The firm and its objectives

 

 

 3. Application: Pricing and Cost Changes

The preceding theorem permits us to make a number of predictions about the behavior of the profit-maximizing firm and to set up some normative «operations research» rules for its operation. We can determine not only the optimal output, but also the profit-maximizing price with the aid of the demand curve for the product of the firm. For, given the opti­mal output, we can find out from the demand curve what price will permit the company to sell this quantity, and that is necessarily the opti­mal price. In Figure 1, where the optimal output is OQm we see that the corresponding price is QmPm where point Pm is the point on the demand curve above Qm (note that Pm is not the point of intersection of the marginal cost and the marginal revenue curves).

It was shown in the last section of Chapter 4 how our theorem can also enable us to predict the effect of a change in tax rates or some other change in cost on the firm’s output and pricing. We need merely determine how this change shifts the marginal cost curve to find the new profit-maximizing price-output combination by finding the new point of intersection of the marginal cost and marginal revenue curves. Let us recall one particular result for use later in this chapter—the theorem about the effects of a change in fixed costs. It will be remembered that a change in fixed costs never has any effect on the firm’s marginal cost curve because marginal fixed cost is always zero (by definition, an additional unit of output adds nothing to fixed costs). Hence, if the profit-maximizing firm’s rents, its total assessed taxes, or some other fixed cost increases, there will be no change in the output-price level at which its marginal cost equals its marginal revenue. In other words, the profit-maximizing firm will make no price or output changes in response to any increase or decrease in its fixed costs! This rather unexpected result is certainly not in accord with common business practice and requires some further comment which will be supplied presently.

 4. Extension: Multiple Products and Inputs

The firm’s output decisions- are normally more complicated, even in principle, than the preceding decisions suggest. Almost all companies pro­duce a variety of products and these various commodities typically compete for the firm’s investment funds and its productive capacity. At any given time there are limits to what the company can produce, and often, if it decides to increase its production of product x, this must be done at the expense of product y.

 

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