1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:05,799 ♪ [music] ♪ 2 00:00:09,740 --> 00:00:12,169 - [Alex] We learned last time that a firm 3 00:00:12,169 --> 00:00:15,012 in a competitive market doesn't have much control 4 00:00:15,012 --> 00:00:16,416 over it's price. 5 00:00:16,416 --> 00:00:19,141 It must accept the market price. 6 00:00:19,141 --> 00:00:23,383 So its decision about profit maximization turns into a decision 7 00:00:23,383 --> 00:00:26,122 about what quantity to choose, 8 00:00:26,122 --> 00:00:28,629 and that's what we're going to be focusing on now. 9 00:00:33,931 --> 00:00:35,591 So what is profit? 10 00:00:35,591 --> 00:00:38,614 Profit is total revenue minus total cost. 11 00:00:38,614 --> 00:00:42,021 Total revenue is just price times the quantity sold. 12 00:00:42,021 --> 00:00:44,717 Total cost has two parts. 13 00:00:45,394 --> 00:00:47,454 First are the fixed costs. 14 00:00:47,454 --> 00:00:50,957 These are costs that do not vary with output. 15 00:00:50,967 --> 00:00:53,941 So, for example, suppose you are the owner 16 00:00:53,941 --> 00:00:57,806 of this small oil well and you have to pay rent 17 00:00:57,806 --> 00:01:00,601 for the land on which the oil well sits. 18 00:01:01,042 --> 00:01:03,665 Those rental costs -- you have to pay them 19 00:01:03,665 --> 00:01:07,955 regardless of how much the oil well is producing. 20 00:01:08,372 --> 00:01:10,935 Every month you have to pay some rental cost 21 00:01:10,935 --> 00:01:14,490 whether you're producing one barrel of oil per month, 22 00:01:14,490 --> 00:01:17,730 10 barrels of oil per month, 11 barrels of oil per month. 23 00:01:17,730 --> 00:01:18,839 It doesn't matter. 24 00:01:18,839 --> 00:01:21,235 You still have to pay the same rental cost. 25 00:01:21,235 --> 00:01:24,556 Indeed, even if you don't produce any oil that month, 26 00:01:24,556 --> 00:01:27,610 if your oil well breaks down, you still have to pay 27 00:01:27,610 --> 00:01:29,155 those rental costs. 28 00:01:29,155 --> 00:01:31,633 So the rental costs are fixed costs. 29 00:01:31,633 --> 00:01:34,297 They don't vary with the quantity produced. 30 00:01:34,919 --> 00:01:38,868 By the way, notice that even if you owned the land, 31 00:01:38,868 --> 00:01:42,153 if you could have rented it to someone else, 32 00:01:42,153 --> 00:01:44,871 then that would be an opportunity cost. 33 00:01:44,871 --> 00:01:49,897 So your calculation of profit should also include 34 00:01:49,897 --> 00:01:51,699 opportunity costs. 35 00:01:51,699 --> 00:01:55,880 That's what makes the economic calculation of profit, by the way, 36 00:01:55,880 --> 00:01:58,853 differ from the accounting definition of profit. 37 00:01:58,853 --> 00:02:02,581 The economic notion of profit includes opportunity costs. 38 00:02:02,582 --> 00:02:03,986 Okay, what else? 39 00:02:04,521 --> 00:02:07,307 Well, variable costs -- these are the cost 40 00:02:07,307 --> 00:02:09,847 that do vary with output. 41 00:02:09,847 --> 00:02:13,601 So for example, the electricity cost for pumping oil -- 42 00:02:13,601 --> 00:02:17,364 the more oil you pump, the faster you get your rig to go, 43 00:02:17,364 --> 00:02:20,506 the more electricity you're going to use up. 44 00:02:20,506 --> 00:02:22,933 If you run it 24 hours a day, you're going to use 45 00:02:22,933 --> 00:02:25,609 more electricity than if you only run the pump 46 00:02:25,609 --> 00:02:27,283 12 hours a day. 47 00:02:27,283 --> 00:02:30,126 Transportation cost -- you got to go and get the oil, 48 00:02:30,126 --> 00:02:32,513 truck it out of there, move it and so forth. 49 00:02:32,513 --> 00:02:36,894 So these costs are all costs which vary with output, 50 00:02:36,894 --> 00:02:40,898 which typically will increase the more output that you produce. 51 00:02:40,898 --> 00:02:42,842 Those are your variable costs. 52 00:02:42,842 --> 00:02:47,042 So just to summarize on cost, total cost is equal 53 00:02:47,042 --> 00:02:50,081 to your fixed costs plus your variable costs 54 00:02:50,081 --> 00:02:52,851 and these depend upon output. 55 00:02:53,659 --> 00:02:56,352 Okay, so how do we maximize profit? 56 00:02:56,352 --> 00:02:58,868 Well, we're not going to use calculus in this class, 57 00:02:58,868 --> 00:03:01,082 but for those of you who do know calculus, 58 00:03:01,082 --> 00:03:03,910 I want to do a quick aside -- show you actually how useful 59 00:03:03,910 --> 00:03:06,116 calculus is and show you an easy way 60 00:03:06,116 --> 00:03:07,942 of answering this problem. 61 00:03:07,942 --> 00:03:11,706 So we know the profit is total revenue minus total cost 62 00:03:11,706 --> 00:03:15,152 and both of these are functions of the quantity produced. 63 00:03:15,305 --> 00:03:18,172 Now in calculus how do we maximize a function? 64 00:03:18,390 --> 00:03:20,182 Think back to your calculus class. 65 00:03:20,734 --> 00:03:23,725 You take the derivative of that function 66 00:03:23,725 --> 00:03:26,549 and you set it equal to zero. 67 00:03:26,549 --> 00:03:28,650 So in this case, we want to take the derivative 68 00:03:28,650 --> 00:03:31,189 of profit with respect to quantity and set that 69 00:03:31,189 --> 00:03:32,959 equal to zero. 70 00:03:32,959 --> 00:03:35,498 So derivative of profit with respect to quantity -- 71 00:03:35,498 --> 00:03:38,337 that's just the derivative of total revenue 72 00:03:38,337 --> 00:03:42,806 with respect to quantity minus the derivative of total cost 73 00:03:42,806 --> 00:03:44,552 with respect to quantity. 74 00:03:44,552 --> 00:03:46,310 Now in economics, we have special names 75 00:03:46,310 --> 00:03:48,203 for these two derivatives. 76 00:03:48,203 --> 00:03:51,293 The derivative of total revenue with respect to quantity 77 00:03:51,293 --> 00:03:53,959 is simply called marginal revenue. 78 00:03:53,959 --> 00:03:57,559 And the derivative of total cost with respect to quantity 79 00:03:57,559 --> 00:03:59,642 is called marginal cost. 80 00:03:59,642 --> 00:04:03,092 So we want to find the quantity such that marginal revenue 81 00:04:03,092 --> 00:04:06,849 minus marginal cost is zero, or in other words, 82 00:04:06,849 --> 00:04:10,095 we want to find the quantity such that marginal revenue 83 00:04:10,095 --> 00:04:12,191 is equal to marginal cost. 84 00:04:12,191 --> 00:04:16,364 In other words, the quantity, which maximizes profit, 85 00:04:16,364 --> 00:04:21,207 is the one where marginal revenue is equal to marginal cost. 86 00:04:21,738 --> 00:04:24,687 Now I'm about to give you a more intuitive explanation, 87 00:04:24,687 --> 00:04:28,356 especially for those of you who don't get no calculus, 88 00:04:28,356 --> 00:04:31,353 but for those of you who do, this is just exactly 89 00:04:31,353 --> 00:04:33,748 what you were to do in calculus -- you take the derivative, 90 00:04:33,748 --> 00:04:35,379 set it equal to zero. 91 00:04:35,379 --> 00:04:37,667 Okay let's get to more intuition. 92 00:04:37,793 --> 00:04:40,968 When the firm produces an additional unit of output, 93 00:04:40,968 --> 00:04:44,672 there are additional revenues and additional costs. 94 00:04:45,246 --> 00:04:48,512 Profit maximization is all about comparing 95 00:04:48,512 --> 00:04:50,829 these additional revenues and costs, 96 00:04:50,829 --> 00:04:52,765 and we have names for these. 97 00:04:52,790 --> 00:04:57,052 Marginal revenue is the addition to total revenue 98 00:04:57,052 --> 00:04:59,995 from selling an additional unit of output. 99 00:05:00,014 --> 00:05:04,503 Marginal cost is the addition to total cost from producing 100 00:05:04,503 --> 00:05:06,663 an additional unit of output. 101 00:05:06,829 --> 00:05:10,611 Profits are maximized at the level of output where marginal revenue 102 00:05:10,611 --> 00:05:12,478 is equal to marginal cost. 103 00:05:12,478 --> 00:05:13,999 Now why is this? 104 00:05:13,999 --> 00:05:15,791 Well, let's suppose that marginal revenue 105 00:05:15,791 --> 00:05:19,027 is not equal to marginal cost and let’s show 106 00:05:19,027 --> 00:05:22,164 that you can't be profit maximizing if that's the case. 107 00:05:22,164 --> 00:05:26,369 For example, if marginal revenue is bigger than marginal cost, 108 00:05:26,369 --> 00:05:29,004 you're not profit maximizing -- producing more 109 00:05:29,004 --> 00:05:30,758 will add to your profit. 110 00:05:30,758 --> 00:05:35,926 Why? Well, remember marginal revenue is the addition 111 00:05:35,926 --> 00:05:38,953 to revenue from producing another unit. 112 00:05:38,953 --> 00:05:41,499 Marginal cost is the addition to cost 113 00:05:41,499 --> 00:05:43,242 from producing another unit. 114 00:05:43,242 --> 00:05:45,971 If marginal revenue is bigger than marginal cost, 115 00:05:45,971 --> 00:05:50,168 that says producing that unit adds more to your revenues 116 00:05:50,168 --> 00:05:52,013 than it does to your costs. 117 00:05:52,013 --> 00:05:54,518 In other words, you could increase profit 118 00:05:54,518 --> 00:05:56,434 by producing more. 119 00:05:56,434 --> 00:05:58,865 So if marginal revenue is ever bigger 120 00:05:58,865 --> 00:06:01,956 than marginal cost, you want to produce more. 121 00:06:02,517 --> 00:06:04,820 On the other hand, suppose marginal revenue 122 00:06:04,820 --> 00:06:09,003 is less than marginal cost, or to put it the other way, 123 00:06:09,003 --> 00:06:12,968 suppose marginal cost is bigger than marginal revenue. 124 00:06:12,968 --> 00:06:15,803 Well then, you're not profit maximizing 125 00:06:15,803 --> 00:06:19,345 because producing less will add to your profit. 126 00:06:19,743 --> 00:06:21,173 Why is this? 127 00:06:21,173 --> 00:06:24,006 Well, think about marginal cost. 128 00:06:24,006 --> 00:06:29,835 If you were to produce one unit less your costs would fall 129 00:06:30,254 --> 00:06:34,318 by marginal cost, your revenues would also fall 130 00:06:34,318 --> 00:06:38,455 by marginal revenue, but since marginal cost is bigger 131 00:06:38,455 --> 00:06:41,612 than marginal revenue, your costs by producing 132 00:06:41,612 --> 00:06:45,897 one unit less fall by more than your revenues fall. 133 00:06:46,174 --> 00:06:49,611 So if your costs are going down by more than your revenues 134 00:06:49,611 --> 00:06:53,664 are going down, you're again increasing profit. 135 00:06:53,967 --> 00:06:58,073 So if marginal revenue is ever less than marginal cost, 136 00:06:58,073 --> 00:07:02,165 you want to produce less -- you'll be increasing your profit 137 00:07:02,165 --> 00:07:04,180 by producing less. 138 00:07:04,371 --> 00:07:08,407 So, if marginal revenue is bigger than marginal cost, 139 00:07:08,407 --> 00:07:10,364 you're not profit maximizing. 140 00:07:10,364 --> 00:07:13,157 If marginal revenue is less than marginal cost 141 00:07:13,157 --> 00:07:15,029 you're not profit maximizing. 142 00:07:15,029 --> 00:07:19,542 You can only profit maximize if marginal revenue 143 00:07:19,542 --> 00:07:22,128 is equal to marginal cost. 144 00:07:23,053 --> 00:07:26,961 Now let's put all this in a diagram beginning with marginal revenue. 145 00:07:26,961 --> 00:07:29,387 Now for a competitive firm, this is going to be easy 146 00:07:29,387 --> 00:07:32,054 because remember, that a competitive firm 147 00:07:32,054 --> 00:07:35,651 is small relative to the total market. 148 00:07:35,651 --> 00:07:39,932 That means it can double its production easily 149 00:07:39,932 --> 00:07:43,249 and not push down the market price. 150 00:07:43,249 --> 00:07:45,668 As a result, for a competitive firm, 151 00:07:45,668 --> 00:07:49,290 marginal revenue is equal to the market price. 152 00:07:49,290 --> 00:07:53,719 So for example, suppose the firm is producing two units of output 153 00:07:53,719 --> 00:07:56,178 and it decides to produce a third unit, 154 00:07:56,178 --> 00:07:59,502 what's the additional revenue from that third unit? 155 00:07:59,502 --> 00:08:00,793 It's the price. 156 00:08:00,793 --> 00:08:03,317 It's the price it gets for that barrel of oil. 157 00:08:03,317 --> 00:08:06,179 What about if it produces a fourth barrel of oil? 158 00:08:06,179 --> 00:08:08,549 What does it get? What's the addition to revenue? 159 00:08:08,549 --> 00:08:10,797 It's the price of a barrel of oil. 160 00:08:10,797 --> 00:08:12,311 What about the fifth unit? 161 00:08:12,311 --> 00:08:17,374 Again, the price is the addition to revenue, is marginal revenue. 162 00:08:17,820 --> 00:08:20,577 So, marginal revenue for a competitive firm 163 00:08:20,577 --> 00:08:22,732 is equal to the price and it's flat -- 164 00:08:22,732 --> 00:08:26,390 it doesn't change when the firm changes its output 165 00:08:26,390 --> 00:08:29,380 because the firm is small relative to the market. 166 00:08:29,380 --> 00:08:31,407 Now what about marginal cost? 167 00:08:31,407 --> 00:08:33,656 Well, a typical shape of a marginal cost curve 168 00:08:33,656 --> 00:08:36,083 would be upward sloping like this. 169 00:08:36,083 --> 00:08:38,685 Again, think about our stripper oil well. 170 00:08:38,685 --> 00:08:42,747 We can produce more from that oil well, 171 00:08:42,747 --> 00:08:44,022 but there's a limit. 172 00:08:44,022 --> 00:08:46,076 We can only run it so quickly. 173 00:08:46,076 --> 00:08:50,092 We have to push it really hard when we start to produce more. 174 00:08:50,092 --> 00:08:53,672 So we can easily produce, you know, three, or four units, 175 00:08:53,672 --> 00:08:57,673 but in order to produce six, seven, eight, or nine barrels of oil 176 00:08:57,673 --> 00:09:00,032 from that oil well, we're going to have to run it 177 00:09:00,032 --> 00:09:01,795 really quickly, we're going to have to put in 178 00:09:01,795 --> 00:09:04,342 a lot of electricity, we're going to have to do 179 00:09:04,342 --> 00:09:06,395 a lot of maintenance and so forth. 180 00:09:06,395 --> 00:09:10,147 So our costs will tend to increase. 181 00:09:10,147 --> 00:09:13,696 We can't produce an unlimited amount of oil 182 00:09:13,696 --> 00:09:16,085 at the same cost from this oil well. 183 00:09:16,085 --> 00:09:19,827 Our costs are going to go up, are going to rise, 184 00:09:19,827 --> 00:09:22,529 our additional costs are going to rise 185 00:09:22,529 --> 00:09:25,199 the more we want to produce from that oil well. 186 00:09:25,199 --> 00:09:28,988 So this is a typical shape of a marginal cost curve. 187 00:09:29,346 --> 00:09:32,720 Now, where's profit maximization? 188 00:09:32,720 --> 00:09:35,015 Well, profit is maximized where marginal revenue 189 00:09:35,015 --> 00:09:36,905 is equal to marginal cost. 190 00:09:36,905 --> 00:09:38,818 In this case, for a competitive firm, 191 00:09:38,818 --> 00:09:40,787 marginal revenue is equal to price. 192 00:09:40,787 --> 00:09:43,596 So profit is maximized where price is equal 193 00:09:43,596 --> 00:09:47,155 to marginal cost or at this point right here. 194 00:09:47,523 --> 00:09:49,967 Now let's think about that intuitively. 195 00:09:50,932 --> 00:09:55,732 On the left hand side, this is the additional revenues 196 00:09:55,732 --> 00:09:57,758 from selling a barrel of oil. 197 00:09:57,758 --> 00:10:01,204 These are the additional costs from selling a barrel of oil. 198 00:10:01,204 --> 00:10:04,728 So you want to compare -- revenues bigger than costs, 199 00:10:04,728 --> 00:10:06,242 therefore sell more. 200 00:10:06,242 --> 00:10:09,025 Revenues bigger than costs, therefore sell more. 201 00:10:09,025 --> 00:10:10,610 Revenues bigger than costs. 202 00:10:10,610 --> 00:10:13,698 You keep selling more until you reach this point. 203 00:10:13,698 --> 00:10:15,925 Do you want to go further? No. 204 00:10:15,925 --> 00:10:18,745 Here, costs are bigger than revenues. 205 00:10:18,745 --> 00:10:22,526 So by selling less, you can reduce your costs 206 00:10:22,526 --> 00:10:25,037 by more than you'd reduce your revenues 207 00:10:25,037 --> 00:10:27,982 and therefore profit goes up going this way 208 00:10:27,982 --> 00:10:30,713 and that's why this point, where marginal revenue 209 00:10:30,713 --> 00:10:35,271 is equal to marginal cost, or price is equal to marginal cost, 210 00:10:35,271 --> 00:10:37,986 that's the point where profit is maximized. 211 00:10:37,986 --> 00:10:40,843 Now remember way back in the first talk, 212 00:10:40,843 --> 00:10:44,106 we wanted to explain a firm’s behavior. 213 00:10:44,106 --> 00:10:48,628 So let's look how maximizing profit explains the firm’s behavior. 214 00:10:48,998 --> 00:10:52,485 Suppose the market price is $50 per barrel. 215 00:10:52,485 --> 00:10:55,038 Well, then in order to maximize profit, 216 00:10:55,038 --> 00:10:58,636 the firm chooses the quantity -- in this case, 217 00:10:58,636 --> 00:11:02,011 about eight barrels of oil -- such that marginal revenue 218 00:11:02,011 --> 00:11:04,293 is equal to marginal cost, bearing in mind 219 00:11:04,293 --> 00:11:07,954 that for the competitive firm, marginal revenue is equal to price. 220 00:11:08,260 --> 00:11:11,442 So to profit maximize the firm produces a quantity 221 00:11:11,442 --> 00:11:13,635 of about eight barrels of oil. 222 00:11:13,635 --> 00:11:17,324 Now suppose that the market price goes up to $100. 223 00:11:17,324 --> 00:11:23,538 Now in order to profit maximize, the firm increases its production 224 00:11:23,538 --> 00:11:28,547 along its marginal cost curve keeping this relationship the same 225 00:11:28,547 --> 00:11:31,673 so price is still equal to marginal cost. 226 00:11:31,673 --> 00:11:35,761 Price has gone up to 100, but because the firm has expanded 227 00:11:35,761 --> 00:11:39,872 along its marginal cost curve, marginal cost has gone up as well. 228 00:11:39,872 --> 00:11:43,506 So this again is the profit maximizing point 229 00:11:43,506 --> 00:11:46,519 when the price is equal to 100. 230 00:11:46,519 --> 00:11:49,895 When the price is equal to 100, the profit maximizing quantity 231 00:11:49,895 --> 00:11:52,629 is just under 10 barrels of oil. 232 00:11:52,629 --> 00:11:58,080 So profit maximization explains what the firm does when the price, 233 00:11:58,080 --> 00:12:00,611 when the market price, changes. 234 00:12:01,259 --> 00:12:05,012 We now know how to find the profit maximizing quantity -- 235 00:12:05,012 --> 00:12:06,747 look for the quantity where marginal revenue 236 00:12:06,747 --> 00:12:09,725 is equal to marginal cost, which is the same 237 00:12:09,725 --> 00:12:11,863 for the competitive firm where price is equal 238 00:12:11,863 --> 00:12:13,572 to marginal cost. 239 00:12:13,572 --> 00:12:17,538 Now we want to ask, what is the size of the profit? 240 00:12:17,538 --> 00:12:19,388 This raises a subtle point. 241 00:12:19,388 --> 00:12:22,917 You can be maximizing profits and actually have a loss. 242 00:12:23,238 --> 00:12:27,122 That is, the best that you can do might be a loss. 243 00:12:27,129 --> 00:12:30,958 So we want to show on the diagram how large your profits 244 00:12:30,958 --> 00:12:35,289 or how large your losses are when you are maximizing profits. 245 00:12:35,667 --> 00:12:37,469 In order to do that, we need to introduce 246 00:12:37,469 --> 00:12:39,735 another concept and another curve -- 247 00:12:39,735 --> 00:12:41,466 average cost. 248 00:12:41,466 --> 00:12:45,241 Average cost is simply the cost per unit of output. 249 00:12:45,241 --> 00:12:47,462 That is the total cost divided by Q, 250 00:12:47,462 --> 00:12:49,320 the quantity of the output. 251 00:12:49,320 --> 00:12:52,699 So average cost again -- total cost divided by Q. 252 00:12:52,699 --> 00:12:55,838 Adding the average cost curve to our graph 253 00:12:55,838 --> 00:12:58,088 will let us show profit on the graph. 254 00:12:58,088 --> 00:13:00,241 And that's what we want to do, and that's what we'll do 255 00:13:00,241 --> 00:13:01,399 in the next talk. 256 00:13:01,399 --> 00:13:02,806 Thanks. 257 00:13:03,206 --> 00:13:04,974 - [Narrator] If you want to test yourself, 258 00:13:04,974 --> 00:13:07,137 click, "Practice Questions," 259 00:13:07,137 --> 00:13:10,660 or if you're ready to move on, just click, "Next Video." 260 00:13:10,660 --> 00:13:15,673 ♪ [music] ♪