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Welcome to EC 209: Managerial Economics- Group A By: Dr. Jacqueline Khorassani

Welcome to EC 209: Managerial Economics- Group A By: Dr. Jacqueline Khorassani. Class 1: Week One. Monday, September 3 11:00-11:50 Fottrell (AM). Study the Course Contract available on line at www.marietta.edu/~khorassj Click on Fall 2007 Courses Click on EC 209 : Managerial Economics

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Welcome to EC 209: Managerial Economics- Group A By: Dr. Jacqueline Khorassani

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  1. Welcome to EC 209: Managerial Economics- Group ABy:Dr. Jacqueline Khorassani Class 1: Week One

  2. Monday, September 311:00-11:50Fottrell (AM) • Study the Course Contract available on line at www.marietta.edu/~khorassj • Click on Fall 2007 Courses • Click on EC 209 : Managerial Economics • Click on Course Contract • It is in Microsoft Word format • Make sure you understand the contract • Ask me questions via an email to khorassj@marietta.edu or jacqueline.khorassani@nuigalway.ie .

  3. Highlights of the Contract • Why Managerial Economics? • Suppose you are the manager of a ice-cream shop • Lists some of the decisions you have to make • Price of ice-cream • Quantity of ice-cream • Inputs (how to minimize cost subject to the constraint of quality of inputs) • Productivity/ efficiency • Where have you leaned about these stuff? • MICROECOMICS

  4. Why Managerial Economics? • Do managers have full information? • No • Where have you learned about decision making under uncertainty? • STATISTICS • Managerial Economics is about microeconomics, statistics, and more

  5. Textbook • Managerial Economics and Business Strategy, fifth edition, by Michael R. Baye. • Purchase this book from the college bookshop because a chapter from another economics textbook is included with the version of the book available in the college bookshop. We will be using this chapter during the course.

  6. Means of Communication • Class • Mondays: 11:00-11:50, Fottrell (AM) Tuesdays: 15:00-15:50, Cairnes Theatre Thursdays: 15:00-15:50, Tyndall Theatre • My website • www.marietta.edu/~khorassj • Email • khorassj@marietta.edu • Jacqueline.khorassani@nuigalway.ie

  7. Means of Communication 4. Office • 310 St. Anthony’s • Phone: 091- 493105 (office • Hours • Mondays: 14:00-15:00 Tu & Th: 12:00-13:00 Wednesdays: 13:00-14:00 & by appointment. 5. Blackboard (Later) • http://balckboard.nuigalway.ie

  8. My Teaching Philosophy • I am not a lecturer • In other words, I am not going to be a transmitter of knowledge. • I am a designer • You are not knowledge sponges • You are knowledge constructors

  9. My tasks • Design a map that will lead you toward the construction of your knowledge. • Study guides will be posted on my website in the beginning of each week. • Help you figure out how to ask the right questions when you feel lost. • Ask you questions in an attempt to find out if you are on the right track. • Give clear and meaningful answers to your questions. • PowerPoint slides of the classroom activities will be posted on my website at the end of each week.

  10. Your tasks • Study and follow the map • Ask questions when you feel lost • A dumb question is better than no question • Respond to my questions • Be prepared to be wrong sometimes

  11. Our joint task • is to build a learning environment in which we feel free and comfortable to express our thoughts; to respectfully disagree with each other at times; and to learn from each other.

  12. Assignments • Carry 100 points (25% of the course grade). • Will be completed on line on Aplia • You will need to register on line. • The details are outlined in the course contract.

  13. Examination • There is only one exam at the end of the term. • Carries 300 points or 75% of the course grade.

  14. Study the textbook’s Preface • Believe me it is not a waste of time to read the Preface of a book • Ask me questions via an email.

  15. Chapter 1 • Who is a manager? • A person who directs resources to achieve a stated goal. • What is economics? • The science of making decisions in the presence of scare resources. • What is managerial economics? • The study of how to direct scarce resources in the way that most efficiently achieves a managerial goal. • What are some goals and constraints of managers?

  16. Costs • What is the accounting (explicit) cost of producing ice-cream • The explicit costs of the resources needed to produce ice-cream. • Milk, ice-cream machine, labor,…. • What is the opportunity cost of producing ice-cream? • The cost of the explicit and implicit resources that are foregone when a decision is made. • What is an example of implicit cost? • If you run your own ice-cream shop and do not directly (explicitly) pay salary to yourself.

  17. Ec 209: Managerial Economics-Group A • Week One- Class 2 • Tuesday, September 4 • Cairness • Is anybody here for the first time?

  18. I received a question • This class does not have a regular tutorial • There will be teaching assistant who will hold office hours and special tutorial sessions as needed

  19. Profits • Accounting Profits • Total revenue minus total explicit cost. • Economic Profits • Total revenue minus total opportunity cost. • Which one is higher?

  20. What are accounting profits and Economic profit of the ice-cream shop? • Revenue = €2000 • Cost of labor = €500 • Cost of other inputs = €700 • The owner is the manager but she does not pay herself salary • Accounting profit=? • Economic profit=?

  21. Why profits are important? • The reason you are making profits is because people are willing and able to pay a high price (relative to your cost) for your ice-cream. • Why do they pay a high price? • Because the value of ice-cream to them is high. (They really want it badly.)

  22. 1. Entry Sustainable Industry Profits 2. Power of Input Suppliers 3. Power of Buyers 3. Industry Rivalry 4. Substitutes & Complements The Five Forces Framework and Profitability

  23. Understand Incentives • Are important • Examples

  24. Market Interactions • Is there a rivalry between consumer & Producer • Consumers attempt to locate low prices, while producers attempt to charge high prices. • Is there a rivalry between consumer & consumer? • Scarcity of goods

  25. Market Interactions • Is there a rivalry between Producer & Producer> • Scarcity of consumers • Scarcity of resources • What is the role of Government • Disciplines the market process.

  26. Would you prefer to receive • €100 today or €100 next year? • €100 today or €105 next year? • €100 today or €120 next year? • What affects your decision? • Bring calculators to this class please

  27. The Time Value of Money • Present value (PV) of a lump-sum amount (FV) to be received at the end of “n” periods when the per-period interest rate is “i”:

  28. If interest rate is 10% • Then the present value of €110 to be received one year form now is • PV = 110/(1+0.1) = 100

  29. Examples • Lotto • winner choosing between a single lump-sum payout of $104 million or $198 million over 25 years. • Business • You need to choose between a project with a expected profit of €200 next year and another one with the expected profit of €230 in 2 years.

  30. Present value of a stream of future amounts (FVt) received at the end of each period for “n” periods: Present Value of a Series

  31. Example • You will be receiving 100 next year, 200 in 2 years and 50 in 3 years • What is the present value of this income stream if the interest rate is 10%?

  32. EC 209: Managerial Economics • Week One: Class 3 • Thursday, September 6 • 15:10- 16:00 • Teaching Assistant • Darragh Flannery • d.flannery@nuigalway.ie • Office: 234 , St. Anthony's • Office Hours: Mondays

  33. Note: • Aplia Enrollment • Is Under Professor Brendan Kennley’s name

  34. Notes: • At the end of each week, I post classroom slides on line. • In the beginning of a new week, I post a study guide on line. • Your job is to review the study guide and ask me questions. • If you don’t ask, I assume that you have no problem and I may not cover certain material. But you are responsible to know everything that is on the study guide.

  35. I received a question on implicit/explicit cost • Explicit cost is out of pocket cost • Pay €200 to attend this class • Implicit cost is forgone benefit • When attend class can’t go to movies • Value of movies to you = €50 • Total opportunity cost of class = implicit cost + explicit cost = €250

  36. What is the net present value of a stream of future amounts? • Suppose a manager can purchase a stream of future receipts (FVt) by spending “C0” dollars today. The NPV of such a decision is Decision Rule: If NPV < 0: Reject project NPV > 0: Accept project

  37. What is the present value of a perpetuity of identical cash flows? • An asset that perpetually generates a stream of cash flows (CF) at the end of each period is called a perpetuity. • The present value (PV) of a perpetuity of cash flows paying the same amount at the end of each period is

  38. What is the value of a firm? • The value of a firm equals the present value of current and future profits. • PV = Spt / (1 + i)t • If profits grow at a constant rate (g < i) and current period profits are po: • If the growth rate in profits < interest rate and both remain constant, maximizing the present value of all future profits is the same as maximizing current profits.

  39. Control Variables Quantity of Output Price Product Quality Money spent on advertising Money spent on R&D What are some variables that managers can control?

  40. Basic Managerial Question: How much of the control variable should be used to maximize net benefits? • Where • Net benefits = total benefits – total costs

  41. Marginal analysis: Suppose the control variable under study is output, Q • Marginal Benefit, MB • Is the benefit of the last unit of control variable output ,Q. • Is equal to the change in total benefits divided by a change in the output Q: • Graphically, the MB curve is the slope (derivative) of the total benefit curve.

  42. Marginal Cost (MC) • Is the cost of the last unit of output, Q • Is equal to the change in total costs divided by a change in the control variable, Q: • Graphically, the MC curve is the slope (derivative) of the total cost curve

  43. Marginal Principle • To maximize benefits, the managerial control variable (Q) should be increased up to the point where MB = MC. • MB > MCmeans the last unit of the output increased benefits more than it increased costs  need to produce more output • MB < MCmeans the last unit of the output increased costs more than it increased benefits  need to produce less output

  44. Q The Geometry of Optimization Total Benefits & Total Costs Costs Benefits Slope =MB B Slope = MC C Q*

  45. Conclusions • Make sure you include all costs and benefits when making decisions (opportunity cost). • When decisions span time, make sure you are comparing apples to apples (PV analysis). • Optimal economic decisions are made at the margin (marginal analysis).

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