Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

Managerial Economics: A Case Study of Boeing and Airbus, Slides of Managerial Economics

Main topics in Managerial Economics are Demand, Elasticity, Supply, Markets, Efficiency and Cost, Monopoly, Pricing Policy, Strategic Thinking, Imperfect Market, Basic Macroeconomics, Modern Macroeconomic Issues I. This lecture includes: Introduction, Boeing and Airbus, New Economy, Microeconomics, Macroeconomics, Methodology, Competitive Market, Imperfect Market

Typology: Slides

2013/2014

Uploaded on 02/01/2014

akriti
akriti 🇮🇳

4.4

(123)

130 documents

1 / 20

Toggle sidebar

This page cannot be seen from the preview

Don't miss anything!

bg1
INTRODUCTION
docsity.com
pf3
pf4
pf5
pf8
pf9
pfa
pfd
pfe
pff
pf12
pf13
pf14

Partial preview of the text

Download Managerial Economics: A Case Study of Boeing and Airbus and more Slides Managerial Economics in PDF only on Docsity!

INTRODUCTION

MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS

Managerial economics: Science of directing scarce resources to manage more effectively  resources – financial, human, physical  management of customers, suppliers, competitors, internal organization  organizations – business, nonprofit, household

QUESTIONS OF MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS

RELATED TO THE CASE

 Why did Airbus corporatize in 2001? What are benefits from corporatization?  Why did Airbus Chief Commercial Officer John Leahy remark that A350 would “put a hole in Boeing’s Christmas stocking”?  How should Boeing respond?

HOW SHOULD BOEING RESPOND?

 Should Boeing proceed with its plan to develop the Dreamliner or should it alter its development plans?  Should Boeing respond by changing its pricing for its new jet??  How much would development and manufacturer cost, and how do these costs depend on sales volume?  Did Airbus respond correctly to Boeing’s Dreamliner?

NEW ECONOMY: INTERNET

 Managerial Economics also applies to the new economy.  Example: In pricing, Airlines use online auctions to segment their market between business and leisure travelers.  Example: In competitive strategy, Google competes fiercely with Yahoo.

OLD/NEW ECONOMY

 Differences between “New” and “Old” economy: _ role of network effects in demand **network effects – benefit/cost depends on total number of other users example: Internt _ importance of economies of scale and scope example: Information in Yahoo is scalable

EXAMPLE: INCREASE IN OIL PRICE

 Micro effect: vehicle users, electronic power generators  Macro effect: inflation, unemployment

METHODOLOGY

 economic model – concise description of behavior and outcomes  marginal vis-à-vis average  stock vis-à-vis flow  other things equal

ORGANIZATION

 Vertical boundaries – closer to or further from end user  Samsung Electronics – vertical boundaries longer than  Intel – specializes in semiconductors (upstream)  Motorola – specializes in mobile phones (downstream)

ORGANIZATION

 Horizontal boundaries – scale and scope of activities  Samsung Electronics – horizontal boundaries broader than  LG.Philips LCD – specializes in LCD  Motorola – specializes in mobile phones

MARKET: CONTINUED

 Competitive Markets  Market Power  Imperfect Markets

COMPETITIVE MARKET

 Benchmark for managerial economics  Extremely competitive market  many buyers and many sellers  no room for managerial strategizing  Achieves economic efficiency

MARKET POWER

 Definition – ability of a buyer or seller to influence market conditions  Seller with market power must manage  costs  pricing  advertising expenditure  R&D expenditure  strategy toward competitors

IMPERFECT MARKET

 Definition: where  one party directly conveys a benefit or cost to others, or  one party has better information than others