Equilibrium Price and Quantity
Jacob: How do we solve for the equilibrium price and quantity?
Rachel: We set marginal cost = marginal revenue. We write the demand curve as P in terms of Q. Both marginal cost and marginal revenue are in terms of Q, not in terms of P. They are the additional cost or revenue for one more unit, not for one more dollar of price.
Jacob: Is there a way to write marginal cost and marginal revenue in terms of P?
Rachel: Marginal cost has nothing to do with price, so we can’t write it in terms of P. For the demand curve, Q is a function of P, so we could write marginal revenue in terms of P. But marginal cost is function of Q, so we must have marginal revenue as a function of Q.
Marginal Cost by Group
Jacob: How do we get the marginal cost curve for adults vs seniors?
Rachel: The marginal cost curve depends on the total quantity produced. The cost of a plane ticket, a train ticket, a theater seat, or a magazine is the same regardless who sits in the seat or reads the magazine.
Marginal Revenue
Jacob: How do we get the marginal revenue curve?
Rachel: We use the demand curve for that market, which differs for seniors, adults, or the total. We write P in terms of Q. We then multiply P × Q, to get their product in terms of Q (not in terms of P).
The product of total revenue. The partial derivative of total revenue with respect to quantity is marginal revenue.
Jacob: Is there a simple formula for a linear demand curve?
Rachel: If the demand curve is P = α – β Q, the marginal revenue curve is MR = α – 2 β P.
Solving the Homework Assignment
Jacob: How do we solve the homework assignment for two separate groups?
Rachel: We write three equations in three unknowns. The equations are simple linear equations, so the arithmetic is easy.
The three unknowns are QA, QS, and Qtotal. One linear equation is QA + QS = Qtotal.
~ For adults, we write the marginal revenue as a function of QA and the marginal cost as a function of Qtotal.
~ For seniors, we write the marginal revenue as a function of QS and the marginal cost as a function of Qtotal.