Question
Because cooking soufflés is incredibly difficult, the supply of soufflés in a small French town is controlled by two bakers, Gaston and Pierre. The demand for soufflés is given by P = 30 – 2Q, and the marginal and average
Read More
Question
Because cooking soufflés is incredibly difficult, the supply of soufflés in a small French town is controlled by two bakers, Gaston and Pierre. The demand for soufflés is given by P = 30 – 2Q, and the marginal and average
Read More
Question
A firm with market power faces the demand function q = 4,000 – 40P. The firm’s total cost function is TC(q) = 10q + 0.001q2 + 1,000.
a. If the firm behaves as a single-price monopoly, identify the firm’s
Question
Owners of a movie theater have determined that the elasticity of demand for movie tickets equals -2.0 for students and -1.5 for adults.
a. If the owners of the theater decide to segment the market, who should be charged
Question
In Problem 5, you found the profit that a promoter of a major college basketball tournament would earn if he were to segment the market into adults and students. Suppose that the promoter’s CEO decides that price discrimination presents a
Read More
Question
Promoters of a major college basketball tournament estimate that the demand for tickets on the part of adults is given by Qad = 5,000 – 10P, and that the demand for tickets on the part of students is given by
Read More
Question
Consider the problem faced by the Butterfinger seller in Problem 3.
a. Assume that the seller is able to prevent resale between customers. In the real world, why is the seller still unlikely to be able to perfectly price
Question
There are seven consumers, each of whom is hungry for exactly one Butterfinger. The consumers’ maximum willingness to pay is given in the table on the right:
Consumer (age, gender) Maximum Willingness to Pay
Marge (34, female)…………………………….. $2
Question
a. Determine the profit-maximizing price and quantity that SmacFone would like to charge each type of consumer, and show it on the appropriate graph. Then, determine the potential profit that SmacFone could generate from each segment.
Because SmacFone cannot
Question
a. If Elaine is an ordinary monopolist, what price should she charge for cupcakes? How many will each customer order? How much profit will Elaine earn? How much consumer surplus will the buyer get?
b. Suppose that Elaine decides
Question
a. If you are a local farmer who can produce dates and eggs for free, what is the optimal price for dates and eggs if you price them individually? How much profit will you generate?
b. If you bundle