Managerial Economics 11 Edition: by Mark Hirschey
Managerial Economics 11 Edition: by Mark Hirschey
Managerial Economics 11 Edition: by Mark Hirschey
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ECONOMICS 11 Edition
By
Mark Hirschey
Nature and Scope of
Managerial Economics
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
OVERVIEW
How Is Managerial Economics Useful?
Theory of the Firm
Profit Measurement
Why Do Profits Vary among Firms?
Role of Business in Society
Structure of this Text
Chapter 1
KEY CONCEPTS
managerial economics economic profit
theory of the firm profit margin
expected value return on stockholders'
maximization equity
value of the firm frictional profit theory
present value monopoly profit theory
optimize innovation profit theory
satisfice compensatory profit
business profit theory
normal rate of return
How Is Managerial Economics
Useful?
Evaluating Choice Alternatives
Identify ways to efficiently achieve goals.
Specify pricing and production strategies.
Provide production and marketing rules to
help maximize net profits.
Making the Best Decision
Managerial economics can be used to
efficiently meet management objectives.
Managerial economics can be used to
understand logic of company, consumer, and
government decisions.
Theory of the Firm
Expected Value Maximization
Owner-managers maximize short-run profits.
Primary goal is long-term expected value
maximization.
Constraints and the Theory of the Firm
Resource constraints.
Social constraints
Limitations of the Theory of the Firm
Alternative theory adds perspective.
Competition forces efficiency.
Hostile takeovers threaten inefficient managers.
Profit Measurement
Business Versus Economic Profit
Business (accounting) profit reflects
explicit costs and revenues.
Economic profit.
Profit
above a risk-adjusted normal return.
Considers cash and noncash items.