Varian9e LecturePPTs Ch23
Varian9e LecturePPTs Ch23
Varian9e LecturePPTs Ch23
Firm Supply
Firm Supply
Derive the supply curve of a competitive
firm from its cost function using the
model of profit maximization.
Market environment: perfectly
competitive market
The firm is a market price-taker, although
the firm is free to vary its own price.
Demand Curve facing a firm
If the firm sets its own price above the
market price then the quantity
demanded from the firm is zero.
If the firm sets its own price below the
market price then the quantity
demanded from the firm is the entire
market quantity-demanded.
Demand Curve facing a firm
$/output unit
Market Supply
pe
Market Demand
Y
Demand Curve facing a firm
$/output unit
Market Supply
p’
pe At a price of p’, zero is
demanded from the firm.
Market Demand
y
Demand Curve facing a firm
$/output unit
Market Supply
p’
pe At a price of p’, zero is
demanded from the firm.
p”
Market Demand
y
At a price of p” the firm faces the entire
market demand.
Demand Curve facing a firm
$/output unit
Market Supply
p’
pe At a price of p’, zero is
demanded from the firm.
p”
Market Demand
y
At a price of p” the firm faces the entire
market demand.
Demand Curve facing a firm
$/output unit
p’
pe
p”
Market Demand
Y
Smallness
What does it mean to say that an
individual firm is “small relative to
the industry”?
Smallness
$/output unit
Firm’s MC
Firm’s demand
pe
curve
y
The individual firm’s technology causes it
always to supply only a small part of the
total quantity demanded at the market price.
Demand Curve facing a firm
Although there is a limit in the
demand facing a firm, the firm’s
supply is much smaller than that
limit. It’s safe to say the demand
curve facing the firm is a horizontal
line.
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The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
Supply in the short run
Each firm is a profit-maximizer and in
a short-run.
Q: How does each firm choose its
output level?
A: By solving
max s ( y ) py c s ( y ).
y 0
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
max Ps (y) = py - c s (y).
y³0
Necessary condition?
MR of output = MC of output
p=MC
Why?
If y* is the profit maximizing output level, either
an increase or a decrease in y will make profit
smaller.
If MR > MC, profit increases as y increases;
If MR < MC, profit increases as y decreases.
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
Then, p=MC(y) is a possible
candidate for the short run supply
curve.
However, there may be some
problems.
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Two output supply level?
$/output unit
MCs(y)
y’ ys* y
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
$/output unit
So a profit-max. supply level
can lie only on
the upwards
sloping part
pe of the firm’s
MC curve.
MCs(y)
y’ ys* y
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
Butnot every point on the upward-
sloping part of the firm’s MC curve
represents a profit-maximum.
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
But not every point on the upward-
sloping part of the firm’s MC curve
represents a profit-maximum.
The firm’s profit function is
s ( y ) py c s ( y ) py F c v ( y ).
If the firm chooses y = 0 then its
profit is
s ( y ) 0 F c v ( 0 ) F.
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
Sothe firm will choose an output
level y > 0 only if
s ( y ) py F c v ( y ) F .
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
So the firm will choose an output
level y > 0 only if
s ( y ) py F c v ( y ) F .
I.e., only if
py c ( y ) 0
v
Equivalently, only if
cv ( y)
p AVCs ( y ).
y
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
$/output unit
MCs(y)
ACs(y)
AVCs(y)
y
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
$/output unit
MCs(y)
ACs(y)
AVCs(y)
y
The Firm’s Short-Run Supply
Decision
$/output unit
Shutdown
point MC s(y)
ACs(y)
AVCs(y)
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The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
The long-run is the circumstance in
which the firm can choose amongst
all of its short-run circumstances.
How does the firm’s long-run supply
decision compare to its short-run
supply decisions?
The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
A competitive firm’s long-run profit
function is
( y ) py c( y ).
Thelong-run cost c(y) of producing y
units of output consists only of
variable costs since all inputs are
variable in the long-run.
The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
Thefirm’s long-run supply level
decision is to
max ( y ) py c( y ).
y 0
The
1st and 2nd-order maximization
conditions are, for y* > 0,
p MC( y ) and
dMC( y )
0.
dy
The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
Additionally, the firm’s economic
profit level must not be negative
since then the firm would exit the
industry. So,
( y ) py c( y ) 0
c( y )
p AC( y ).
y
The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
$/output unit
MC(y)
AC(y)
y
The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
$/output unit
MC(y)
The firm’s long-run
supply curve
AC(y)
y
The Firm’s Long-Run Supply
Decision
How is the firm’s long-run supply
curve related to all of its short-run
supply curves?
The long-run supply curve intersect
once with the short-run supply curve.
The long-run supply curve is flatter
than the short-run supply curve
(more elastic).
The Firm’s Long & Short-Run
Supply Decisions
$/output unit
MC(y)
p’ AC(y)
ys* y
ys* is profit-maximizing in this short-run.
The Firm’s Long & Short-Run
$/output unit Supply Decisions
MC(y)
Long-run supply curve
AC(y)
y*(p) y
Producer’s Surplus Revisited
$/output unit
MCs(y)
p ACs(y)
AVCs(y)
PS
y*(p) y
Producer’s Surplus Revisited
y*( p ) y*(p) y
c v (y * ( p)) = ò MC (z)d(z)
s
0
Producer’s Surplus Revisited
$/output unit
MCs(y)
p ACs(y)
AVCs(y)
Revenue
= py*(p)
y*(p) y
Producer’s Surplus Revisited
$/output unit
MCs(y)
p ACs(y)
AVCs(y)
Revenue
= py*(p)
cv(y*(p))
y*(p) y
Producer’s Surplus Revisited
PS = Revenue - Variable Cost.
Profit = Revenue - Total Cost
= Revenue - Fixed Cost
- Variable Cost.
So, PS = Profit + Fixed Cost.
Only if fixed cost is zero (the long-
run) are PS and profit the same.
Example
43