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Firms' Strategy of Passing on Costs to Maintain Profit Share
A core assumption of the WS-PS model is that firms utilize their price-setting capabilities to preserve their profit share. When confronted with increased costs, such as higher taxes or more expensive imported energy, firms are expected to pass these on to consumers via higher prices. This mechanism leads to the prediction that the profit share remains constant, provided that the underlying competitive conditions in the market do not change.
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Economics
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.4 Inflation and unemployment - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
CORE Econ
Social Science
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Influence of Labor Productivity on Price-Setting
Assumption: Constant Labor Productivity in Price-Setting
Assumption: Constant Market Competition in Price-Setting
Figure 1.14: The Price-Setting (PS) Curve
Distribution of Output per Worker
Single-Firm Analysis as the Basis for the Price-Setting Curve
Assumption: Labor as the Sole Production Cost in the Price-Setting Model
Assumption: Identical Firms in the Price-Setting Model
Figure 1.22: Determinants of the Price-Setting Real Wage
Wage Share Formula in the Price-Setting Model
Definition of the Price-Setting Real Wage
Factors Causing a Downward Shift in the Price-Setting Curve
Firms' Strategy of Passing on Costs to Maintain Profit Share
Imagine an economy where a new government policy significantly weakens anti-monopoly regulations, leading to a decrease in the overall level of competition among firms. Assuming the output per worker remains unchanged, what is the direct consequence for the price-setting curve and the distribution of output?
In the standard model of price-setting behavior, an increase in the aggregate level of employment will cause profit-maximizing firms to offer a lower real wage.
Calculating the Price-Setting Real Wage
Rationale for the Shape of the Price-Setting Curve
Match each component of the price-setting model to its correct description, based on how firms determine the real wage.
Determinants of the Price-Setting Real Wage
The price-setting curve is represented as a horizontal line on a graph of real wage versus employment because the real wage resulting from firms' profit-maximizing decisions is assumed to be independent of the level of ____.
Arrange the following statements into the correct logical sequence that explains how firms' profit-maximizing behavior collectively determines the real wage in the economy.
A company determines that its profit-maximizing price for a product is 25% higher than its nominal wage cost per unit. If the output produced by a single worker is valued at $100, what is the real wage received by the worker, expressed in terms of the value of the output?
Evaluating a Business Strategy's Impact on Real Wages
Impact of Market Power on the Price-Setting (PS) Curve
Independence of the Price-Setting Real Wage from Employment Level
Determinants of the Price-Setting Curve's Height
Impact of Market Power on the Price-Setting Curve
Analyzing the Price-Setting Curve from a Single Firm's Perspective
Supply-Side Equilibrium in the WS-PS Model
The Marketing Department's Price-Setting Process
Learn After
Corporate Response to a New Tax
An economy is characterized by firms that have some control over the prices they charge for their products. The government unexpectedly imposes a new, significant tax on all imported raw materials used by these firms. Assuming the level of competition between firms remains unchanged, what is the most likely immediate outcome of this new tax?
Firm Response to Supply Cost Shocks
Consider an economy where firms have significant power to set their own prices. If the government imposes a new, permanent tax on all business inputs, the most likely long-term outcome is a reduction in the firms' average share of revenue kept as profit, assuming the level of competition between firms does not change.
Profit Share and Market Power
In an economy where firms generally set prices as a fixed markup over their production costs, a new nationwide labor agreement leads to a 10% increase in the nominal wages for all workers. Assuming the level of competition between firms and their desired profit margins remain unchanged, what is the most probable immediate outcome?
A company manufactures a product with a total production cost of $100 per unit. It sells the product for $120, achieving a $20 profit per unit. The company's pricing strategy is to maintain a constant profit margin, calculated as a percentage of its total costs. If a sudden increase in raw material expenses raises the total production cost by $10 per unit, what will the new selling price be if the company adheres to its pricing strategy?
An industry, where firms have historically maintained stable profit shares by adjusting prices, experiences two simultaneous changes. First, the cost of a universal key input rises for all producers. Second, deregulation allows several new competitors to enter the market. Given these two events, what is the most probable outcome for the average profit share of the established firms in this industry?
Consider two distinct industries within the same economy. Industry A is highly competitive, with numerous firms and low barriers to entry. Industry B is an oligopoly, dominated by a few large firms with substantial market power. Both industries are suddenly faced with an identical, significant increase in the cost of a key raw material. Assuming firms in both industries aim to protect their profit shares, what is the most probable outcome regarding their pricing strategies?
An economy consists of firms that set prices as a markup over their costs. Match each economic event with its most likely impact on firms' pricing and profit share.
UK Firms Widening Profit Margins Amidst Rising Costs (2020-2023)