Optimality at the Point of Tangency
A company producing a unique product has determined that its profit-maximizing output level occurs where one of its isoprofit curves is tangent to the market demand curve. Explain why producing at a different point on the demand curve, where the demand curve crosses an isoprofit curve, would not be the profit-maximizing choice.
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CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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General Model of a Firm with Cost and Demand Functions
Influence of Variable Unit Costs on a Firm's Price and Output Decisions
The Manager's Profit-Maximizing Choice as a Balance of Price-Quantity Trade-offs
Differentiated Products Lead to Downward-Sloping Demand Curves
Price Determination through Firm-Consumer Power Dynamics
Pricing Strategy for a Specialty Bakery
A company that sells a unique, patented software program wants to find the price and quantity that will maximize its profit. The company knows its cost structure, which allows it to map out different 'isoprofit curves' (combinations of price and quantity that yield the same total profit). It also faces a downward-sloping demand curve, which represents the constraint of what customers are willing to pay. How does the firm determine its profit-maximizing choice?
Analyzing Pricing Trade-offs for a Differentiated Product
To maximize its profit, a company selling a unique product should determine the price and quantity combination that corresponds to its highest possible isoprofit curve, and then set that price, regardless of whether customers are actually willing to purchase that quantity at that price.
A firm producing a differentiated good must decide on a price and quantity to maximize its profit. This decision involves balancing what the firm wants (its preferences for profit) with what is possible (its market constraints). Match each component of the firm's decision-making model to its correct description.
Optimality at the Point of Tangency
A firm selling a differentiated product faces the decision shown in the diagram. The downward-sloping line is the demand curve, which represents the firm's feasible set of price and quantity combinations. The curved lines are isoprofit curves; curves further from the origin represent higher levels of profit.
[Image Description: A graph with Quantity on the x-axis and Price on the y-axis. A downward-sloping demand curve is shown. There are several convex isoprofit curves.
- Point A is on the demand curve, but on a lower isoprofit curve.
- Point B is where the demand curve is tangent to the highest attainable isoprofit curve.
- Point C is on an even higher isoprofit curve, but is above the demand curve (infeasible).
- Point D is below the demand curve and on a low isoprofit curve.]
Based on the diagram, which point represents the combination of price and quantity that maximizes the firm's profit?
Evaluating Competing Pricing Strategies
A company sells a differentiated product and is trying to maximize its profit. It is currently producing at a price and quantity combination where its isoprofit curve intersects the demand curve. At this specific point, the isoprofit curve is steeper than the demand curve. What should the company do to increase its profit?
A firm with a differentiated product wants to determine the profit-maximizing price and quantity. Arrange the following steps in the logical order the firm would follow to solve this constrained choice problem.