WEBVTT 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:03.000 ♪ [music] ♪ 00:00:08.640 --> 00:00:13.630 - [Alex Taborrok] In the next set of videos, 00:00:13.810 --> 00:00:17.010 we'll be looking at costs and how to describe a firm's costs. 00:00:17.010 --> 00:00:20.010 We'll also take a look at how a firm maximizes its profit. 00:00:20.010 --> 00:00:21.030 In this section, we're looking at 00:00:21.030 --> 00:00:24.030 profit maximization under competition. 00:00:24.030 --> 00:00:25.580 In a later section, we'll cover 00:00:25.580 --> 00:00:28.580 profit maximization under monopoly. 00:00:28.580 --> 00:00:35.840 Let's get going. 00:00:35.840 --> 00:00:36.840 So the key question that we want to answer is this, 00:00:36.840 --> 00:00:38.840 "How do firms behave?" 00:00:38.840 --> 00:00:40.130 And a guiding assumption is going to be that 00:00:40.130 --> 00:00:43.130 profit is the main motivation for a firm's actions. 00:00:43.130 --> 00:00:49.030 Now this is not literally 100% true. 00:00:49.210 --> 00:00:51.450 Nevertheless, for most firms, most of the time, 00:00:51.450 --> 00:00:54.450 profit is going to be a key motivator. 00:00:54.450 --> 00:00:57.580 For firms with a lot of competitors, competition alone is going 00:00:57.580 --> 00:01:00.580 to compel them to maximize profit 00:01:00.580 --> 00:01:01.680 because firms with a lot of competitors 00:01:01.680 --> 00:01:04.680 that don't maximize profit, 00:01:04.680 --> 00:01:06.510 they're going to be out of business pretty quickly. 00:01:06.510 --> 00:01:09.510 For firms with more market power or monopoly power -- 00:01:09.510 --> 00:01:11.255 they're not compelled to maximize profit. 00:01:11.255 --> 00:01:14.255 Nevertheless, the owners are still going to want profit. 00:01:14.255 --> 00:01:16.110 Who doesn't like profit? 00:01:16.110 --> 00:01:19.110 So for most firms, most of the time, 00:01:19.110 --> 00:01:22.930 this is going to be a good assumption. 00:01:22.930 --> 00:01:25.930 The key question then becomes, how? How do firms maximize profit? 00:01:25.930 --> 00:01:31.190 And the basic answer is by choosing price and quantity. 00:01:31.370 --> 00:01:35.820 By choosing what price is set and what quantity to set. 00:01:36.000 --> 00:01:40.060 Now some firms have more control over their price than others. 00:01:40.240 --> 00:01:44.420 In the next chapter, we're going to be looking at a monopoly, 00:01:44.420 --> 00:01:47.420 which can choose price and quantity with some restrictions. 00:01:47.420 --> 00:01:51.600 In this chapter, we're going to be looking at a competitive firm, 00:01:51.780 --> 00:01:54.510 which takes prices as given -- 00:01:54.510 --> 00:01:57.510 it doesn't have much control over its price -- 00:01:57.510 --> 00:01:58.880 we'll explain why in a moment, and it chooses quantities. 00:01:58.880 --> 00:02:01.880 So for a competitive firm, 00:02:01.880 --> 00:02:03.210 quantity is going to be the key choice 00:02:03.210 --> 00:02:06.210 which determines how much profit the firm makes. 00:02:06.210 --> 00:02:09.720 So we're focusing in this chapter on one type of firm, 00:02:09.900 --> 00:02:11.190 the competitive firm, the firm in a competitive market. 00:02:11.190 --> 00:02:14.190 Now what are the characteristics of this firm and market? 00:02:14.190 --> 00:02:16.040 Well, the product that the firm sells 00:02:16.040 --> 00:02:19.040 is similar across many different sellers. 00:02:19.040 --> 00:02:25.050 So think about this stripper oil well. 00:02:25.230 --> 00:02:27.210 This small oil well, it produces oil, 00:02:27.210 --> 00:02:28.210 which is pretty much the same 00:02:28.210 --> 00:02:30.210 as the oil produced by the well next door, 00:02:30.210 --> 00:02:31.990 which is pretty much the same 00:02:31.990 --> 00:02:34.990 as the oil produced by a well in Saudi Arabia, 00:02:34.990 --> 00:02:35.990 which is pretty much the same as the oil produced from Mexico 00:02:35.990 --> 00:02:38.903 or from the North Sea and so forth. 00:02:38.903 --> 00:02:43.528 Oil is pretty much the same across all over the world. 00:02:43.528 --> 00:02:49.243 Or think about wheat, or soy beans, or steel, or concrete, or paper. 00:02:49.243 --> 00:02:51.346 All of these are competitive markets -- 00:02:51.346 --> 00:02:54.346 the product is similar across sellers. 00:02:54.346 --> 00:02:55.674 In addition, in all of these markets 00:02:55.674 --> 00:02:58.674 there are many buyers and sellers 00:02:58.674 --> 00:03:00.592 and they're each small relative to the total market. 00:03:00.592 --> 00:03:04.791 So this stripper oil well produces only a small fraction 00:03:04.791 --> 00:03:08.920 of the world's total production of oil. 00:03:08.920 --> 00:03:11.920 A wheat farm, any given wheat farm 00:03:11.920 --> 00:03:17.530 produces only a small fraction of the total production of wheat. 00:03:17.530 --> 00:03:20.877 Alternatively, we may have the case 00:03:20.877 --> 00:03:23.877 where there are many potential sellers. 00:03:23.877 --> 00:03:25.152 So even if a firm, a grocery store in a small town, 00:03:25.152 --> 00:03:28.152 is the only grocery store in the small town, 00:03:28.152 --> 00:03:30.490 it's still in a competitive market, 00:03:30.490 --> 00:03:33.490 because if it were to raise its price, 00:03:33.490 --> 00:03:35.180 there are many potential sellers 00:03:35.180 --> 00:03:36.180 who in the long run could sell in that same town. 00:03:36.180 --> 00:03:38.180 So that's a competitive firm. 00:03:38.180 --> 00:03:41.650 It's producing a product which is similar across sellers, 00:03:41.830 --> 00:03:43.070 there are many buyers and sellers, 00:03:43.070 --> 00:03:46.070 each small relative to the total market, 00:03:46.070 --> 00:03:47.660 or there are many potential sellers. 00:03:47.660 --> 00:03:50.660 So let's suppose you own one of those stripper oil wells 00:03:50.660 --> 00:03:52.900 I showed in the previous slide. 00:03:52.900 --> 00:03:55.900 What price are you going to set? 00:03:55.900 --> 00:03:58.950 Well, fortunately your problem is going to be really easy 00:03:58.950 --> 00:03:59.950 because a firm in a competitive market 00:03:59.950 --> 00:04:01.950 has no control over its price. 00:04:01.950 --> 00:04:07.230 The market determines each firm's price. 00:04:07.410 --> 00:04:08.410 So let's take a look at the market for oil, 00:04:08.410 --> 00:04:11.250 and suppose that the world demand and supply 00:04:11.250 --> 00:04:15.450 are such that quantity demanded is equal 00:04:15.630 --> 00:04:20.530 to quantity supplied at a price of $52, 00:04:20.530 --> 00:04:23.530 at which point 82 million barrels of oil a day are bought and sold. 00:04:23.530 --> 00:04:27.020 Now let's think about the demand for your oil. 00:04:27.020 --> 00:04:30.020 The oil produce by your stripper oil well. 00:04:30.020 --> 00:04:33.830 The demand for your oil 00:04:33.830 --> 00:04:36.830 is going to be perfectly elastic at the market price. 00:04:36.830 --> 00:04:38.700 Now what does that mean? 00:04:38.700 --> 00:04:41.700 What that means is suppose that you tried to sell your oil 00:04:41.700 --> 00:04:45.320 at a price above the market price, 00:04:45.320 --> 00:04:46.320 let's say $55 per barrel. 00:04:46.320 --> 00:04:48.320 Are you going to sell any oil? No! 00:04:48.320 --> 00:04:56.590 Not even your mother thinks that the oil from your well 00:04:56.770 --> 00:05:02.490 is so special that she would be willing to pay more for it. 00:05:02.670 --> 00:05:05.380 She can get oil which is identical or virtually identical 00:05:05.380 --> 00:05:06.380 at a price of $50 per barrel, 00:05:06.380 --> 00:05:08.380 so she's unlikely to be want to pay $55. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:08.380 --> 00:05:13.910 And if your mother won't pay extra then nobody will. 00:05:14.090 --> 00:05:17.810 So if you try to set a price higher than the market price, 00:05:17.810 --> 00:05:20.810 you're not going to sell any oil at all, zero. 00:05:20.810 --> 00:05:25.010 Now you can sell as much oil as you want below the market price, 00:05:25.190 --> 00:05:28.510 but why would you want to do that? 00:05:28.510 --> 00:05:29.510 Because in fact you could sell 00:05:29.510 --> 00:05:31.510 all the oil you want at the market price. 00:05:31.510 --> 00:05:37.050 Now why can you sell all the oil that you want at the market price? 00:05:37.230 --> 00:05:41.730 Simply because your production, 00:05:41.730 --> 00:05:44.730 let's say 10 barrels a day, or 20 or 30, 00:05:44.730 --> 00:05:50.220 it's so small relative to the world production of 82 million barrels of oil per day, 00:05:50.400 --> 00:05:54.920 that however much you produce from your single well, that's not going to influence the 00:05:55.100 --> 00:05:59.980 price of oil. So you can double, triple your production, the price of oil is still 00:06:00.160 --> 00:06:08.270 going to $50 per barrel. So your only choice, then, to maximize 00:06:08.450 --> 00:06:12.750 profit is going to be a choice over quantity. You look at the market price, you 00:06:12.930 --> 00:06:18.110 see, "Oh, the price of oil today is $50 per barrel," and your decision is going to 00:06:18.290 --> 00:06:23.890 be how much do I want to produce at that price? Do I want to produce 2 barrels, 00:06:24.070 --> 00:06:28.740 3 barrels, 4, 10, 20, how much? That is going to be your key 00:06:28.920 --> 00:06:34.740 question, and that's the key question we'll take up next time when we also add into 00:06:34.920 --> 00:06:37.370 this diagram your costs. 00:06:39.400 --> 00:06:43.380 - [Announcer] If you want to test yourself, click "Practice Questions." Or, 00:06:43.560 --> 00:06:46.559 if you're ready to move on, just click, "Next Video." 00:06:46.559 --> 00:06:49.500 ♪ [music] ♪