100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada
logo-home
Introduction to Industrial Organization, 2nd Ed Solutions to End-of-Chapter Exercises $17.49   Añadir al carrito

Examen

Introduction to Industrial Organization, 2nd Ed Solutions to End-of-Chapter Exercises

 1 vista  0 veces vendidas
  • Grado
  • Institución

Introduction to Industrial Organization, 2nd Ed Solutions to End-of-Chapter Exercises Lu´ıs Cabral This draft: March 2017 Please address questions or corrections to 1 Introduction 1.1. Competition and performance.Empi...

[Mostrar más]

Vista previa 4 fuera de 151  páginas

  • 21 de abril de 2022
  • 151
  • 2021/2022
  • Examen
  • Preguntas y respuestas
avatar-seller
Introduction to
Industrial Organization,
2nd Ed

Solutions to End-of-Chapter Exercises

Luı́s Cabral

This draft: March 2017




Please address questions or corrections to luis.cabral@nyu.edu

,1 Introduction



1.1. Competition and performance.Empirical evidence from a sample of more than 600
UK firms indicates that, controlling for the quantity of inputs (that is, taking into account
the quantity of inputs), firm output is increasing in the number of competitors and
decreasing in market share and industry concentration.1 How do these results relate to the
ideas presented in this chapter?
Answer: In Section 1.2, I argued that one of the implications of market power is the
decline of productive efficiency. Controlling for input levels, the level of output is a
measure of productive efficiency. The number of competitors and the degree of
concentration are measures of the degree of competition (concentration is an inverse
indicator). The empirical evidence from UK firms is therefore consistent with the view
presented in the text.

,2 Consumers



2.1. Fruit salad. Adam and Barbara are big fruit salad fans (and both agree that the
more the better). However, their tastes differ regarding the way the salad is made. For
Adam, for each apple you throw in, there should be one and only one banana (if you give
him more than one banana, he will throw it way). For Barbara, as long at it’s fruit, it
doesn’t matter; in other words, all that counts is the number of pieces of fruit.
(a) Show what Adam’s and Barbara’s indifference curves look like.
Answer: Figure 2.1 depicts Adam’s and Barbara’s indifference curves (left and right
panels, respectively).
(b) Are apples and bananas substitutes or complements?
Answer: For Adam, apples and bananas are perfect complements; for Barbara, perfect
substitutes.

2.2. Village microbrew. Village microbrew raised its price from $10 to $12 a case
(wholesale). As a result, sales dropped from 10,500 to 8,100 (in units). Based on your
estimate of the demand elasticity, what percent change in sales would you predict if price
were cut from $10 to $9? What demand level would this correspond to?


Figure 2.1
Indifference curves: Adam and Barbara
bananas bananas




3 3


2 2


1 1

apples apples
1 2 3 1 2 3




3

, Answer: We can approximate it by the “change formula,”
∆q p 10, 500 − 8, 100 12
ϵ≈ = = −1.77
∆p q 10 − 12 8, 100

This is approximate, since we’re using discrete changes. If we assume that the elasticity of
demand is constant then we could get an exact solution by using the log formula:
∆ log q log 10500 − log 8100
ϵ= = = −1.42
∆ log p log 10 − log 12

Did revenue rise or fall? Since ϵ < −1, the increase in prices led to an overall fall in
revenue. (If you want to make sure, then calculate the revenues before and after the price
change.) If the elasticity is constant, what is the demand at $9? If the elasticity is constant
then the log formula calculates the elasticity exactly and in addition we know that:
log 10500 − log q9
= −1.42
log 10 − log 9
where q9 is the demand when the price is $9 per case, so (after a little bit of algebraic
manipulation)
10
q9 = exp log 10500 + 1.42 log = 12195
9
With constant demand elasticity, the percent variation method only gives an
approximation of the value of demand elasticity. Moreover, estimating demand for a
different price level will give a different value than the log formula. Specifically, the
demand estimate when price is $9 is given by
q9 = 10500 1 + (−1.77) × (−10%) = 12358

since the drop in price from 10 to 9 corresponds to a −10% variation

2.3. Demand elasticity. Based on the values in Table 3.2, provide an estimate of the
impact on sales revenues of a 10% increase in each product’s price.
Answer: Revenue is given by R = p × q. Differentiating, we get
dR = dp q + p dq
Dividing by R,
dR q p
= dp + dq
R R R

Since R = p q and ϵ = dq/dp p/q, we have
dR q p
= dp + dq
R R R
q p
= dp +
pq
dp dp p
= +
p p
dp dp
= +
4

Los beneficios de comprar resúmenes en Stuvia estan en línea:

Garantiza la calidad de los comentarios

Garantiza la calidad de los comentarios

Compradores de Stuvia evaluaron más de 700.000 resúmenes. Así estas seguro que compras los mejores documentos!

Compra fácil y rápido

Compra fácil y rápido

Puedes pagar rápidamente y en una vez con iDeal, tarjeta de crédito o con tu crédito de Stuvia. Sin tener que hacerte miembro.

Enfócate en lo más importante

Enfócate en lo más importante

Tus compañeros escriben los resúmenes. Por eso tienes la seguridad que tienes un resumen actual y confiable. Así llegas a la conclusión rapidamente!

Preguntas frecuentes

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

100% de satisfacción garantizada: ¿Cómo funciona?

Nuestra garantía de satisfacción le asegura que siempre encontrará un documento de estudio a tu medida. Tu rellenas un formulario y nuestro equipo de atención al cliente se encarga del resto.

Who am I buying this summary from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller FLOYYD. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy this summary for $17.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

45,681 summaries were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy summaries for 14 years now

Empieza a vender

Vistos recientemente


$17.49
  • (0)
  Añadir