Consider a price-setting firm that cannot change the wage it pays its workers. If a recession causes a parallel leftward shift in the firm's linear demand curve, its profit-maximizing response will involve lowering its price, but its markup (the difference between price and marginal cost) will remain unchanged.
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Firm Strategy During a Demand Shock with Wage Rigidity
Firm's Response to Recession with Wage Rigidity
A firm that sets its own price is initially operating at its profit-maximizing equilibrium. An economic recession causes the demand curve for its product to shift inward (to the left). The firm's labor contracts prevent it from lowering the wage rate paid to its workers. To minimize its losses or re-establish a new profit-maximizing position, how will the firm most likely adjust its price and quantity produced?
Firm's Adjustment to a Demand Shock with Wage Rigidity
A price-setting firm operates with fixed wages for its employees. When a recession hits, the demand for its product falls. Arrange the following steps in the correct logical sequence to show how the firm adjusts to find its new profit-maximizing price and quantity.
Consider a price-setting firm that cannot change the wage it pays its workers. If a recession causes a parallel leftward shift in the firm's linear demand curve, its profit-maximizing response will involve lowering its price, but its markup (the difference between price and marginal cost) will remain unchanged.
A price-setting firm experiences a recession, causing its product demand curve to shift leftward from D1 to D2. The firm's labor contracts prevent it from lowering wages, so its marginal cost (MC) curve remains constant. The firm's initial profit-maximizing equilibrium is at point A, where D1 is tangent to isoprofit curve IC1. After the demand shock, the new equilibrium is at point B, where D2 is tangent to isoprofit curve IC2. Match each element from this scenario (Term) with its correct economic description (Definition).
A price-setting firm operates with fixed wages, which results in a constant marginal cost. During a recession, the demand for its product decreases, causing the demand curve to shift to the left. To find its new profit-maximizing output and price, the firm must identify the point where the new demand curve is tangent to the highest attainable ____.
Evaluating a Firm's Pricing Strategy in a Recession
Critiquing a Manager's Recession Strategy