ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925,...

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ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 [email protected]

Transcript of ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925,...

Page 1: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

ECON 1001 ABIntroduction to

Economics IDr. Ka-fu WONG

Sixth week of tutorial sessions

KKL 925, K812, KKL 106Clifford CHAN

KKL [email protected]

Page 2: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Covered and to be covered

Covered the week before the break Dr. Wong finished up to kf006.ppt You should have at least read up to Chapter 6 Perfectly competiti

ve supply: The cost side of the market If not, please press hard on it. Start reading Chapter 7

To be covered in the tutorial sessions this week Problems in chapter 6: #1, #3, #5, #7 and #9 You are advised to work on the even ones as well

Page 3: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #1, Chapter 6 (1)

Zoe is trying to decide how to divide her time between her job as a wedding photographer, which pays $27 per hours for as many hours as she chooses to work, and as a fossil collector, in which her pay depends both on the price of fossils and the number of them she finds. Earnings aside, Zoe is indifferent between the two tasks, and the number of fossils she can find depends on the number of hours a day she researches, as shown in the table below.

Page 4: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #1, Chapter 6 (2)

Hours per day Total fossils per day

1 5

2 9

3 12

4 14

5 15

Page 5: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #1 (1) Derive a table with a price in dollar increments from $0 to $30

in the first column and the quantity of fossils Zoe is willing to supply per day at that price in the second column

Page 6: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #1 (2)

In the first hour, Zoe can collect 5 fossils If the price of a fossil is $5, Zoe can make a total $25 in

an hour if she devotes all her time to collecting fossils, which is less than the money she can earn from photography

Thus, she won’t collect fossil if the price of a fossil is less than $5

If the price of a fossil is $6 Zoe should devote all her time to photography, as she can make $30 an hour from photography

Page 7: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #1 (3)

An additional hour would yield only 4 additional fossils or $24 additional revenue, so she should not spend any further time looking for fossils

If the price of fossils rises to $7, however, the additional hour gathering fossils would yield an additional $28, so gathering fossils during that hour would then be the best choice, and Zoe would therefore supply 9 fossils per day

Page 8: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #1 (4)

Price of fossils ($) # of fossils supplied / day

0 – 5 0

6 5

7, 8 9

9 – 13 12

14 – 26 14

27+ 15

Page 9: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #1 (5)

Plot these points in a graph with price on the vertical axis and quantity per day on the horizontal. What is this curve called?

The curve will depict a price-quantity supplied relationship for fossils as follows

In other words, it is SUPPLY CURVE for fossils

Page 10: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #1 (6)

Zoe's Supply Curve for Fossils

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

0 5 10 15 20

Number of fossils

Pric

e ($

/fos

sil)

Page 11: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #3, Chapter 6 (1)

The Paducah Slugger Company makes baseball bats out of lumber supplied to it by Acme Sporting Goods, which pays Paducah $10 for each finished bat. Paducah’s only factors of production are lathe operators and a small building with a lathe. The number of bats per day it produces depends on the number of employee-hours per

day, as shown in the table below.

Page 12: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #3, Chapter 6 (2)

# of bats per day # of employee-hours per day

0 0

5 1

10 2

15 4

20 7

25 11

30 16

35 22

Page 13: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #3, Chapter 6 (3)

If the wage is $15 per hour and Paducah’s daily fixed cost for the lathe and building is $60, what is the profit-maximizing quantity of bats?

What would be the profit-maximizing number of bats if the firm’s fixed cost were not $60 per day but only $30?

Page 14: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #3 (1)Quantity

(bats/day)Total

Revenue ($/day)

Total labour cost (hours X wage)

Total cost (labour cost +

fixed cost)

Profit ($/day) (revenue –

cost)

0 0 0 *15 = $0 0 + 60 =$60 -$60

5 50 1 *15 = $15 15 + 60 =$75 -$25

10 100 2 *15 = $30 30 + 60 =$90 $10

15 150 4 *15 = $60 60 + 60 =$120 $30

20 200 7 * 15 = $105 105 + 60 =$165 $35

25 250 11 *15 = $165 165 + 60 =$225 $25

30 300 16 *15 = $240 240 + 60 =$300 $0

35 350 22 *15 = $330 330 + 60 =$390 -$40

Page 15: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #3 (2)

Based on the above table, we note that the profit-maximizing quantity of bats is 20, as it yield the highest profit of

$35 If the firm’s fixed cost decreases from $60 to $30, what is

the profit maximizing quantity of bats? It is still 20 bats Why? Decrease in fixed cost will increase the profits across diff

erent quantities of bats by the same amount ($30) 20 bats will yield a new highest profit of $35 +$30 = $65

Page 16: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #5, Chapter 6

The supply curve for the only two firms in a competitive industry are given by P=2Q1 and P= 2+Q2, where Q1 is the output of firm 1 and Q2 is the output of firm 2. What is the market supply curve for this industry? (Hint: graph the two curves side by side, then add their respective quantities at a sample of different prices.)

Page 17: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #5 (1) Horizontal summation means holding price fixed and

adding the corresponding quantities

P P P

Q1 Q2 Q

Market supply curveFirm 2Firm 1

1 2 3

P =2Q1

6

4

2

6

4

2 2

4

6

2 4

P =2+Q2

1 4 7

S

P= (4/3) + (2/3)Q for P>2

P= 2Q for P<2

Page 18: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #7, Chapter 6

For the pizza seller whose marginal, average variable, and average total cost curves are shown in the accompanying diagram, what is the profit-maximizing level of output and how much profit will this producer earn if the price of pizza is $2.50 per slice?

Page 19: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (1)

0

Quantity (slices/day)

Pric

e ($

/slic

e)

00

ATC

AVC

MC

570

1.40

2.50

Page 20: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (2)

0

Quantity (slices/day)

Pric

e ($

/slic

e)

00

ATC

AVC

MC

570

1.40

2.50

Wrong! MC cuts ATC at its minimum.

Page 21: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (3)

0

Quantity (slices/day)

Pric

e ($

/slic

e)

00

ATC

AVC

MC

570

1.40

2.50

Wrong! MC cuts AVC at its minimum.

Page 22: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (4)

0

Quantity (slices/day)

Pric

e ($

/slic

e)

00

ATC

AVC

MC

570

1.40

2.50

Wrong! AVC and ATC approaches each other as quantity increases.

Page 23: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (5)

Unless specific, assume it is a perfectly competitive market

Firms are earning a zero economic profit Firms should always charge at a price that is equal to

their marginal cost

Page 24: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (6)

If P > ATC > AVC, the firm operates with a profit If ATC > P > AVC, the firm still operates but with a loss-

the operation can cover part of its cost If ATC > AVC > P, the firm should shut down as it cannot

even cover part of its cost

Page 25: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #7 (7)

To maximize profit, the firm will produce 570 slices of pizza a day

Why? A perfectly competitive firm should always charge at a

price that is equal to their marginal cost The associated profit is (P or MC – ATC)*Q

($2.5 / slice - $1.4 / slice) * 570 slices / day $627 / day

Page 26: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Problem #9, Chapter 6

For the pizza seller whole marginal, average variable, and average total cost curves are shown in the accompanying diagram, what is the profit-maximizing level of output and how much profit will this producer earn if the price of pizza is $0.50 per slice?

Page 27: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #9 (1)

0

Quantity (slices/day)

Pric

e ($

/slic

e)

00

ATC

AVC

MC

260

0.500.68

1.18

Page 28: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #9 (2)

Recall from Problem #7 If P > ATC > AVC, the firm operates with a profit If ATC > P > AVC, the firm still operates but with a loss- the

operation can cover part of its cost If ATC > AVC > P, the firm should shut down as it cannot even

cover part of its cost Based on the diagram above, where is the firm’s shut

down point in the short run? The firm should shut down at a point where P = $0.68

per slice (where P = AVC) If a slice of pizza is sold for only $0.50, the firm will

definitely not produce any pizza and shut down

Page 29: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #9 (3)

If the firm shuts down, there will be no (average) variable cost

By shutting down the plant, the firm will have a negative profit that is exactly equal to the fixed cost

Fixed cost = Total cost – variable cost Total cost

ATC * Q $1.18 / slice * 260 slices = $306.80 / day

Variable cost AVC * Q $0.68 / slice * 260 slices = $176.80 / day

Page 30: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

Solution to Problem #9 (4)

Fixed cost = $306.80/day - $176.80/day =$130/day Thus, by shutting down the plant in the short run, the firm

will loss $130 a day In other words, the firm earns a profit of -$130 per day if

the price for a slice of pizza is just $0.50

Page 31: ECON 1001 AB Introduction to Economics I Dr. Ka-fu WONG Sixth week of tutorial sessions KKL 925, K812, KKL 106 Clifford CHAN KKL 1109 givencana@yahoo.ca.

The end

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See you next week!!!