Optimal Decisions Using Margial Analysis
Optimal Decisions Using Margial Analysis
Units of Ou
π ∆π π
Q
250
200
150
Profits ($)
100
50
0
0 2 4 6 8 10
Ou tp u t ( u nits )
Units of output
doi r ep
i t r ep ti f or P
A
em
A B Units of output
Marginal Profit
pt uo
i f or P
Multivariate Optimization
It is the process of optimization for
equations with three or more
variables.
E.g. Demand is a function of (1)
product’s own price, (2) price of
other goods, (3) advertising, and
(4) income.
Partial Derivatives
Optimization requires an analysis of
how a change in each independent
variable affects the dependent variable,
holding constant the effect of all
other independent variables.
Partial derivatives are used for finding
this type of an “isolated” effect.
Partial Derivatives
E.g. Q = 5000 - 10P + 40A + PA - 0.8A2 -
0.5P2
In order to find the effect of each
independent variable, we will assume that
all variables except the one under analysis
remain unchanged (constant). Other
variables will be treated as constants when
taking the partial derivatives.
Partial Derivatives
Q = 5000 - 10P + 40A + PA - 0.8A2 -
0.5P2
δ Q/δ P = 0 - 10 + 0 + A - 0 - P = -10 +
A-P
δ Q/δ A = 0 - 0 + 40 + P - 1.6A - 0
= 40 + P - 1.6A
Maximizing Multivariate
Functions
All first-order partial derivatives are
set equal to zero to find the
maximum of a multivariate function.
δ Q/δ P = -10 + A - P = 0
δ Q/δ A = 40 + P - 1.6A = 0
function:
Lπ = -10,000 + 400Q - 2Q2 + λ (300 - 4Q)
Take the partial derivatives and set them equal
to zero:
δ Lπ /δ Q = 400 - 4Q - 4λ = 0
δ Lπ /δ λ = 300 - 4Q = 0
Q = 75, λ = 25, π = 8,750.