧,如图9-5所示。
图9-5价格提供曲线和无差异曲线3.价格变动对消费者福利的影响(1)价格变化前消费者是商品的净供给者(如表9-1所示)表9-1价格变化前消费者是商品的净供给者(2)价格变化前消费者是商品的净购买者(如表9-2所示)表9-2价格变化前消费者是商品的净购买者4.修正的斯勒茨基方程(1)禀赋收入效应当消费者拥有初始禀赋时,价格的变动对需求的影响除了表现为替代效应和普通的收入效应外,禀赋的价值也会随着价格的变动而变化,这就是禀赋收入效应。
第2章供给和需求的基本原理一、单项选择题1.若需求曲线为直角双曲线,则商品价格的上升将引起消费者在该商品上的总花费()。
A.增加B.下降C.不变D.以上均有可能【答案】C【解析】因为直角双曲线上点弹性处处相等且等于1,即处处为单位弹性。
单位弹性的商品降价或提高价格对厂商的销售收入都没有影响,因此消费者在该商品上的总花费不变。
2.下列说法中正确的是()。
A.收入弹性取决于商品本身的属性B.不同商品在一定收入范围内具有相同的收入弹性C.同一商品在不同的收入范围内具有相同的收入弹性D.同一商品在不同的收入范围内具有不同的收入弹性【答案】D【解析】收入弹性取决于商品本身的属性和消费者的收入水平。
例如,对同一个消费者而言,任一收入水平下,都会有必需品和奢侈品,其收入弹性自然不同;同时,对同一个消费者而言,收入水平极低时,水果是奢侈品,收入弹性,但收入水平提高后,也许就成了必需品了,收入弹性。
因此,商品不同、收入水平不同,都会有不同的收入弹性。
3.需求价格弹性等于( )。
A .需求曲线上两点间价格的变动量除以需求的变动量B .需求曲线上需求的变动量除以价格的变动量C .需求曲线上价格的变动比除以需求的变动比D .需求曲线上需求的变动比除以价格的变动比【答案】D【解析】需求价格弹性表示商品需求量对自身价格变动的反应程度,即:。
4.商品是正常品,则当其价格下降时( )。
A .商品的需求量会下降B .商品的需求会下降C .商品的需求量会上升D .商品的需求会上升【答案】C【解析】需求变动是指价格之外的变量变化对消费者决策的影响,它与整个需求曲线的移动是对应的;需求量的变动则是价格变化对消费者均衡购买量的影响,它对应于一条需求曲线上点的移动。
因此当商品价格下降时,其需求量会上升。
1I E >1I E <//P Q Q E P P∆=∆x x x x x x5.如果某商品的价格下降5%后,消费者对此商品的货币支出增加了2%,则需求曲线在这一区域内的需求弹性为( )。
第8章利润最大化和竞争性供给8.1 复习笔记1.完全竞争市场(1)完全竞争市场的基本假定完全竞争又称为纯粹竞争,指不存在任何阻碍和干扰因素的市场情况,亦即没有任何垄断因素的市场结构。
完全竞争市场的三个基本假定:①价格接受者。
每个厂商和顾客的决策对市场价格不产生影响,他们将价格视为给定的。
②产品同质。
所有厂商的产品是完全替代的,即完全同质的。
③自由进入与退出。
厂商进入和退出不会有特别的成本产生。
(2)可竞争性市场即使市场上只有一个厂商时,该厂商也要按竞争市场的方式来寻找利润最大化,原因在于如果它要把价格提高到竞争价格水平之上,其他厂商就会进入市场,与它竞争顾客,迫使价格下降。
因此,同一个市场中厂商间的竞争相对于厂商竞争同一个市场是不太重要的。
在可竞争市场中,新的厂商可能会在一个厂商已经处于市场中的情况下以同样的成本进入。
同样,一个厂商也可能退出,它不会损失资本投资,其资本是特定于那一市场而在其他地方是没有价值的。
2.利润最大化企业的经理人员可以按照一套复杂的目标,在不同的约束下进行经营。
但是,可以假设所有厂商都在使其长期利润最大化。
3.边际收益、边际成本和利润最大化(1)竞争性厂商的需求和边际收益竞争性厂商面临的需求曲线为一条水平线,即竞争性厂商是市场价格的接受者。
为此,竞争性厂商的边际收益就是市场价格。
(2)竞争性厂商的利润最大化因为,并且竞争性厂商面对的是一条水平的需求曲线,所以,可以总结出一个适用于所有厂商的利润最大化的法则。
完全竞争性厂商选择的产量应该使得边际成本等于价格,即:注意,这一法则是用来确定产量而非价格的,因为竞争性厂商把价格视为给定的。
图8-1显示了厂商的短期决策。
在短期,竞争性厂商通过选择使边际成本与产品价格(或边际收益)相等的产量来实现利润最大化。
厂商的利润由矩形ABCD 表示。
任何较低的产量或较高产量都将导致利润下降。
图8-1 竞争性厂商利润最大化4.选择短期产量(1)竞争性厂商的短期利润最大化在短期中,厂商资本数额固定,必须选择它的可变投入(劳动和原材料)水平以使利润MR P =()MC Q MR P ==MC P MR 1q 2q最大化。
第9章 竞争性市场分析9.1 课后复习题详解1.无谓损失的含义是什么?为什么价格上限通常导致无谓损失?答:(1)无谓损失的含义无谓损失是指市场在非效率条件下运作时,生产者与(或)消费者的福利净损失,任何一方都无法获得的利益。
(2)价格上限通常导致无谓损失的原因政府的价格上限管制所导致的消费者和生产者剩余的变化如图9-1所示。
由于存在价格管制,生产和销售量从降为。
那些仍能买到商品的消费者现在支付的价格降低,获得的剩余增加,如图中的矩形区域。
然而,有些消费者不再能买到商品,他们的消费者剩余损失为深色阴影三角形区域。
因此,消费者剩余的净变化为。
图9-1 无谓损失那些仍留在市场上生产数量商品的生产者,现在只得接受较低的价格,他们失去了矩形代表的生产者剩余。
同时,总产量也下降了,导致生产者剩余的额外损失为三角形。
因此,生产者剩余的总变化为。
显然,价格控制使生产者遭受损失。
所以,剩余的总变化为,从图9-1中看,即两个三角形区域和。
2.假设某商品的供给曲线完全无弹性。
如果政府规定的最高价格低于市场出清价格,这会导致无谓损失吗?请加以解释。
答:不会导致无谓损失。
原因如下:(1)供给曲线完全无弹性,即,意味着该供给曲线是纵向供给曲线,不管价格如何改变,供给量都不变。
最高价格管制即政府对某一产品设定市场最高价格,显然这一设定的最高价格要小于市场出清的价格。
最高价格管制是否会导致无谓损失取决于供求曲线的弹性。
(2)如果供给曲线完全无弹性,实行低于市场出清价格的最高限价政策后,生产者剩余的减少量与消费者剩余的增加量相等,因此,将不会有无谓损失。
如图9-2所示,当实行最高限价后,价格由降低到,需求量由增加到,供给量保持不变。
消费者剩余增加为矩形A ,生产者剩余的减少也为A ,因此无谓损失是0。
图9-2 供给无弹性时最高限价的影响3.价格上限怎样改善消费者境况?在什么条件下它可能使消费者的处境变糟?答:(1)“价格上限”也称为“最高限价”,指政府在保持低收入阶层的人可以购买的限度内,规定某些特殊商品或服务的价格不准超越的价格。
第9章竞争性市场分析9.1 复习笔记跨考网独家整理最全经济学考研真题,经济学考研课后习题解析资料库,您可以在这里查阅历年经济学考研真题,经济学考研课后习题,经济学考研参考书等内容,更有跨考考研历年辅导的经济学学哥学姐的经济学考研经验,从前辈中获得的经验对初学者来说是宝贵的财富,这或许能帮你少走弯路,躲开一些陷阱。
以下内容为跨考网独家整理,如您还需更多考研资料,可选择经济学一对一在线咨询进行咨询。
1.政府政策的损益评价——消费者剩余和生产者剩余消费者剩余和生产者剩余被用来评价消费者和生产者的损益。
将此方法用于分析天然气价格控制、航空管制、小麦价格支持计划和食糖配额时,可以发现损益可能相当大。
(1)消费者剩余和生产者剩余在无管制的竞争市场上,消费者和生产者按现行市价买卖商品。
但是,对于某些消费者来说,商品价值超过市场价格,如若必需,他们愿意支付更高的价格。
消费者剩余是消费者获得的超过购买商品支付的总效益或总价值。
就消费者总体来看,消费者剩余等于需求曲线与市场价格之间的面积。
生产者剩余测度生产者的总利润加上要素投入品的租金,等于供给曲线与市场价格之间的面积。
总的来看,消费者剩余和生产者剩余测度竞争市场的福利效益。
(2)无谓损失价格控制导致总剩余的净损失,称之为无谓损失。
无谓损失是价格控制造成的低效率;无谓损失的形成是因为生产者剩余的损失超过了消费者剩余的增加,或者是消费者剩余的损失超过了生产者剩余的增加。
政府干预一般导致无谓损失,即使消费者的福利与生产者的福利同等重要,由于政府政策将福利从一方转移给另一方,从而发生净损失。
有些案例中,无谓损失较小,但有些案例,比如价格支持和进口配额,无谓损失较大。
这个无谓损失是一种经济低效率的形式,政府在设计和实施政策时必须加以考虑。
2.竞争性市场的效率(1)经济效率经济效率指利用经济资源的有效性。
高的经济效率表示对资源的充分利用或者能以最有效的生产方式进行生产;低的生产效率表示对资源的利用不充分或没有以最有效的方式进行生产。
平狄克《微观经济学》(第7版)笔记和课后习题详解第16章一般均衡与经济效率16.1复习笔记1.一般均衡分析局部均衡是指在假设其他市场不变的情况下,某一特定产品或要素市场的市场均衡。
一般均衡指在一个经济体系中,所有市场的供给和需求同时达到均衡的状态。
一般均衡分析从微观经济主体行为的角度出发,考察每一种产品和每一个要素的供给和需求同时达到均衡状态所需具备的条件和相应的均衡价格以及均衡供销量应有的量值。
(1)两个相互依赖的市场——向一般均衡移动录像带租赁和影剧院门票这两个竞争性市场存在紧密的联系,因为录像机的普遍拥有使大多数顾客可以选择在家而不是去影剧院看电影。
影响某一市场的价格政策变动也会影响另一个市场,而该市场的变化又会对第一个市场产生反馈效应。
可以用一般均衡分析来进一步考察:①电影税对录像市场的影响;②录像市场对电影市场是否有反馈效应。
(2)一般均衡的实现经济社会是由相互联系的各个局部组成的体系,当消费者偏好、要素供给和生产函数为已知时,就能从数学上论证所有商品市场和要素市场可以同时达到均衡状态,即整个经济可以处于一般均衡状态。
在这种状态下,所有商品和要素的价格和数量都有确定的量值,均衡条件是消费者的效用最大化和生产者的利润最大化,所有市场的供需总量相等。
2.交换的效率一个不受管制的竞争性市场是有效率的,因为它使消费者和生产者的剩余达到最大。
(1)贸易的好处:商品在两个消费者之间分配的原则只有当商品的分配使任何一对商品的边际替代率对所有消费者都相同时,这些商品的配置才是有效率的。
(2)埃奇沃思盒形图埃奇沃思盒形图是20世纪初的英国经济学家埃奇沃思最先创造的一种分析方法。
这种“盒形图”在于表示两种经济活动的交互作用,其中假设,在这种活动中所消费的产品或所投入的生产要素在数量上是固定的,这个假设是这种分析工具的一个很大的限制条件。
埃奇沃思盒形图用以分析交换过程和消费活动的情况。
其主要特点是,这种长方形“盒形图”的长度和宽度代表消费者双方共有的两种商品的总量,而在“方盒”内的每一点则代表这两种商品的总供给量在这两个消费者之间的分配。
目 录第1篇 导论:市场和价格第1章 绪 论第2章 供给和需求的基本原理第2篇 生产者、消费者与竞争性市场第3章 消费者行为第4章 个人需求和市场需求第5章 不确定性与消费者行为第6章 生 产第7章 生产成本第8章 利润最大化与竞争性供给第9章 竞争性市场分析第3篇 市场结构与竞争策略第10章 市场势力:垄断和买方垄断第11章 有市场势力的定价第12章 垄断竞争和寡头垄断第13章 博弈论与竞争策略第14章 投入要素市场第15章 投资、时间与资本市场第4篇 信息、市场失灵与政府的角色第16章 一般均衡与经济效率第17章 信息不对称的市场第18章 外部性和公共物品附 录 指定平狄克《微观经济学》教材为考研参考书目的院校列表第1篇 导论:市场和价格第1章 绪 论一、单项选择题1.经济学可以被定义为( )。
A .政府对市场制度的干预B .企业赚取利润的活动C .研究稀缺资源如何有效配置的问题D .个人的生财之道2.经济物品是指( )。
A .有用的东西B .稀缺的物品C .要用钱购买的物品D .有用且稀缺的物品C【答案】经济学是研究人们和社会如何做出选择,来使用可以有其他用途的稀缺的经济资源在现在或是将来生产各种物品,并把物品分配给社会的各个成员或集团以供消费之用的一门社会科学。
【解析】D【答案】现实世界中绝大多数的物品都是不能自由取得的,因为资【解析】3.一个经济体必须作出的基本选择是( )。
A .生产什么B .生产多少,何时生产C .为谁生产D .以上都是4.宏观经济学与微观经济学的关系是( )。
A .相互独立的B .两者建立在共同的理论基础上C .两者既有联系又有矛盾D .毫无联系源是稀缺的,要获得这些有限的物品就必须付出代价,这种物品就被称为“经济物品”。
D【答案】经济学所要解决的问题包括:①生产什么;②如何生产;③为谁生产;④何时生产。
【解析】C【答案】宏观经济学所研究的总量经济特征正是由经济体系中无数微观主体(家庭和厂商)的经济行为所决定的,因而微观经济主体的决策行为就构成了宏观经济分析的基础,宏观经济学需要构建自己的微观基础。
CHAPTER 7THE COST OF PRODUCTIONIn this chapter, it is easy for the students to concentrate too much on definitions and geometry and lose focus on the economics. Therefore, keep in mind the key concepts: opportunity cost, short-run average and marginal cost, cost minimization, and long-run average cost. These concepts can be illuminated with the supplementary material provided at the end of the chapter, which includes sections on economies of scope, learning curves, and estimating and predicting costs. The Appendix presents the calculus of constrained optimization, as applied to cost minimization. All exercises involve some algebra or geometry: Exercises (12) and (13) are time consuming, but rewarding.Opportunity cost is the conceptual base of this chapter. While most students think of costs in accounting terms, they must develop an understanding of the distinction between accounting, economic, and opportunity costs. One source of confusion is the opportunity cost of capital, i.e., why the rental rate on capital must be considered explicitly by economists. It is important, for example, to distinguish between the purchase price of capital equipment and the opportunity cost of using the equipment. The opportunity cost of a person’s tim e also leads to some confusion for students.Following the discussion of opportunity cost, the chapter diverges in two directions: one path introduces types of cost and cost curves, and the other focuses on cost minimization. Both directions converge with the discussion of long-run average cost.The geometry of total, fixed, variable, average, and marginal costs can prove to be tedious. An emphasis on the following issues helps students master this topic: 1) the relationship between the production function, diminishing returns in the short run, input prices, and the shapes of the various cost curves; 2) the distinction between total, average, and marginal; and 3) the reasonableness of the assumption of constant input prices (note that this assumption w ill be relaxed in Chapter 10’s discussion of monopsony). The determination of the cost-minimizing quantity is crucial to understanding Chapters 8 and 10. The concept of duality (minimizing cost subject to a given level of production) is equivalent to maximizing output subject to a given level of total cost) clarifies this concept for students.A clear understanding of short-run cost and cost minimization is necessary for the derivation of long-run average cost. With long-run costs, stress that firms are operating on short-run cost curves at each level of the fixed factor and that long-run costs do not exist separately from short-run costs. Exercise (6) illustrates the relationship between long-run cost and cost minimization, with an emphasis on the importance of the expansion path. Stress the connection between the shape of a long-run cost curve and returns to scale. While Section 7.7 is starred, it does not require calculus. Example 7.5 “Cost Functions for Electric Power,” gives students another vie w of long-run average cost and allows for discussion of minimum efficient scale, an important determinant of industry structure.1. A firms pays its accountant an annual retainer of $10,000. Is this an explicit or implicit cost?Explicit costs are actual outlays. They include all costs that involve a monetary transaction.An implicit cost is an economic cost that does not necessarily involve a monetary transaction, butstill involves the use of resources. When a firm pays an annual retainer of $10,000, there is amonetary transaction. The accountant trades his or her time in return for money. Therefore,an annual retainer is an explicit cost.2. The owner of a small retail store does her own accounting work. How would you measure the opportunity cost of her work?Opportunity costs are measured by comparing the use of a resource with its alternative uses.The opportunity cost of doing accounting work is the time not spent in other ways, i.e., time suchas running a small business or participating in leisure activity. The economic cost of doingaccounting work is measured by computing the monetary amount that the time would be worth inits next best use.3. Suppose a chair manufacturer finds that the marginal rate of technical substitution of capital for labor in his production process is substantially greater than the ratio of the rental rate on machinery to the wage rate for assembly-line labor. How should he alter his use of capital and labor to minimize the cost of production?To minimize cost, the manufacturer should use a combination of capital and labor so the rate atwhich he can trade capital for labor in his production process is the same as the rate at which hecan trade capital for labor in external markets. The manufacturer would be better off if heincreased his use of capital and decreased his use of labor, decreasing the marginal rate oftechnical substitution, MRTS. He should continue this substitution until his MRTS equals theratio of the rental rate to the wage rate.4. Why are isocost lines straight lines?The isocost line represents all possible combinations of labor and capital that may be purchasedfor a given total cost. The slope of the isocost line is the ratio of the input prices of labor andcapital. If input prices are fixed, then the ratio of these prices is clearly fixed and the isocost lineis straight. Only when the ratio or factor prices change as the quantities of inputs change is theisocost line not straight.5. If the marginal cost of production is increasing, does this tell you whether the average variable cost is increasing or decreasing? Explain.Marginal cost can be increasing while average variable cost is either increasing or decreasing. Ifmarginal cost is less (greater) than average variable cost, then each additional unit is adding less(more) to total cost than previous units added to the total cost, which implies that the AVCdeclines (increases). Therefore, we need to know whether marginal cost is greater than averagecost to determine whether the AVC is increasing or decreasing.6. If the marginal cost of production is greater than the average variable cost, does this tell you whether the average variable cost is increasing or decreasing? Explain.If the average variable cost is increasing (decreasing), then the last unit produced is adding more(less) to total variable cost than the previous units did, on average. Therefore, marginal cost isabove (below) average variable cost. If marginal cost is above average variable cost, averagevariable cost is also increasing.7. If the firm’s average cost curves are U-shaped, why does its average variable cost curve achieve its minimum at a lower level of output than the average total cost curve?Total cost is equal to fixed plus variable cost. Average total cost is equal to average fixed plusaverage variable cost. When graphed, the difference between the U-shaped total cost andaverage variable cost curves is the average fixed cost curve. If fixed cost is greater than zero, theminimum of average variable cost must be less than the minimum average total cost.8. If a firm enjoys increasing returns to scale up to a certain output level, and then constant returns to scale, what can you say about the shape of the firm’s long-run average cost curve?When the firm experiences increasing returns to scale, its long-run average cost curve isdownward sloping. When the firm experiences constant returns to scale, its long-run averagecost curve is horizontal. If the firm experiences increasing returns to scale, then constantreturns to scale, its long-run average cost curve falls, then becomes horizontal.9. How does a change in the price of one input change the firm’s long-run expansion path?The expansion path describes the combination of inputs for which the firm chooses to minimizecost for every output level. This combination depends on the ratio of input prices: if the price ofone input changes, the price ratio also changes. For example, if the price of an input increases,less of the input may be purchased for the same total cost. The intercept of the isocost line onthat input’s axis moves closer to the origin. Also, the slope of the isocost line, the price ratio,changes. As the price ratio changes, the firm substitutes away from the now more expensiveinput toward the cheaper input. Thus, the expansion path bends toward the axis of the nowcheaper input. See Exercise (7.6).10. Distinguish between economies of scale and economies of scope. Why can one be present without the other?Economies of scale refer to the production of one good and occur when proportionate increases inall inputs lead to a more-than-proportionate increase in output. Economies of scope refer to theproduction of more than one good and occur when joint output is less costly than the sum of thecosts of producing each good or service separately. There is no direct relationship betweenincreasing returns to scale and economies of scope, so production can exhibit one without theother. See Exercise (13) for a case with constant product-specific returns to scale andmultiproduct economies of scope.1. Assume a computer firm’s marginal costs of production are constant at $1,000 per computer. However, the fixed costs of production are equal to $10,000.a. Calculate the firm’s average variable cost and average total cost curves.The variable cost of producing an additional unit, marginal cost, is constant at $1,000, so theaverage variable cost is constant at $1,000, ()000,1$000,1$=QQ . Average fixed cost is $10,000Q. Average total cost is the sum of average variable cost and average fixed cost: ATC Q=+$1,$10,.000000 b. If the firm wanted to minimize the average total cost of production, would it choose to be verylarge or very small? Explain.The firm should choose a very large output because average total cost decreases with increase inQ . As Q becomes infinitely large, ATC will equal $1,000.2. If a firm hires a currently unemployed worker, the opportunity cost of utilizing t he worker’s service is zero. Is this true? Discuss.From the worker’s perspective, the opportunity cost of his or her time is the time not spent inother ways, including time spent in personal or leisure activities. Certainly, the opportunity costof hiring an unemployed mother of pre-school children is not zero! While it might be difficult toassign a monetary value to the time of an unemployed worker, we can not conclude that it is zero.From the perspective of the firm, the opportunity cost of hiring the worker is not zero, and thefirm could purchase a piece of machinery rather than hiring the worker.3.a. Suppose that a firm must pay an annual franchise fee, which is a fixed sum, independent of whether it produces any output. How does this tax aff ect the firm’s fixed, marginal, and average costs?Total cost, TC , is equal to fixed cost, FC , plus variable cost, VC . Fixed costs do not vary with thequantity of output. Because the franchise fee, FF , is a fixed sum, the firm’s fixed costs increaseby this fee. Thus, average cost, equal toFC VC Q +, and average fixed cost, equal to FC Q , increase by the average franchise fee FF Q. Note that the franchise fee does not affect average variable cost. Also, because marginal cost is the change in total cost with the production of anadditional unit and because the fee is constant, marginal cost is unchanged.3.b. Now suppose the firm is charged a tax that is proportional to the number of items it produces. Ag ain, how does this tax affect the firm’s fixed, marginal, and average costs?Let t equal the per unit tax. When a tax is imposed on each unit produced, variable costsincrease by tQ . Average variable costs increase by t , and because fixed costs are constant,average (total) costs also increase by t . Further, because total cost increases by t with eachadditional unit, marginal costs increase by t .4. A recent issue of Business Week reported the following:During the recent auto sales slump, GM, Ford, and Chrysler decidedit was cheaper to sell cars to rental companies at a loss than to lay offworkers. That’s because closing and reopening plants is expensive,partly because the auto makers’ current union contracts obligatethem to pay many wor kers even if they’re not working.When the article discusses selling cars “at a loss,” is it referring to accountingprofit or economic profit? How will the two differ in this case? Explainbriefly.When the article refers to the car companies selling at a loss, it is referring to accounting profit.The article is stating that the price obtained for the sale of the cars to the rental companies was less than their accounting cost. Economic profit would be measured by the difference of theprice with the opportunity cost of the cars. This opportunity cost represents the market valueof all the inputs used by the companies to produce the cars. The article mentions that the carcompanies must pay workers even if they are not working (and thus producing cars). Thisimplies that the wages paid to these workers are sunk and are thus not part of the opportunitycost of production. On the other hand, the wages would still be included in the accountingcosts. These accounting costs would then be higher than the opportunity costs and wouldmake the accounting profit lower than the economic profit.5. A chair manufacturer hires its assembly-line labor for $22 an hour and calculates that the rental cost of its machinery is $110 per hour. Suppose that a chair can be produced using 4 hours of labor or machinery in any combination. If the firm is currently using 3 hours of labor for each hour of machine time, is it minimizing its costs of production? If so, why? If not, how can it improve the situation?If the firm can produce one chair with either four hours of labor or four hours of capital,machinery, or any combination, then the isoquant is a straight line with a slope of -1 andintercept at K = 4 and L = 4, as depicted in Figure 7.5.The isocost line, TC = 22L + 110K has a slope of -=-2211002. when plotted with capital on the vertical axis and has intercepts at K TC =110 and L TC =22. The cost minimizing point is a corner solution, where L = 4 and K = 0. At that point, total cost is $88.6. Suppose the economy takes a downturn, and that labor costs fall by 50 percent and are expected to stay at that level for a long time. Show graphically how this change in the relative price of labor and capital affects the firm’s expansion path.Figure 7.6 shows a family of isoquants and two isocost curves. Units of capital are on the verticalaxis and units of labor are on the horizontal axis. (Note: In drawing this figure we have assumedthat the production function underlying the isoquants exhibits constant returns to scale, resultingin linear expansion paths. However, the results do not depend on this assumption.)If the price of labor decreases while the price of capital is constant, the isocost curve pivotsoutward around its intersection with the capital axis. Because the expansion path is the set ofpoints where the MRTS is equal to the ratio of prices, as the isocost curves pivot outward, theexpansion path pivots toward the labor axis. As the price of labor falls relative to capital, thefirm uses more labor as output increases.business when costs are cheaper and discourage off-peak business when costs are higher.Do you follow the consultant’s advice? Discuss.The consultant does not understand the definition of average cost. Encouraging ridership always decreases average costs, peak or off-peak. If ridership falls to 10, costs climb to $3.00 per rider. Further, during rush hour, the buses are full. How could more people get on? Instead, encourage passengers to switch from peak to off-peak times, for example, by charging higher prices during peak periods.MC 2 is the marginal cost of refining distillate up to the capacity constraint, Q 2. The shape of thetotal marginal cost curve is horizontal up to the lower capacity constraint. If the capacityconstraint of the distilling unit is lower than that of the hydrocracking unit, MC T is vertical at Q 1.If the capacity constraint of the hydrocracking unit is lower than that of the distilling unit, MC T isvertical at Q 2.9. You manage a plant that mass produces engines by teams of workers using assembly machines. The technology is summarized by the production function.Q 4 KLwhere Q is the number of engines per week, K is the number of assembly machines, and L is the number of labor teams. Each assembly machine rents for r = $12,000 per week and each team costs w = $3,000 per week. Engine costs are given by the cost of labor teams and machines, plus $2,000 per engine for raw materials. Your plant has a fixed installation of 10 assembly machines as part of its design.a. What is the cost function for your plant — namely, how much would it cost to produce Qengines? What are average and marginal costs for producing Q engines? How do average costs vary with output?K is fixed at 10. The short-run production function then becomes Q = 40 L. This implies that for any level of output Q, the number of labor teams hired will be L = Q / 40. The total cost function is thusgiven by the sum of the costs of capital, labor, and raw materials:TC(Q) = rK + wL + 2000Q = (12,000)(10) + (3,000)(Q/40) + 2,000 Q= 120,000 + 2,075QThe average cost function is then given by:AC(Q) = TC(Q)/Q = 120,000/Q + 2,075and the marginal cost function is given by:∂ TC(Q) / ∂ Q = 2,075Marginal costs are constant and average costs will decrease as quantity increases (due to the fixed cost of capital).b. How many teams are required to producing 80 engines? What is the average cost perengine?To produce Q = 80 engines we need L = Q/40 labor teams or L = 2. Average costs are given byAC(Q) = 120,000/Q + 2,075or AC = 3575 c. You are asked to make recommendations for the design of a new production facility. Whatwould you suggest? In particular, what capital/labor (K/L) ratio should the new plant accommodate? If lower average cost were your only criterion, should you suggest that the new plant have more production capacity or less production capacity that the plant you currently manage?We no longer assume that K is fixed at 10. We need to find the combination of K and L which minimizes costs at any level of output Q. The cost-minimization rule is given byMP r =MP w .KLTo find the marginal product of capital, observe that increasing K by 1 unit increases Q by 4L, so MP K = 4L. Similarly, observe that increasing L by 1 unit increases Q by 4K, so MP L = 4K. (Mathematically, MP K = ∆Q /∆K = 4L and MP L = ∆Q /∆L = 4K.) Using these formulas in the cost-minimization rule, we obtain:4L/r = 4K/w or K / L = w / r = 3,000 / 12,000 = 1/4The new plant should accommodate a capital to labor ratio of 1 to 4.The firm’s capital -labor ratio is currently 10/2 or 5. To reduce average cost, the firm should either use more labor and less capital to produce the same output or it should hire more labor and increase output.*10. A computer company’s cost function, which relates its average cost of product ion AC to its cumulative output in thousands of computers CQ and its plant size in terms of thousands of computers produced per year Q, within the production range of 10,000 to 50,000 computers is given byAC = 10 - 0.1CQ + 0.3Q.a. Is there a learning curve effect?The learning curve describes the relationship between the cumulative output and the inputsrequired to produce a unit of output. Average cost measures the input requirements per unit ofoutput. Learning curve effects exist if average cost falls with increases in cumulative output.Here, average cost decreases as cumulative output, CQ, increases. Therefore, there are learningcurve effects.b. Are there increasing or decreasing returns to scale?To measure scale economies, calculate the elasticity of total cost, TC, with respect to output, Q:ETCTCQQTCTCQMCACC ===∆∆∆∆.If this elasticity is greater (less) than one, then there are decreasing (increasing) returns to scale, because total costs are rising faster (slower) than output. From average cost we can calculate total and marginal cost:TC = Q(AC) = 10Q - (0.1)(CQ)(Q) + 0.3Q2, thereforeMCdTCdQCQ Q ==-+100106...Because marginal cost is greater than average cost (because 0.6Q > 0.3Q), the elasticity, EC, is greater than one; there are decreasing returns to scale. The production process exhibits a learningeffect and decreasing returns to scale.c. During its existence, the firm has produced a total of 40,000 computers and is producing 10,000computers this year. Next year it plans to increase its production to 12,000 computers. Will its average cost of production increase or decrease? Explain.First, calculate average cost this year:AC1= 10 - 0.1CQ + 0.3Q = 10 - (0.1)(40) + (0.3)(10) = 9.Second, calculate the average cost next year:AC2= 10 - (0.1)(50) + (0.3)(12) = 8.6.(Note: Cumulative output has increased from 40,000 to 50,000.) The average cost will decreasebecause of the learning effect.11. The short-run cost function of a company is given by the equation C = 190 + 53Q, where C is the total cost and Q is the total quantity of output, both measured in tens of thousands.a. What is the company’s fixed cost?When Q = 0, C = 190 (or $1,900,000). Therefore, fixed cost is equal to 190 (or $1,900,000).b. If the company produced 100,000 units of goods, what is its average variable cost?With 100,000 units, Q= 10. Variable cost is 53Q= (53)(10) = 530 (or $5,300,000). Averagevariable cost is TVCQ==$530$53.10c. What is its marginal cost per unit produced?With constant average variable cost, marginal cost is equal to average variable cost, $53.d. What is its average fixed cost?At Q = 10, average fixed cost is TFCQ==$190$1910.e. Suppose the company borrows money and expands its factory. Its fixed cost rises by $50,000,but its variable cost falls to $45,000 per 10,000 units. The cost of interest (I) also enters into the equation. Each one-point increase in the interest rate raises costs by $30,000. Write the new cost equation.Fixed cost changes from 190 to 195. Variable cost decreases from 53 to 45. Fixed cost alsoincludes interest charges: 3I . The cost equation isC = 195 + 45Q + 3I .*12. Suppose the long-run total cost function for an industry is given by the cubic equation TC = a + bQ + cQ 2 + dQ 3. Show (using calculus) that this total cost function is consistent with a U-shaped average cost curve for at least some values of a, b, c, d.To show that the cubic cost equation implies a U -shaped average cost curve, we use algebra,calculus, and economic reasoning to place sign restrictions on the parameters of the equation.These techniques are illustrated by the example below.First, if output is equal to zero, then TC = a , where a represents fixed costs. In the short run,fixed costs are positive, a > 0, but in the long run, where all inputs are variable a = 0. Therefore,we restrict a to be zero.Next, we know that average cost must be positive. Dividing TC by Q:AC = b + cQ + dQ 2.This equation is simply a quadratic function. When graphed, it has two basic shapes: a U shapeand a hill shape. We want the U shape, i.e., a curve with a minimum (minimum average cost),rather than a hill shape with a maximum.To the left of the minimum, the slope should be negative (downward sloping). At the minimum,the slope should be zero, and to the right of the minimum the slope should be positive (upwardsloping). The first derivative of the average cost curve with respect to Q must be equal to zero atthe minimum. For a U -shaped AC curve, the second derivative of the average cost curve must bepositive.The first derivative is c + 2dQ ; the second derivative is 2d . If the second derivative is to bepositive, then d > 0. If the first derivative is equal to zero, then solving for c as a function of Qand d yields: c = -2dQ . If d and Q are both positive, then c must be negative: c < 0.To restrict b , we know that at its minimum, average cost must be positive. The minimum occurswhen c + 2dQ = 0. We solve for Q as a function of c and d : Q c=->0. Next, substitutingthis value for Q into our expression for average cost, and simplifying the equation:2222⎪⎪⎭⎫ ⎝⎛-⎪⎪⎭⎫ ⎝⎛-++=++=d c d c d c b dQ cQ b AC , orAC b b b c d cd cd c d c d =-=-+=->+2222223362660. implying b c d >26. Because c 2and d > 0, b must be positive.In summary, for U -shaped long-run average cost curves, a must be zero, b and d must be positive, cmust be negative, and 4db > c 2. However, the conditions do not insure that marginal cost is positive.To insure that marginal cost has a U shape and that its minimum is positive, using the sameprocedure, i.e., solving for Q at minimum marginal cost -c d /,3 and substituting into theexpression for marginal cost b + 2cQ + 3dQ 2, we find that c 2 must be less than 3bd . Notice thatparameter values that satisfy this condition also satisfy 4db > c 2, but not the reverse.where a, b, and c are positive. Is this total cost function consistent with the presence of economies or diseconomies of scale? With economies or diseconomies of scope?There are two types of scale economies to consider: multiproduct economies of scale and product-specific returns to scale. From Section 7.5 we know that multiproduct economies of scalefor the two-product case, S H,S , are()()()()()S H S H MC S MC H S H TC S +=, , where MC H is the marginal cost of producing hardware and MC S is the marginal cost of producingsoftware. The product-specific returns to scale are:()()()()H H MC H S TC S H TC S ,0 , -= and ()()()()S S MC S H TC S H TC S 0, , -= where TC (0,S ) implies no hardware production and TC (H ,0) implies no software production. Weknow that the marginal cost of an input is the slope of the total cost with respect to that input.Since()(),S cH b aH bS H cS a TC -+=+-=we have MC H = a - cS and MC S = b - cH .Substituting these expressions into our formulas for S H,S , S H , and S S :()()cH b S cS a H cHS bS aH S S H -+--+=, or S aH bS cHS H S ,=+-+->1, because cHS > 0. Also, ()()cS a H bS cHS bS aH S H ---+=, or()()()()1=--=--=cS a cS a cS a H cHS aH S H and similarly ()().1=---+=cH b S aH cHS bS aH S S There are multiproduct economies of scale, S H,S > 1, but constant product-specific returns to scale,S H = S C = 1.Economies of scope exist if S C > 0, where (from equation (7.8) in the text):()()()()S H TC S H TC S TC H TC S c , , ,0 0, -+=, or, ()()S H TC cHS bS aH bS aH S c , -+-+=, or ().0, >=S H TC cHS S c Because cHS and TC are both positive, there are economies of scope.CHAPTER 8PROFIT MAXIMIZATION AND COMPETITIVE SUPPLYAs the title implies, this chapter covers two interrelated topics: a consideration of the behavioral incentives of the profit-maximizing firm and an examination of the interaction of these firms in a competitive market. The chapter begins with a discussion of whether firms maximize profits and ends with a discussion of the criteria for a competitive market, including an introduction to contestable markets. Exercises (1), (2), and (4) rely on data discussed in the text, while Exercises (3), (6), and (7) focus on the determination of the firm’s profit -maximizing quantity. Exercises (5), (8), and (9) consider the influence of taxes on firms’ output in a competitive market.S ections 8.2 through 8.4 derive the firm’s supply curve. Although total revenue is easily understood, you will need to show why average revenue may be represented by the demand curve. Demand and average revenue will be used interchangeably in Chapters 10 and 11. When presented with a problem involving the derivation of marginal revenue, some students will substitute Q , instead of P , in the expression for total revenue. This leads to revenue as a function of price. Stress that when they are given a demand curve in these applications they should first solve for price as a function of quantity. The origin of this confusion could lie in the popular notion that the firm determines the profit-maximizing price instead of the profit-maximizing quantity. Emphasize the importance of quantity, for example, when discussing why deviations from the profit-maximizing quantity lead to a decrease in profit (see Figure 8.3). Using the solutions to the exercises, emphasize that, for a linear demand curve, the slope of the marginal revenue curve is twice the slope of the demand curve.Other sources of confusion arise during analysis of firms’ supply curves. Stress that, as a primary rule, the firm should choose a quantity such that marginal revenue is equal to marginal cost. In this chapter, we can simplify this rule: for a firm facing a perfectly elastic demand curve, price is equal to marginal revenue. Stress that the rule for the competitive firm is a special case. Although some students will understand references to second-order conditions, expect to be asked why q 0 in Figure 8.3 is not profit maximizing, although MR = MC . Two additional points warrant careful explanation: 1) why the firm would remain in business if the firm sustains a loss in the short run, and 2) that maximizing profit is the same as minimizing loss.Although the summation of firm supply curves into a market supply curve is easy, the analysis of long-run competitive equilibrium is difficult. Show that long-run equilibrium relies on profit maximization by firms. Accompanying the rule that price must be greater than average variable cost in the short run, there is the assumption of free entry and exit. This leads to the statement that price must equal long-run average cost, LAC, as no firm may make an economic profit. The rule that price must equal long-run marginal cost, LMC , is the second equilibrium condition. Therefore, because LAC = LMC at minimum LAC , price is equal to minimum LAC in the long-run equilibrium. This result will be reconsidered in Chapter 12 in the discussion of equilibrium for a monopolistically competitive firm. When discussing the attainment of equilibrium in constant, increasing, and。
第1章绪论1.1 复习笔记1.微观经济学的主题(1)微观经济学的研究对象微观经济学研究的是单个经济个体(如消费者、工人、投资者、资源所有者和厂商)的行为,也研究构成市场与行业的消费者和厂商的相互影响。
微观经济学的核心内容是论证亚当·斯密的“看不见的手”原理。
(2)经济模型经济模型是现代经济理论的一种主要分析方法,也称为经济数学模型,指用数学形式所表述的经济过程或经济理论结构。
现实世界的情况是由各种主要变量和次要变量构成的,因而非常复杂,只有把次要因素排除在外,才能对经济运行进行严格的分析。
运用经济模型,事先做出某些假设,可以排除掉许多次要因素,从而建立起一定的模型,然后通过运用这一模型,可以对错综复杂的现实世界作出简单的描述。
(3)经济理论的局限性在经济学中,理论的有用性和合理性取决于它是否对其试图解释和预测的一系列现象成功地做出了解释和预测。
比如说,厂商并不总是追求其利润的最大化的,因此,厂商理论只在解释厂商某些行为(如资本投资决策的时机)时才获得了有限的成功。
尽管如此,这一理论确实解释了有关厂商和行业的行为、成长和演变方面的大量现象,所以它已经成为决策者手中一个重要的工具。
2.实证分析和规范分析(1)微观经济学的分析方法微观经济学既研究实证问题,也研究规范问题。
实证问题主要涉及解释和预测,规范问题则研究应该如何。
实证分析和规范分析都是重要的经济学分析方法。
(2)实证分析和规范分析的含义实证分析是进行经济分析的一种重要方法,特点是它对有关命题的逻辑分析,旨在理解经济过程实际是什么、将会是什么、为什么,而不涉及对结果好坏和是否公平的评价,其中不包含任何价值判断。
实证分析既有定性分析,也有定量分析。
规范分析也是经济学分析经济问题的一种方法,它以一定的价值判断作为出发点,提出行为的标准,并研究如何才能符合这些标准。
它力求说明“应该是什么”的问题,或者说,它回答这样的问题:为什么要做出这种选择,而不做出另一种选择?(3)实证分析和规范分析的关系实证分析和规范分析既有联系又有区别。
目 录第1篇 导论:市场和价格第1章 绪 论1.1 课后复习题详解1.2 课后练习题详解第2章 供给和需求的基本原理2.1 课后复习题详解2.2 课后练习题详解第2篇 生产者、消费者以及竞争性市场第3章 消费者行为3.1 课后复习题详解3.2 课后练习题详解第4章 个人需求和市场需求4.1 课后复习题详解4.2 课后练习题详解第4章附录 需求理论——一种数学的处理方法课后练习题详解第5章 不确定性与消费者行为5.1 课后复习题详解5.2 课后练习题详解第6章 生 产6.1 课后复习题详解6.2 课后练习题详解第7章 生产成本7.1 课后复习题详解7.2 课后练习题详解第7章附录 生产与成本理论——一种数学的处理方法课后练习题详解第8章 利润最大化和竞争性供给8.1 课后复习题详解8.2 课后练习题详解第9章 竞争性市场分析9.1 课后复习题详解9.2 课后练习题详解第3篇 市场结构和竞争策略第10章 市场势力:垄断与买方垄断10.1 课后复习题详解10.2 课后练习题详解第11章 有市场势力的定价11.1 课后复习题详解11.2 课后练习题详解第11章附录 联合厂商的内部转移定价课后练习题详解第12章 垄断竞争和寡头垄断12.1 课后复习题详解12.2 课后练习题详解第13章 博弈论和竞争策略13.1 课后复习题详解13.2 课后练习题详解第14章 投入要素市场14.1 课后复习题详解14.2 课后练习题详解第15章 投资、时间及资本市场15.1 课后复习题详解15.2 课后练习题详解第4篇 信息、市场失灵以及政府的角色第16章 一般均衡与经济效率16.1 课后复习题详解16.2 课后练习题详解第17章 信息不对称市场17.1 课后复习题详解17.2 课后练习题详解第18章 外部性与公共品18.1 课后复习题详解18.2 课后练习题详解附录:指定平狄克《微观经济学》教材为考研参考书目的院校列表第1篇 导论:市场和价格第1章 绪 论1.1 课后复习题详解1.人们常说,一个好的理论是可以用经验研究和实证研究来加以证伪的。
第8章利润最大化和竞争性供给
8.1课后复习题详解
1.为什么一个发生亏损的厂商选择继续进行生产而不是关闭?
答:一个发生亏损的厂商选择继续进行生产而不是关闭的原因在于:此时的价格仍然大于平均可变成本,但小于平均成本。
具体来讲:
(1)厂商发生亏损是指总收益TR小于总成本TC,此时,如果总收益TR仍然大于可变成本VC,厂商继续生产将会弥补VC,并且可以弥补一部分的固定成本FC,弥补量是 ,从而使损失最小化,因此在短期内,厂商不会关闭而是继续生产。
TR VC
(2)停止营业点是指一个已经投入生产的企业,在生产中总有这样一点,当根据利润最大化原则确定的产量大于这一点所代表的产量时,仍可以继续生产,小于这一点所代表的产量时,就只好关闭。
一个已经投入生产的企业是否必须关闭的条件不在于它是否盈利,而在于它关闭后的亏损与生产时的亏损哪种情况更大。
如果关闭后的亏损比生产时的亏损更大,则应继续生产;如果生产时的亏损比关闭后的亏损更大,则必须关闭。
实际上关闭后也是有亏损的,其亏损就是固定成本。
因此,是否关闭就视生产时的亏损是否大于固定成本而定,若不大于,就可继续生产,若大于,就必须停止营业。
企业的停止营业点可用图8-1说明:图中N点即平均可变成本最低点就是企业停止营业点。
图8-1停止营业点
(3)当市场决定的价格为
P时,均衡产量为2Y,恰好等于N点所表示的产量。
这时,
2
总亏损为面积BFJN,即等于总固定成本。
此时,厂商的平均收益AR等于平均可变成本AVC,厂商可以继续生产,也可以不生产,也就是说,厂商生产或不生产的结果都是一样的。
这是因为,如果厂商生产的话,则全部收益只能弥补全部的可变成本,不变成本得不到任何弥补。
如果厂商不生产的话,厂商虽然不必支付可变成本,但是全部不变成本仍然存在。
由于在这一均衡点上,厂商处于关闭企业的临界点,所以,该均衡点也被称作停止营业点或关闭点。
2.解释为什么行业长期供给曲线不是行业长期边际成本曲线。
答:(1)供给曲线是指每一可能的价格下厂商将生产的产量。
供给曲线有短期和长期之分。
(2)在完全竞争条件下,单个厂商是价格接受者。
在短期,企业生产规模固定不变,厂商通过选择产量水平以实现利润最大化。
厂商将增加产量直到价格等于边际成本,但如果价格低于平均可变成本,它则会不生产。
因此一个厂商的短期供给曲线是短期边际成本曲线(位于最小平均可变成本点之上的部分)。
(3)但在长期,厂商无固定成本,成本全部是可变的。
由于厂商能够调整生产规模,进入或退出某一个行业,因此厂商可以把生产规模调整到使短期边际成本与市场价格相等的水平上。
随着长期价格的变动,厂商逐渐变动自己的要素组合来最小化其生产成本。
所以,长期供给曲线是厂商不断从一组短期边际成本曲线向另一组短期边际成本曲线调整的结果,而不是长期边际成本曲线(位于最小平均总成本的点之上的部分)。
此外,在长期,每个厂商利润都为零,因此任何位于MC AC
>的产出水平都是不可行的。
3.在长期均衡时,行业中所有厂商的经济利润为零。
为什么?
答:在完全竞争条件下,行业没有任何的进入和退出障碍。
因此,在实现长期均衡的动态过程中,如果行业有正的经济利润,就会有厂商进入。
新厂商的进入使得行业供给曲线向右移动,均衡价格下降,从而使得行业中厂商的经济利润下降。
而如果大量厂商的进入使经济利润为负,必然会促使一些厂商退出该行业。
因此,最终的平衡状态必然是行业中所有厂商的经济利润为零,从而没有厂商进入或者退出行业。
部分厂商比其他厂商的会计利润更高,是因为他们能够获得比较便宜的资源,如果考虑机会成本,即它并不自己生产而是把这些资源以更高价格卖给其他厂商的收益,那么厂商的经济利润同样也是为零的。
因此,只要厂商所在的行业是竞争性的,那么长期中其经济利润一定为零。
4.经济利润和生产者剩余有什么不同?
答:经济利润与生产者剩余之间的差额就是生产的固定成本FC。
具体来讲:
(1)经济利润是指属于企业所有者的、超过生产过程中所运用的所有要素的机会成本的一种收益,它等于总收益TR与总成本TC之间的差额,即TR TC
-。
(2)生产者剩余指厂商在提供一定数量的某种产品时实际接受的总支付和愿意接受的最小总支付之间的差额。
它通常用市场价格线以下,SMC曲线以上的面积来表示,如图8-2中的阴影部分面积所示。
其原因在于:在生产中,只要价格大于边际成本,厂商进行生产总是有利的。
这时,厂商就可以得到生产者剩余。
图8-2生产者剩余
(3)在短期内,由于固定成本是无法改变的,所以,总边际成本必然等于总可变成本。
因此,生产者剩余也可以用厂商的收益和总可变成本的差额来定义。
总之,生产者剩余可以用厂商的总收益TR和总可变成本TVC的差额来定义,即TR TVC
-。
而经济利润等于总收益减去总成本(总可变成本加上总固定成本),即--。
所以,经济利润与生产者剩余之间的差额就是生产的总固定成本TFC。
TR TVC TFC
5.当厂商知道在长期它们的经济利润为零时,它们为什么还进入这个行业?
答:其原因可以从以下两个方面来分析:
(1)实现长期均衡是一个动态过程,需要很长时间。
在长期均衡时,厂商得到的经济利润为零,而在短期内可能有相当的利润。
厂商进入行业是无成本的,因此厂商的收益依赖于他所能获得的短期利润。
长期均衡概念反映厂商行为的方向,即在当前的行业条件下,是进入还是退出行业,是
增加还是减少投入,先进入某一有利可图的行业的厂商比后进入的厂商可赚取更多的利润,先退出某无利可赚的行业的厂商可节省很多资金。
因此,最终经济利润为零的长期均衡并不会影响厂商进入行业。
(2)在长期中,所有的生产要素投入量都是可变的,厂商通过对全部生产要素投入量的调整来实现利润最大化的均衡条件MR LMC。
所以,零经济利润并不意味着厂商经营不好,而是表明厂商所在的行业是竞争性的。
获得零经济利润的厂商没有必要退出该行业,因为零经济利润表明厂商的投资获得了正常利润。
当然,投资者都希望获得正的经济利润,正是这一点激励着企业家的创新精神。
6.在20世纪初,美国有许多小的汽车生产厂家,20世纪末仅有三家大的厂家。
假设这种情况不是反垄断法实施不力的结果,你怎样解释汽车制造厂家的数量减少?(提示:汽车行业的固有成本结构是怎样的?)
答:汽车制造厂家的数量减少与该行业的性质和成本结构有关,具体分析如下:
(1)自然垄断指某些行业或部门为了有效生产而只需要少数几个生产者或厂商的市场状况。
这种行业可能始终呈现规模报酬递增的特征,若由多家厂商生产将产生较高的平均成本、造成社会资源的浪费。
自然垄断的形成,使得少数几个大规模厂商能够依靠自己的规模经济来降低生产成本,使得规模经济的益处由该厂商充分加以利用。
(2)汽车产业是资本密集型产业,总成本中固定成本所占的比例比较大。
汽车的单位成本随生产规模的增大而下降,具有规模经济。
规模比较大的厂商能够以一个比较低的价格销售其产品。
在长期中,一些规模比较小的厂商必然会面临无利可图的市场价格,从而退出行业。
因此,在长期中汽车制造厂商数量会下降。
在一定的产量水平下,规模经济效应会趋于消失,从而最终结果是行业中不只存在一家厂商。
所以,自然的选择是较少的企业(比如
题中三家大的厂家)以较低的平均成本,生产较多的产量,享受规模经济。
实际上,长期以来汽车行业由于固定的成本结构形成自然垄断。
7.某行业是完全竞争的,该行业的每个厂商的经济利润为零。
如果产品价格下降,没有厂商可以生存。
你同意还是不同意这种认识?讨论一下。
答:不同意这种观点。
原因如下:
(1)如果产品价格下降,所有厂商将会遭受经济损失。
短期内,如果价格下降到总成本之下,可变成本以上,那么部分厂商将会降低产量并继续生产。
因为短期内厂商的收益取决于短期利润,即短期收益与短期成本之差。
而行业中厂商的短期成本是不同的。
因此,只要价格不低于所有厂商的短期平均可变成本,从而短期内就总有厂商不会退出行业;只要价格不低于所有厂商的短期平均成本,就总有厂商可以获得正的经济利润,从而不会退出行业。
(2)在长期均衡点,完全竞争市场中每个厂商只能获得正常利润,得不到超额利润。
当产品的价格下降时(由需求缩小引起的),长期均衡将被打破,会引起部分厂商退出该行业,由于部分厂商的退出,使该行业的供给量减少,供给曲线向左上方移动,从而使价格会上升到原来的水平,恢复到原来的价格水平时,留存下来的厂商又达到新的均衡。
因而不能说当价格下降时,没有厂商可以生存。
8.对音像电影的需求增加也可以增加演员的薪水。
解释电影的长期供给曲线是水平的还是向上倾斜的。
答:电影的长期供给曲线是向上倾斜的。
长期供给曲线的形状取决于行业的成本结构,即需求量增加与减少对投入要素价格的影响程度,投入要素价格是厂商为生产过程而必须进行的支付。