ISBN-13: 9780471486749 / Angielski / Miękka / 2004 / 594 str.
ISBN-13: 9780471486749 / Angielski / Miękka / 2004 / 594 str.
Written primarily for students taking courses in managerial economics in Britain and Europe, The Business Economics and Managerial Decision Making analyses the growth and development of privately owned firms and also the decisions made by firms operating in both private and public sector enterprises. Coverage is clear and concise, and avoids specialist techniques such as linear programming, which in a European context tend to belong in courses dealing with operations research. The book also avoids straying into areas of industrial economics, instead retaining a sharp focus on relevant issues such as the theory of the firm and the varying objectives that may be adopted in practice. Key sections are supported by case studies of real firms and actual decisions made.
Preface.
Acknowledgements.
I. Corporate Governance and Business Objectives.
1. Ownership control and corporate governance.
Introduction.
Ownership structures.
Patterns of shareholding.
Classifying firms as owner or management–controlled.
Case Study 1.1 Manchester United owner or managerially controlled?
Systems of corporate control.
Constraints on managerial discretion.
Improving corporate governance in the UK.
Case Study 1.2 Ownership and governance structures in UK retailing.
Case Study 1.3 Corporate governance in English football.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
2. Business objectives and theories of the firm.
Introduction.
Profit maximization.
Sales revenue maximization.
Williamson s Managerial Utility Model.
Behavioural models.
Comparison of behavioural and traditional theories.
Corporate social responsibility.
Owners, managers and performance.
Case Study 2.1 Objectives in company annual reports.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
3. Risk and uncertainty.
Introduction.
Risk versus uncertainty.
Sources of uncertainty.
Incorporating time and uncertainty into decision making.
Decision trees.
Attitudes to risk and uncertainty.
Case Study 3.1 UK Lottery and risk–loving behaviour.
Indifference curve analysis of risk and return.
Decision making and attitudes to risk.
Limiting the impact of uncertainty.
Case Study 3.2 Uncertainty and business decisions: buses and pharmaceuticals.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
II Knowing the Market.
4. Consumer behaviour.
Introduction.
Indifference curve analysis.
Characteristics approach to consumer behaviour.
Case Study 4.1 The characteristics approach and the provision of airline services.
Hedonic prices.
Case Study 4.2 Estimating and using hedonic prices: cars and wine.
Behavioural approach to consumer behaviour.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
5. Demand analysis.
Introduction.
The demand function.
The demand curve.
Market demand.
Demand and revenue.
Elasticity and revenue.
Own price elasticity.
Own price elasticity and marginal revenue.
Case Study 5.1 Own price elasticity and rail travel pricing.
Factors affecting the own price elasticity of demand.
Income elasticity.
Advertising elasticity of demand.
Cross elasticity of demand.
Case Study 5.2 Estimating elasticities for petrol.
Demand elasticities and business.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
6. Estimation of demand functions.
Introduction.
Estimating demand functions.
Interviews and survey methods.
Questionnaires.
Consumer experiments.
Market studies.
Statistical analysis.
Pitfalls using regression analysis.
The economic verification of regression models.
Statistical verification of regression models.
Econometric verification of the regression estimates.
Case Study 6.1 The demand for beer, wine and spirits.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
III. Understanding Production and Costs.
7. Production and efficiency.
Introduction.
Production functions.
Isoquant analysis.
Optimal choice of factors.
Technical progress and the shape of isoquants.
Laws of production.
Total, average and marginal product curves.
Empirical production functions.
Case Study 7.1 Production function for a retail chain.
Measuring productivity.
Relative measures of e ciency.
Case Study 7.2 Measuring relative efficiency.
Productivity differences.
Case Study 7.3 Explaining productivity differences in the biscuit industry.
Country differences in productivity.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
8. Costs.
Introduction.
Short–run cost curves.
Long–run cost curves.
Costs and the multi–product firm.
Economics versus accounting cost concepts.
Empirical cost analysis.
Case Study 8.1 Estimating cost functions for hospitals.
Cost concepts and strategic advantage.
Case Study 8.2 Economies of scope in car production.
Case Study 8.3 Economies of scale in building societies and insurance companies.
Management of costs.
Chapter summary.
Appendix: statistical cost functions.
Review questions.
IV. Pricing, Promotional and Investment Policies.
9. Pricing and market structure: theoretical considerations.
Introduction.
Perfect competition.
Monopolistic competition.
Oligopoly.
Kinked demand curve model.
Bertrand oligopoly.
Cournotoligopoly.
Collusion and cheating.
Gametheory.
Non–zero sum game.
Price stickiness.
Collusive oligopoly.
Cartels.
Case Study 9.1 The vitamin cartel and the EU.
Tacit collusion.
Case Study 9.2 Price leadership in the salt industry.
Case Study 9.3 UK digital television.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
10. Pricing in practice.
Introduction.
The nature of price.
Dominant–firm pricing and consumer surplus.
Price discrimination.
Case Study 10.1 Licence auction: third–generation mobile phones.
Two–part tariffs.
Peak load pricing.
Case Study 10.2 BT s pricing structure.
Pricing in imperfect markets.
Studies of pricing.
Analytics of average cost pricing.
Other considerations in setting price.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
11. Advertising.
Introduction.
Roles of advertising.
Advertising and changing consumer preferences.
Advertising: price and demand.
Advertising and costs.
Sales and advertising.
Optimal level of advertising.
Which products do firms advertise?
Advertising and market structure.
Advertising as investment.
Branding.
Case Study 11.1 Tobacco advertising.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
12. Investment appraisal.
Introduction.
Basic steps in investment appraisal.
Estimating cash flows.
Time and the value of money.
Discounting and present value.
Ranking of projects and the capital–spending plan.
Non–discounting methods of investment appraisal.
Capital rationing and the capital–spending plan.
Incorporating risk and uncertainty.
Coping with uncertainty.
The cost of capital.
The risk premium and the discount rate for capital investment.
Capital budgeting in large British businesses.
Case Study 12.1 Assessing the Concorde programme.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
V. Strategic Decisions: The Growth and Development of the Firm.
13. The entrepreneur and the development of the firm.
Introduction.
Entrepreneurship.
Economic developments.
A behavioural explanation of entrepreneurship.
Entrepreneurship and the development of the firm.
The birth of the firm.
Characteristics of new–firm founders.
The formation of new firms in the UK.
Case Study 13.1 Sir Richard Branson and the Virgin Group.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
14. The boundaries of the firm.
Introduction.
Transaction cost approach.
Transaction costs.
Information, imperfect markets and transaction costs.
Williamson s analysis.
Knowledge–based theory of the firm.
The firm as a team.
The firm as a nexus of contracts.
Case Study 14.1 The changing distribution of Coca–Cola and Pepsi: a transaction cost explanation.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
15. The growth of the firm.
Introduction.
Motives for growth.
A simple growth model.
Baumol s dynamic sales growth model.
Marris s model of managerial enterprise.
Diversification and the growth of the firm.
Endogenous growth theory of the firm.
Limits to growth.
Limits to growth: empirical evidence.
Resources and competences.
Case Study 15.1 Stagecoach: core competences.
The development of the firm.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
16. Changing the boundaries of the firm: vertical integration.
Introduction.
Concept of vertical integration.
Case Study 16.1 Production linkages in the oil industry.
Motivation to vertically integrate.
Traditional explanations.
Uncertainty and security of supply.
Alternative explanations of vertical integration.
Case Study 16.2 Kuwait National Oil Company.
Case Study 16.3 Fisher Bodies and General Motors.
Vertical integration and profitability.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
17. Changing the boundaries of the firm: diversification.
Introduction.
Directions of diversification.
Related and unrelated diversification.
The firm s portfolio of activities.
Economic arguments for diversification.
Benefits and costs of diversification.
The performance of diversified firms.
Case Study 17.1 Virgin Group diversification and branding.
Case Study 17.2 US oil industry: related and unrelated diversification.
Case Study 17.3 Hanson Trust: its rise and dismemberment.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
18. Changing the boundaries of the firm: divestment and exit.
Introduction.
Exit decisions in competitive markets.
Exit decisions in oligopolistic markets.
Factors encouraging exit.
Factors keeping the firm in the market: exit barriers.
Bankruptcy.
Case Study 18.1 ITV Digital terrestrial service.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
19. Changing the boundaries of the firm: mergers.
Introduction.
Mergers, acquisitions and takeovers.
Types of mergers.
Numbers of mergers in the UK.
Motives for merging.
Case Study 19.1 Ford s acquisition of Kwik–Fit a corporate error?
The merger process.
Indicators of the success or failure of mergers.
Case Study 19.2 Granada Forte takeover battle in 1995 1996.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
20. Organizational issues and structures.
Introduction.
Principal–agent analysis.
Effort, outcomes and rewards.
Case Study 20.1 Sliding–scale payments in coal mining.
Case Study 20.2 Managerial incentive schemes.
Organizational structures.
U–form organizations.
M–form organizations.
Case Study 20.3 Organizational form empirical studies.
Limits to growth and size of the firm.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
21. The growth and development of the firm: Stagecoach Group Plc.
Introduction.
The bus industry.
Government policy changes in the bus industry^ creating opportunities.
Stagecoach start–up.
Stagecoach: growth and development.
Stagecoach in 2003.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
VI. Decision Making in the Regulated and Public Sectors.
22. Decision making in regulated businesses.
Introduction.
What is regulation?
Regulatory tools for promoting the public interest.
Case Study 22.1 Regulating BT.
Competition policy.
Anti–competitive behaviour, or what firms cannot do.
Methodology of competition policy.
Competition policy in the EU.
Case Study 22.2 Air tours and First Choice a rejected merger.
UK competition policy.
Case Study 22.3 Interbrew and the UK s competition regulators.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
23. Public sector production.
Introduction.
Why public sector production?
Externalities.
Characteristics of goods: excludability and rivalry.
Provision of goods by the public and private sector.
Arguments for public production.
Organizational issues.
Public enterprise.
Property rights approach.
Incentives and monitoring.
Public enterprise versus private enterprise performance compared.
Case Study 23.1 The postal service.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
24. Quasi–markets and non–market public sector.
Introduction.
Decision making in the absence of prices.
Supply: economic analysis of bureaucracy.
Demand: merit and public goods.
Collective decision making.
Exit, voice, loyalty.
Consumer difficulties and public supply.
Theory of quasi, or internal, markets.
Case Study 24.1 Health reform: the quasi–market approach.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
25. Cost–benefit analysis.
Introduction.
Public and private investment.
Theoretical foundations of cost–benefit analysis.
Which benefits and costs?
Measuring benefits and costs.
The value of time.
The value of life.
Case Study 25.1 Train protection systems and the saving of lives.
The choice of discount rate.
Case Study 25.2 Measuring the social benefits of a railway: the Cambrian Coast Line.
Consistency of approach.
Chapter summary.
Review questions.
Glossary.
Index.
Trefor Jones currently teaches economics at the School of Management at UMIST. He has significant experience of teaching at undergraduate and postgraduate levels both in economics and business/management environments.
Business Economics and Managerial Decision Making is an essential introduction to business economics. A core textbook for students with a grounding in introductory microeconomics, it examines the nature and structure of the firm, and explores the economic principles underlying major business decisions. This accessible text avoids overly mathematical analysis, using diagrams, graphs and tables to explain economic theory.
Trefor Jones draws upon current research and real–world examples from around the globe to illustrate the practical implications of economic theory for the business of the firm. In addition, a major chapter–length case study of a single enterprise (Stagecoach plc) provides an integrative real–world analysis of the core concepts and major theories developed throughout the book.
Extending the approach traditionally taken by business economics texts, Trefor Jones introduces material on the boundaries of the firm, including its growth and development, diversification and mergers.
Business Economics and Managerial Decision Making:
Supplementary resources for lecturers and students can be found at www.wileyeurope.com/go/treforjones.
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