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The Demand Curve as the Firm's Feasibility Frontier and Price-Quantity Trade-off
Constrained Choice Problem
Price-Quantity Profit Maximization as a Constrained Choice Problem Analogous to Consumer Choice
The firm's profit maximization problem is a type of constrained choice problem with a structure analogous to a consumer's utility maximization problem. In both scenarios, the decision is depicted graphically. The objective, whether it is profit for the firm or utility for the consumer, is represented by indifference curves, while the feasible set of outcomes is determined by a constraint. The optimal solution for both problems is located at the tangency point between an indifference curve and the constraint.
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Psychology
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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CORE Econ
Related
Profit Maximization at the Tangency of the Demand Curve and an Isoprofit Curve
Price-Quantity Profit Maximization as a Constrained Choice Problem Analogous to Consumer Choice
Feasible Set in a Firm's Price-Quantity Model
Firm's Profit Maximization as a Constrained Optimization Problem
The Feasible Set and Frontier for a Price-Taking Firm
Karim's Dilemma in the Work-Leisure Choice
Solution to a Constrained Choice Problem
Objective Function
Price-Quantity Profit Maximization as a Constrained Choice Problem Analogous to Consumer Choice
Learn After
Critiquing an Economic Analogy
A firm faces a downward-sloping curve representing its feasible set of price-quantity combinations. To maximize its objective, the firm seeks to reach the highest possible 'iso-objective' curve, where each such curve represents price-quantity combinations yielding a constant outcome. The optimal choice is the point where one of these 'iso-objective' curves is just tangent to the feasible set. Which of the following scenarios is most structurally analogous to this problem?
Consider two distinct economic decision problems described below. Match the component from the Firm's Decision (Scenario 1) with its structurally analogous component from the Consumer's Decision (Scenario 2).
Scenario 1 (Firm's Decision): A firm aims to achieve the highest possible profit. It faces a trade-off, as represented by a downward-sloping demand curve, which shows the feasible combinations of price and quantity it can sell. Its objective is visualized with a set of isoprofit curves, each representing combinations of price and quantity that yield a constant level of profit.
Scenario 2 (Consumer's Decision): A consumer aims to achieve the highest possible satisfaction (utility). They face a budget constraint, represented by a downward-sloping line, which shows the feasible combinations of two goods they can afford. Their objective is visualized with a set of indifference curves, each representing combinations of the two goods that yield a constant level of satisfaction.
Analogous Decision Problems in Economics
In the graphical representation of a decision-maker's constrained choice problem, the set of feasible outcomes for a firm (represented by its demand curve) is structurally analogous to a consumer's set of indifference curves.
Analyzing a Firm's Strategic Decision
Evaluating a Business Strategy Recommendation
A consumer choosing goods to maximize satisfaction given their income, and a firm choosing a price-quantity pair to maximize profit given market demand, can both be modeled as finding a point of tangency between an objective curve and a constraint. While the graphical solutions are analogous, what is a fundamental difference between the firm's constraint and the consumer's constraint?
Deconstructing the Profit Maximization Analogy
A firm's profit-maximizing combination of price and quantity is found at the tangency point between an isoprofit curve and the demand curve. At this point, the rate at which the firm must trade off quantity for price according to market conditions is exactly equal to the rate at which it would be willing to trade them off while keeping its profit level constant.