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MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935
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Page 1: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

MANAGERIAL ECONOMICSBEEG5013

PREPARED FOR:

LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK

PREPARED BY:

NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934

NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935

Page 2: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

QUESTION 6The ultimate aim for manager/decision-

maker is ‘optimal level of production’. How do Marginal Utility, Marginal Product, Marginal

Revenue & Marginal Cost assist their decisions?

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INTRODUCTIONProfit maximization is the short run or long run process whereby

the price and output level that returns the greatest profit is determined by a firm.

Optimum level of production can be achieved when the production is at the maximum, most efficient and beyond which production is.

Marginal is defined as a small change in total revenue, consumer satisfaction or in total cost

Marginal utility as the gain from an increase or loss from a decrease in the consumption of a good or service.

Marginal product can be define as the change in total product per unit change in labour used.

Marginal revenue is the revenue a company gains in producing one additional unit of a good.

Marginal cost be defined as change in the total cost when the quantity produced has an increment by unit. According to Arthur Sullivan and Steven M. Sheffrin, it is the cost of producing one more unit of a good.

Page 4: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

DECISION MAKING

DECISION MAKING

MARGINAL UTILITY

MARGINAL PRODUCT

MARGINAL REVENUE

MARGINAL COST

Page 5: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

MARGINAL UTILITY

The theory of marginal utility was introduced by William Stanley Jevons (1835-1882)

MU –gain from an increase or loss from a decrease of a consumption of a good or

service Amount of happiness brought

by the next unit of a good Can be used to analyze

consumer behaviour

Page 6: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

• According to T.R.Jain & O.P.Khanna (Business Economics –for BIM), MU can be positive, negative or zero

• Positive MU means consumption of an additional item increases the total utility

• Negative MU – when the consumption of an additional item decreases the total utility

• Zero MU – consumption of extra units of items have no change on the total utility

• MU is positive, negative or zero – total utility is always positive

Page 7: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

• This table shows that, the amount of satisfaction decrease with each addition of apples.

• Shows the utility of each bundle, the total utility and the marginal utility of adding the apple into the bundle.

• Marginal utility (MU) is the amount of utility we gain by adding one more unit (increasing Quantity by 1).

• In short, marginal utility is the increment to total utility.• Through this table, if we increase Q from 3 to 4, TU increases

by 5, so the marginal utility equals 5 when Q is 3.

Page 8: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

MARGINAL PRODUCT• Marginal product is described as the additional output that is

produced by one more unit of an input. • It reflects how the last unit effect the total product. This

concept is important to analyse short-run production.• Marginal product can be calculated by dividing the change in

the total product by the change in the variable input. • In the calculation of marginal product, we must hold all

factors, with the exception of the increase in units of labour, constant. This means that only the units of labour change and other factors such as property, plants and equipment available for production remains the same.

• The formula is simplified as follows. • Average Product = Quantity / Labor• Marginal Product = Quantity / Labor = dQuantity / dLabor

Page 9: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

• Let’s refer to the simple example. • First, we need to calculate the change in total product. Assume that

by adding 2 additional worker will increase the population by 25 units. Thus, the total change in the product is 25 units.

• Next is to calculate the variable input. Continuing with the same example, we added two workers, so the change in variable input is 2.

• Step 3, is to calculate the change in total product by the change in the variable product. Continuing with the same example, 25/2 = 12.5. This figure represents the marginal product

• Example taken from McGuigan 10th Edition text book

Table: Labour, Marginal Product and Average Product example

Page 10: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

• When marginal greater average, it shows that marginal product is rising and lies above average product. This is consistent with an increasing average product. If we hire an additional worker in this early stage of production, then the marginal product of this worker is greater than that of the existing workers. This, as such, increases the average for all workers.

• When marginal equals to average, this is the point of intersection and also the peak of the average product curve.

• Once the marginal product curve moves below the average product curve, then the average product curve declines.

• When we hire additional worker in the middle of this range, the marginal product of this worker is less than that of the existing workers, which pulls down the overall average.

Page 11: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

The law of diminishing marginal productivity shows us that instead of

continuing to increase the same input, it might be better to stop at a certain level, increase a different input, or produce an

additional or different product or service to maximize profit.

Page 12: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

MARGINAL COSTMarginal cost is defined as the change in the total cost, that arises

when the quantity produced has an increment by unit. At each level of production and time period being considered,

marginal costs include all costs that vary with the level of production, whereas other costs that do not vary with production are considered fixed.

Marginal costs are variable costs consisting of labour and material costs, plus an estimated portion of fixed costs (such as administration overheads and selling expenses).

In companies where average costs are fairly constant, marginal cost is usually equal to average cost.

The concept of marginal cost is critically important in resource allocation because, for optimum results, management must concentrate its resources where the excess of marginal revenue over the marginal cost is maximum.

Also called choice cost, differential cost, or incremental cost.

Page 13: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

MC = Change in Total Cost Change in Quantity

While other cost-related terms are noteworthy, marginal cost is the most important.

The reason is that the increase marginal cost reflects the law of diminishing marginal returns

MR ↓ MC ↑MC ↑ P ↑The result is a +ve relation between P and Q supplied – law of

supply and supply curve.Marginal cost tends to be relatively high but declining for small

quantities of production. It then reaches a minimum and rises for larger quantities of output. When plotted in a graph, marginal cost traces out a U-shaped pattern. The reason for this shape is directly related to increase and decreasing marginal returns and especially the law of diminishing marginal returns

Page 14: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

• Marginal cost tends to be relatively high but declining for small quantities of production.

• It reaches a minimum and rises for larger quantities of output. When plotted in a graph, marginal cost traces out a U-shaped pattern.

• The reason for this shape is directly related to increase and decreasing marginal returns and especially the law of diminishing marginal returns.

Page 15: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

MARGINAL REVENUE• Marginal revenue helps to analyse the total potential benegits

and consequences associated with increased in production.• Additional revenue or benefit gained from producing

additional unit of product is measured by MR.• Marginal revenue can be defined as the increase in revenue

from selling one more unit of a product. The concept is important in microeconomics because a firm's optimal output (most profitable) is where its marginal revenue equals its marginal cost.

Page 16: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

• Marginal revenue indicates how much extra revenue a firm receives for selling an extra unit of output.

• Marginal revenue is the extra revenue generated when a firm sells one more unit of output.

• The marginal revenue curve is a horizontal, or perfectly elastic, line for a perfectly competitive market.

• For a monopoly, oligopoly, or monopolistically competitive firm, the marginal revenue curve is negatively sloped.

Marginal revenue curve

Page 17: MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS BEEG5013 PREPARED FOR: LT COL PROF DR ABDUL RAZAK CHIK PREPARED BY: NUR ASIAH MOHD SHARI 813934 NUR HADILA ISMAIL 813935.

CONCLUSION

• A combination of marginal cost and marginal revenue allow business owner to find the optimal level of output and price that will lead to maximum profit

Marginal analysis is very relevant tool for business owners

• If the price drops to low, company might want to consider raising prices because there is little to be gained from selling at a low MR, as the extra business does not bring in that much money

Tracking MR allows a business to make changes when demand warrants

• In balancing the costs and benefits of additional actions (whether to produce more, consume more etc) determining whether the benefits will exceed cost and increase utility

Marginal analysis is helpful to individuals and businesses…

• Weighing the costs and benefits can help government officials in determining whether allocating additional resources to a specific public program will generate extra benefits for the general public

Marginal analysis also beneficial to government and policy makers


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