Description
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- Half Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Brief Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- 1.1 Managerial Decision Making
- Profit
- Trade‐Offs
- Other Decision Makers
- Strategy
- 1.2 Economic Models
- Mini‐Case Using an Income Threshold Model in China
- Simplifying Assumptions
- Testing Theories
- Positive and Normative Statements
- Summary
- Chapter 2 Supply and Demand
- Managerial Problem Carbon Taxes
- 2.1 Demand
- The Demand Curve
- The Demand Function
- Using Calculus Deriving the Slope of a Demand Curve
- Summing Demand Curves
- Mini‐Case Summing Corn Demand Curves
- 2.2 Supply
- The Supply Curve
- The Supply Function
- Summing Supply Curves
- 2.3 Market Equilibrium
- Using a Graph to Determine the Equilibrium
- Using Algebra to Determine the Equilibrium
- Forces That Drive the Market to Equilibrium
- 2.4 Shocks to the Equilibrium
- Effects of a Shift in the Demand Curve
- Q&A 2.1
- Effects of a Shift in the Supply Curve
- Managerial Implication Taking Advantage of Future Shocks
- Effects of Shifts in both Supply and Demand Curves
- Mini‐Case Genetically Modified Foods
- Q&A 2.2
- 2.5 Effects of Government Interventions
- Policies That Shift Curves
- Mini‐Case Occupational Licensing
- Price Controls
- Mini‐Case Venezuelan Price Ceilings and Shortages
- Sales Taxes
- Q&A 2.3
- Managerial Implication Cost Pass‐Through
- 2.6 When to Use the Supply‐and‐Demand Model
- Managerial Solution Carbon Taxes
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 3 Empirical Methods for Demand Analysis
- Managerial Problem Estimating the Effect of an iTunes Price Change
- 3.1 Elasticity
- The Price Elasticity of Demand
- Managerial Implication Changing Prices to Calculate an Arc Elasticity
- Q&A 3.1
- Mini‐Case Demand Elasticities for Google Play and Apple Apps
- Using Calculus The Point Elasticity of Demand
- Elasticity Along the Demand Curve
- Q&A 3.2
- Other Demand Elasticities
- Mini‐Case Anti‐Smoking Policies May Reduce Drunk Driving
- Demand Elasticities over Time
- Other Elasticities
- Estimating Demand Elasticities
- 3.2 Regression Analysis
- A Demand Function Example
- Mini‐Case The Portland Fish Exchange
- Multivariate Regression
- Q&A 3.3
- Goodness of Fit and the R2 Statistic
- Managerial Implication Focus Groups
- 3.3 Properties and Statistical Significance of ‐Estimated Coefficients
- Repeated Samples
- Desirable Properties for Estimated Coefficients
- A Focus Group Example
- Confidence Intervals
- Hypothesis Testing and Statistical Significance
- 3.4 Regression Specification
- Selecting Explanatory Variables
- Mini‐Case Determinants of CEO Compensation
- Q&A 3.4
- Functional Form
- Managerial Implication Experiments
- 3.5 Forecasting
- Extrapolation
- Theory‐Based Econometric Forecasting
- Managerial Solution Estimating the Effect of an iTunes Price Change
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 4 Consumer Choice
- Managerial Problem Paying Employees to Relocate
- 4.1 Consumer Preferences
- Properties of Consumer Preferences
- Mini‐Case You Can’t Have Too Much Money
- Preference Maps
- 4.2 Utility
- Utility Functions
- Ordinal and Cardinal Utility
- Marginal Utility
- Using Calculus Marginal Utility
- Marginal Rates of Substitution
- 4.3 The Budget Constraint
- Slope of the Budget Line
- Using Calculus The Marginal Rate of Transformation
- Effects of a Change in Price on the ‐Opportunity Set
- Effects of a Change in Income on the ‐Opportunity Set
- Q&A 4.1
- Mini‐Case Rationing
- Q&A 4.2
- 4.4 Constrained Consumer Choice
- The Consumer’s Optimal Bundle
- Q&A 4.3
- Mini‐Case Why Americans Buy More E‐Books Than Do Germans
- Q&A 4.4
- Promotions
- Managerial Implication Designing Promotions
- 4.5 Deriving Demand Curves
- 4.6 Behavioral Economics
- Tests of Transitivity
- Endowment Effects
- Mini‐Case How You Ask the Question Matters
- Salience
- Managerial Implication Simplifying ‐Consumer Choices
- Managerial Solution Paying Employees to Relocate
- Summary
- Questions
- Appendix 4A The Marginal Rate of Substitution
- Appendix 4B The Consumer Optimum
- Chapter 5 Production
- Managerial Problem Labor Productivity During Recessions
- 5.1 Production Functions
- 5.2 Short‐Run Production
- The Total Product Function
- The Marginal Product of Labor
- Using Calculus Calculating the Marginal Product of Labor
- Q&A 5.1
- The Average Product of Labor
- Graphing the Product Curves
- The Law of Diminishing Marginal Returns
- Mini‐Case Malthus and the Green Revolution
- 5.3 Long‐Run Production
- Isoquants
- Mini‐Case A Semiconductor Isoquant
- Substituting Inputs
- Q&A 5.2
- Using Calculus Cobb‐Douglas Marginal Products
- 5.4 Returns to Scale
- Constant, Increasing, and Decreasing Returns to Scale
- Q&A 5.3
- Mini‐Case Returns to Scale for Crocs
- Varying Returns to Scale
- Managerial Implication Small Is Beautiful
- 5.5 Innovation
- Process Innovation
- Mini‐Case Robots and the Food You Eat
- Organizational Innovation
- Mini‐Case A Good Boss Raises Productivity
- Managerial Solution Labor Productivity During Recessions
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 6 Costs
- Managerial Problem Technology Choice at Home Versus Abroad
- 6.1 The Nature of Costs
- Opportunity Costs
- Mini‐Case The Opportunity Cost of an MBA
- Q&A 6.1
- Costs of Durable Inputs
- Sunk Costs
- Managerial Implication Ignoring Sunk Costs
- 6.2 Short‐Run Costs
- Common Measures of Cost
- Using Calculus Calculating Marginal Cost
- Cost Curves
- Production Functions and the Shapes of Cost Curves
- Using Calculus Calculating Cost Curves
- Short‐Run Cost Summary
- 6.3 Long‐Run Costs
- Mini‐Case Short Run Versus Long Run in the Sharing Economy
- Input Choice
- Managerial Implication Cost Minimization by Trial and Error
- Mini‐Case The Internet and Outsourcing
- Q&A 6.2
- The Shapes of Long‐Run Cost Curves
- Mini‐Case Economies of Scale at Google
- Q&A 6.3
- Long‐Run Average Cost as the Envelope of Short‐Run Average Cost Curves
- Mini‐Case Long‐Run Cost Curves in Beer Manufacturing and Oil Pipelines
- 6.4 The Learning Curve
- Mini‐Case Learning by Drilling
- 6.5 The Costs of Producing Multiple Goods
- Mini‐Case Medical Economies of Scope
- Managerial Solution Technology Choice at Home Versus Abroad
- Summary
- Questions
- Appendix 6A Long‐Run Cost Minimization
- Chapter 7 Firm Organization and Market Structure
- Managerial Problem Clawing Back Bonuses
- 7.1 Ownership and Governance of Firms
- Private, Public, and Nonprofit Firms
- Mini‐Case Chinese State‐Owned Enterprises
- Ownership of For‐Profit Firms
- Firm Governance
- 7.2 Profit Maximization
- Profit
- Two Steps to Maximizing Profit
- Using Calculus Maximizing Profit
- Q&A 7.1
- Managerial Implication Marginal Decision Making
- Profit over Time
- Managerial Implication Stock Prices Versus Profit
- 7.3 Owners’ Versus Managers’ Objectives
- Consistent Objectives
- Q&A 7.2
- Conflicting Objectives
- Q&A 7.3
- Mini‐Case Company Jets
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- Monitoring and Controlling a Manager’s Actions
- Takeovers and the Market for Corporate Control
- Mini‐Case The Yahoo! Poison Pill
- 7.4 The Make or Buy Decision
- Stages of Production
- Vertical Integration
- Profitability and the Supply Chain Decision
- Mini‐Case Vertical Integration at Zara
- Mini‐Case Aluminum
- Market Size and the Life Cycle of a Firm
- 7.5 Market Structure
- The Four Main Market Structures
- Comparison of Market Structures
- Road Map to the Rest of the Book
- Managerial Solution Clawing Back Bonuses
- Summary
- Questions
- Appendix 7A Interest Rates, Present Value, and Future Value
- Chapter 8 Competitive Firms and Markets
- Managerial Problem The Rising Cost of Keeping On Truckin’
- 8.1 Perfect Competition
- Characteristics of a Perfectly Competitive Market
- Deviations from Perfect Competition
- 8.2 Competition in the Short Run
- How Much to Produce
- Q&A 8.1
- Using Calculus Profit Maximization with a Specific Tax
- Whether to Produce
- Mini‐Case Fracking and Shutdowns
- Managerial Implication Sunk Costs and the Shutdown Decision
- The Short‐Run Firm Supply Curve
- The Short‐Run Market Supply Curve
- Short‐Run Competitive Equilibrium
- 8.3 Competition in the Long Run
- Long‐Run Competitive Profit Maximization
- The Long‐Run Firm Supply Curve
- Mini‐Case The Size of Ethanol Processing Plants
- The Long‐Run Market Supply Curve
- Mini‐Case Entry and Exit of Solar Power Firms
- Mini‐Case An Upward‐Sloping Long‐Run Supply Curve for Cotton
- Long‐Run Competitive Equilibrium
- Q&A 8.2
- Zero Long‐Run Profit with Free Entry
- 8.4 Competition Maximizes Economic Well‐Being
- Consumer Surplus
- Managerial Implication Willingness to Pay on eBay
- Producer Surplus
- Q&A 8.3
- Q&A 8.4
- Competition Maximizes Total Surplus
- Mini‐Case The Deadweight Loss of Christmas Presents
- Effects of Government Intervention
- Q&A 8.5
- Managerial Solution The Rising Cost of Keeping On Truckin’
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 9 Monopoly
- Managerial Problem Brand‐Name and Generic Drugs
- 9.1 Monopoly Profit Maximization
- Marginal Revenue
- Using Calculus Deriving a Monopoly’s Marginal Revenue Function
- Q&A 9.1
- Choosing Price or Quantity
- Two Steps to Maximizing Profit
- Using Calculus Solving for the Profit‐Maximizing Output
- Effects of a Shift of the Demand Curve
- 9.2 Market Power
- Market Power and the Shape of the Demand Curve
- Managerial Implication Checking Whether the Firm Is Maximizing Profit
- Mini‐Case Cable Cars and Profit Maximization
- The Lerner Index
- Mini‐Case Apple’s iPad
- Q&A 9.2
- Sources of Market Power
- 9.3 Market Failure Due to Monopoly Pricing
- Q&A 9.3
- 9.4 Causes of Monopoly
- Cost‐Based Monopoly
- Q&A 9.4
- Government Creation of Monopoly
- Mini‐Case The Canadian Medical Marijuana Market
- Mini‐Case Botox
- 9.5 Advertising
- Deciding Whether to Advertise
- How Much to Advertise
- Using Calculus Optimal Advertising
- Q&A 9.5
- Mini‐Case Super Bowl Commercials
- 9.6 Networks, Dynamics, and Behavioral ‐Economics
- Network Externalities
- Network Externalities and Behavioral Economics
- Network Externalities as an Explanation for Monopolies
- Mini‐Case Critical Mass and eBay
- Managerial Implication Introductory Prices
- Managerial Solution Brand‐Name and Generic Drugs
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 10 Pricing with Market Power
- Managerial Problem Sale Prices
- 10.1 Conditions for Price Discrimination
- Why Price Discrimination Pays
- Mini‐Case Disneyland Pricing
- Which Firms Can Price Discriminate
- Managerial Implication Preventing Resale
- Mini‐Case Preventing Resale of Designer Bags
- Not All Price Differences Are Price Discrimination
- Types of Price Discrimination
- 10.2 Perfect Price Discrimination
- How a Firm Perfectly Price Discriminates
- Perfect Price Discrimination Is Efficient but Harms Some Consumers
- Mini‐Case Botox Revisited
- Q&A 10.1
- Individual Price Discrimination
- Mini‐Case Google Uses Bidding for Ads to Price Discriminate
- 10.3 Group Price Discrimination
- Group Price Discrimination with Two Groups
- Using Calculus Maximizing Profit for a Group Discriminating Monopoly
- Q&A 10.2
- Identifying Groups
- Managerial Implication Discounts
- Effects of Group Price Discrimination on Total Surplus
- 10.4 Nonlinear Price Discrimination
- 10.5 Two‐Part Pricing
- Two‐Part Pricing with Identical Consumers
- Two‐Part Pricing with Differing Consumers
- Mini‐Case Available for a Song
- 10.6 Bundling
- Pure Bundling
- Mixed Bundling
- Q&A 10.3
- Requirement Tie‐In Sales
- Managerial Implication Ties That Bind
- 10.7 Peak‐Load Pricing
- Mini‐Case Downhill Pricing
- Managerial Solution Sale Prices
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 11 Oligopoly and Monopolistic Competition
- Managerial Problem Gaining an Edge from Government Aircraft Subsidies
- 11.1 Cartels
- Why Cartels Succeed or Fail
- Mini‐Case The Apple‐Google‐Intel‐Adobe‐Intuit‐Lucasfilm‐Pixar Wage Cartel
- Maintaining Cartels
- Mini‐Case Cheating on the Maple Syrup Cartel
- 11.2 Cournot Oligopoly
- Airlines
- Using Calculus Deriving a Cournot Firm’s Marginal Revenue
- The Number of Firms
- Mini‐Case Mobile Phone Number Portability
- Nonidentical Firms
- Q&A 11.1
- Q&A 11.2
- Managerial Implication Differentiating a Product Through Marketing
- Mergers
- Mini‐Case Acquiring Versus Merging
- 11.3 Bertrand Oligopoly
- Identical Products
- Differentiated Products
- 11.4 Monopolistic Competition
- Managerial Implication Managing in the Monopolistically Competitive Food Truck Market
- Equilibrium
- Q&A 11.3
- Profitable Monopolistically Competitive Firms
- Mini‐Case Zoning Laws as a Barrier to Entry by Hotel Chains
- Managerial Solution Gaining an Edge from Government Aircraft Subsidies
- Summary
- Questions
- Appendix 11A Cournot Oligopoly with Many Firms
- Appendix 11B Nash‐Bertrand Equilibrium
- Chapter 12 Game Theory and Business Strategy
- Managerial Problem Dying to Work
- 12.1 Oligopoly Games
- Dominant Strategies
- Best Responses
- Failure to Maximize Joint Profits
- Mini‐Case Strategic Advertising
- Q&A 12.1
- 12.2 Types of Nash Equilibria
- Multiple Equilibria
- Mini‐Case Timing Radio Ads
- Mixed‐Strategy Equilibria
- Mini‐Case Competing E‐Book Formats
- Q&A 12.2
- 12.3 Information and Rationality
- Incomplete Information
- Managerial Implication Solving Coordination Problems
- Rationality
- Managerial Implication Using Game Theory to Make Business Decisions
- 12.4 Bargaining
- Bargaining Games
- The Nash Bargaining Solution
- Q&A 12.3
- Using Calculus Maximizing the Nash Product
- Mini‐Case Nash Bargaining over Coffee
- Inefficiency in Bargaining
- 12.5 Auctions
- Elements of Auctions
- Bidding Strategies in Private‐Value Auctions
- Mini‐Case Experienced Bidders
- The Winner’s Curse
- Managerial Implication Auction Design
- Managerial Solution Dying to Work
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 13 Strategies over Time
- Managerial Problem Intel and AMD’s Advertising Strategies
- 13.1 Repeated Games
- Strategies and Actions in Dynamic Games
- Cooperation in a Repeated Prisoner’s Dilemma Game
- Mini‐Case Tit‐for‐Tat Strategies in Trench Warfare
- Implicit Versus Explicit Collusion
- Finitely Repeated Games
- 13.2 Sequential Games
- Stackelberg Oligopoly
- Credible Threats
- Q&A 13.1
- 13.3 Deterring Entry
- Exclusion Contracts
- Mini‐Case Pay‐for‐Delay Agreements
- Limit Pricing
- Mini‐Case Pfizer Uses Limit Pricing to Slow Entry
- Q&A 13.2
- Entry Deterrence in a Repeated Game
- 13.4 Cost and Innovation Strategies
- Investing to Lower Marginal Cost
- Learning by Doing
- Raising Rivals’ Costs
- Q&A 13.3
- Mini‐Case Auto Union Negotiations
- 13.5 Disadvantages of Moving First
- The Holdup Problem
- Mini‐Case Venezuelan Nationalization
- Managerial Implication Avoiding Holdups
- Too‐Early Product Innovation
- Mini‐Case Advantages and Disadvantages of Moving First
- 13.6 Behavioral Game Theory
- Ultimatum Games
- Mini‐Case GM’s Ultimatum
- Levels of Reasoning
- Managerial Implication Taking Advantage of ‐Limited Strategic Thinking
- Managerial Solution Intel and AMD’s ‐Advertising Strategies
- Summary
- Questions
- Appendix 13A A Mathematical Approach to Stackelberg Oligopoly
- Chapter 14 Managerial Decision Making Under Uncertainty
- Managerial Problem BP’s Risk and Limited Liability
- 14.1 Assessing Risk
- Probability
- Expected Value
- Q&A 14.1
- Variance and Standard Deviation
- Managerial Implication Summarizing Risk
- 14.2 Attitudes Toward Risk
- Expected Utility
- Risk Aversion
- Q&A 14.2
- Using Calculus Diminishing Marginal Utility of Wealth
- Mini‐Case Stocks’ Risk Premium
- Risk Neutrality
- Risk Preference
- Mini‐Case Gambling
- Risk Attitudes of Managers
- 14.3 Reducing Risk
- Obtaining Information
- Mini‐Case Bond Ratings
- Diversification
- Managerial Implication Diversify Your Savings
- Insurance
- Q&A 14.3
- Mini‐Case Limited Insurance for Natural Disasters
- 14.4 Investing Under Uncertainty
- Risk‐Neutral Investing
- Risk‐Averse Investing
- Q&A 14.4
- 14.5 Behavioral Economics and Uncertainty
- Biased Assessment of Probabilities
- Mini‐Case Biased Estimates
- Violations of Expected Utility Theory
- Prospect Theory
- Managerial Implication Loss Aversion Contracts
- Managerial Solution BP’s Risk and Limited Liability
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 15 Asymmetric Information
- Managerial Problem Limiting Managerial Incentives
- 15.1 Adverse Selection
- Adverse Selection in Insurance Markets
- Products of Unknown Quality
- Q&A 15.1
- Q&A 15.2
- Mini‐Case Reducing Consumers’ Information
- 15.2 Reducing Adverse Selection
- Restricting Opportunistic Behavior
- Equalizing Information
- Managerial Implication Using Brand Names and Warranties as Signals
- Mini‐Case Discounts for Data
- Mini‐Case Adverse Selection and Remanufactured Goods
- 15.3 Moral Hazard
- Moral Hazard in Insurance Markets
- Moral Hazard in Principal‐Agent Relationships
- Mini‐Case Selfless or Selfish Doctors?
- Q&A 15.3
- 15.4 Using Contracts to Reduce Moral Hazard
- Fixed‐Fee Contracts
- Contingent Contracts
- Mini‐Case Sing for Your Supper
- Q&A 15.4
- 15.5 Using Monitoring to Reduce Moral Hazard
- Hostages
- Mini‐Case Capping Oil and Gas Bankruptcies
- Managerial Implication Efficiency Wages
- After‐the‐Fact Monitoring
- Managerial Solution Limiting Managerial Incentives
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 16 Government and Business
- Managerial Problem Licensing Inventions
- 16.1 Market Failure and Government Policy
- The Pareto Principle
- Cost‐Benefit Analysis
- 16.2 Regulation of Imperfectly Competitive Markets
- Regulating to Correct a Market Failure
- Q&A 16.1
- Mini‐Case Natural Gas Regulation
- Regulatory Capture
- Applying the Cost‐Benefit Principle to Regulation
- 16.3 Antitrust Law and Competition Policy
- Mergers
- Mini‐Case Are Monopoly Mergers Harmful?
- Predatory Actions
- Vertical Relationships
- Mini‐Case Piping Up about Exclusive Dealing
- 16.4 Externalities
- The Inefficiency of Competition with ‐Externalities
- Reducing Externalities
- Mini‐Case Pulp and Paper Mill Pollution and Regulation
- Q&A 16.2
- Mini‐Case Why Tax Drivers
- The Coase Theorem
- Managerial Implication Buying a Town
- 16.5 Open‐Access, Club, and Public Goods
- Open‐Access Common Property
- Mini‐Case Spam
- Club Goods
- Mini‐Case Piracy
- Public Goods
- 16.6 Intellectual Property
- Patents
- Q&A 16.3
- Managerial Implication Trade Secrets
- Copyright Protection
- Managerial Solution Licensing Inventions
- Summary
- Questions
- Chapter 17 Global Business
- Managerial Problem Responding to Exchange Rates
- 17.1 Reasons for International Trade
- Comparative Advantage
- Q&A 17.1
- Managerial Implication Brian May’s Comparative Advantage
- Increasing Returns to Scale
- Mini‐Case Barbie Doll Varieties
- 17.2 Exchange Rates
- Determining the Exchange Rate
- Exchange Rates and the Pattern of Trade
- Managerial Implication Limiting Arbitrage and Gray Markets
- Managing Exchange Rate Risk
- 17.3 International Trade Policies
- Quotas and Tariffs in Competitive Markets
- Mini‐Case Russian Food Ban
- Q&A 17.2
- Rent Seeking
- Noncompetitive Reasons for Trade Policy
- Mini‐Case Dumping and Countervailing Duties for Solar Panels
- Trade Liberalization and the World Trading System
- Trade Liberalization Problems
- 17.4 Multinational Enterprises
- Becoming a Multinational
- Mini‐Case What’s an American Car?
- International Transfer Pricing
- Q&A 17.3
- Mini‐Case Profit Repatriation
- 17.5 Outsourcing
- Managerial Solution Responding to Exchange Rates
- Summary
- Questions
- Answers to Selected Questions
- Definitions
- References
- Sources for Managerial Problems, Mini‐Cases, and Managerial Implications
- Index
- Credits