Froeb 01
Froeb 01
Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Appraoch (2nd Edition) Luke M. Froeb, [email protected] Brian T. McCann, [email protected] Website, managerialecon.com
COPYRIGHT 2008 Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. Thomson, the Star logo, and South-Western are trademarks used herein under license.
Answers to these questions will suggest solutions centered on (1) letting someone else make the decision, someone with better information or incentives; (2) giving the decision maker more information; or (3) changing the decision makers incentives.
Problem solving
Two distinct steps:
Figure out whats wrong, i.e., why the bad decision was made Figure out how to fix it
Economists use the rational actor paradigm to model behavior. The rational actor paradigm states:
People act rationally, optimally, self-interestedly
i.e., they respond to incentives to change behavior you must change incentives.
How to fix it
The answers will suggest one or more solutions:
1. Let someone else make the decision, someone with better information or incentives. 2. Change the information flow. 3. Change incentives
Change performance evaluation metric Change reward scheme
Last clue:
Senior management resigned several months later.
Bonuses also created incentive to manipulate the reserve estimate. Now that we know what is wrong, how do we fix it?
Let someone else decide? Change information flow? Change incentives?
Performance evaluation metric Reward scheme
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Ethics
Does the rational-actor paradigm encourage selfinterested, selfish behavior?
NO!
Opportunistic behavior is a fact of life. You need to understand it in order to control it. The rational-actor paradigm is a tool for analyzing behavior, not a prescription for how to live your life.
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13 1. Introduction: What this book is about Managerial Economics 2. The one lesson of business 3.Benefits, costs and decisions Table of contents 4. Extent (how much) decisions 5. Investment decisions: Look ahead and reason back 6. Simple pricing 7.Economies of scale and scope 8. Understanding markets and industry changes 9. Relationships between industries: The forces moving us towards long-run equilibrium 10. Strategy, the quest to slow profit erosion 11. Using supply and demand: Trade, bubbles, market making 12. More realistic and complex pricing 13. Direct price discrimination 14. Indirect price discrimination 15. Strategic games 16. Bargaining 17. Making decisions with uncertainty 18. Auctions 19.The problem of adverse selection 20.The problem of moral hazard 21. Getting employees to work in the best interests of the firm 22. Getting divisions to work in the best interests of the firm 23. Managing vertical relationships 24. You be the consultant EPILOG: Can those who teach, do?