Consider again the New York taxi market, where demand is given by Q=7-5P, each taxi's cost is

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Consider again the New York taxi market, where demand is given by Q=7-5P, each taxi's cost is C 910+ 1.5Q, and ACmin $8 at 140 trips per week.

a. Suppose that, instead of limiting medallions, the commission charges a license fee to anyone wishing to drive a cab. With an average price of P $10, what is the maximum fee the commission could charge? How many taxis would serve the market?

b. Suppose the commission seeks to set the average price P to maximize total profit in the taxi industry. (It plans to set a license fee to tax all this profit away for itself.) Find the profit-maximizing price, number of trips, and number of taxis. How much profit does the industry earn? (Hint: Solve by applying MR MC. In finding MC, think about the extra cost of adding fully occupied taxis and express this on a cost-per trip basis.)

c. Now the city attempts to introduce competition into the taxi market. Instead of being regulated, fares will be determined by market conditions. The city will allow completely free entry into the taxi. market. In a perfectly competitive taxi market, what price will prevail? How many trips will be delivered by how many taxis?

d. Why might monopolistic competition provide a more realistic description of the free market in part c? Explain why average price might fall to, say, only $9.00. At P= $9.00, how many trips would a typical taxi make per week? (Are taxis underutilized?) How many taxis would operate? *12. Firm 1 is a member of a monopolistically competitive market. Its total cost function is C-900+60Q+9Q. The demand curve for the firm's differentiated product is given by P 660-1601-

a. Determine the firm's profit-maximizing output, price, and profit.

b. Attracted by potential profits, new firms enter the market. A typical firm's demand curve (say, firm 1) is given by P [1,224 16(Q+Qs+...+Q)-16Q], where n is the total number of firms. (If competitors' outputs or numbers increase, firm I's demand curve shifts inward.) The long-run equilibrium under monopolistic competition is claimed to consist of 10 firms, each producing 6 units at a price of $264. Is this claim correct? (Hint: For the typical firm, check the conditions MRMC and P = AC.)

c. Based on the cost function given, what would be the outcome if the market were perfectly competitive? (Presume market demand is P 1,224 160, where Qis total output.) Compare this outcome to the outcome in part b..

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Managerial Economics

ISBN: 9781119554912

5th Edition

Authors: William F. Samuelson, Stephen G. Marks

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