Loading...

Messages

Proposals

Stuck in your homework and missing deadline? Get urgent help in $10/Page with 24 hours deadline

Get Urgent Writing Help In Your Essays, Assignments, Homeworks, Dissertation, Thesis Or Coursework & Achieve A+ Grades.

Privacy Guaranteed - 100% Plagiarism Free Writing - Free Turnitin Report - Professional And Experienced Writers - 24/7 Online Support

Managerial economics froeb pdf

29/12/2020 Client: saad24vbs Deadline: 14 Days

SE — Froeb/McCann/Shor/Ward — Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Approach, 5e ISBN-13: 978-1-337-10666-5 ©2018 Designer: Lumina Text & Cover printer: Quad Graphics Binding: Case Trim: 7.375 x 9.125 CMYK




F r o e b M c Ca n n S h o r Wa r dF r o e b M c Ca n n S h o r Wa r d




F r




o e




b •




M c




C a




n n




S




h o




r •




W a




r d




Managerial eConoMiCS




To register or access your online learning solution or purchase materials for your course, visit www.cengagebrain.com.




Managerial eConoMiCS




fifth edition




a ProBleM SolVing aPProaCh




fifth edition




M a




n a




g e




r ia




l e




C o




n o




M iC




S a




P r




o B




l e




M S




o lV




in g




a P




P r




o a




C h




a ProBleM SolVing aPProaCh




5e




06665_cvr_ptg01_hires.indd 1 03/08/17 6:55 AM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




cengage.com/mindtap




Fit your coursework into your hectic life. Make the most of your time by learning your way. Access the resources you need to succeed wherever, whenever.




Study with digital flashcards, listen to audio textbooks, and take quizzes.




Review your current course grade and compare your progress with your peers.




Get the free MindTap Mobile App and learn wherever you are.




Break Limitations. Create your own potential, and be unstoppable with MindTap.




MINDTAP. POWERED BY YOU.




06665_end02_ptg01_hires.indd 1 04/08/17 8:06 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




Australia • Brazil • Mexico • Singapore • United Kingdom • United States




fifth edition




Managerial economics




A PRoBLem soLVinG APPRoAch




luke M. Froeb Vanderbilt University




Mikhael Shor University of Connecticut




Brian T. McCann Vanderbilt University




Michael r. Ward University of Texas, Arlington




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 1 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




© 2018, 2016 Cengage Learning®




Unless otherwise noted, all content is © Cengage




ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this work covered by the copyright herein may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, except as permitted by U.S. copyright law, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.




Library of Congress Control Number: 2017947785




ISBN: 978-1-337-10666-5




Cengage Learning 20 Channel Center Street Boston, MA 02210 USA




Cengage Learning is a leading provider of customized learning solutions with employees residing in nearly 40 different countries and sales in more than 125 countries around the world. Find your local representative at www.cengage.com.




Cengage Learning products are represented in Canada by Nelson Education, Ltd.




To learn more about Cengage Learning Solutions, visit www.cengage.com




Purchase any of our products at your local college store or at our preferred online store www.cengagebrain.com




Managerial Economics, Fifth Edition Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Mikhael Shor, Michael R. Ward




Senior Vice President: Erin Joyner




Product Director: Jason Fremder




Product Manager: Christopher Rader




Content Developer: Molly Umbarger




Product Assistant: Denisse Zavala-Rosales




Marketing Manager: John Carey




Manufacturing Planner: Kevin Kluck




Sr. Art Director: Michelle Kunkler




Cover Image: Kamira/Shutterstock




Intellectual Property  Analyst: Jennifer Bowes  Project Manager: Carly Belcher




Art and Cover Direction, Production Management, and Composition: Lumina Datamatics, Inc




For product information and technology assistance, contact us at Cengage Learning Customer & Sales Support,




1-800-354-9706




For permission to use material from this text or product, submit all requests online at www.cengage.com/permissions




Further permissions questions can be emailed to permissionrequest@cengage.com




Printed in the United States of America Print Number: 01 Print Year: 2017




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 2 8/11/17 3:37 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




In loving memory of Lisa, and for our families: Donna, David, Jake, Halley, Scott, Chris, Leslie, Jacob, Eliana, Cindy, Alex, and Chris




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 3 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 4 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




v




Preface: Teaching Students to Solve Problems xiii




SECTION I Problem Solving and Decision Making 1 1 Introduction: What This Book Is About 3 2 The One Lesson of Business 15 3 Benefits, Costs, and Decisions 25 4 Extent (How Much) Decisions 37 5 Investment Decisions: Look Ahead and Reason Back 49




SECTION II Pricing, Costs, and Profits 65 6 Simple Pricing 67 7 Economies of Scale and Scope 83 8 Understanding Markets and Industry Changes 95 9 Market Structure and Long-Run Equilibrium 113 10 Strategy: The Quest to Keep Profit from Eroding 125 11 Foreign Exchange, Trade, and Bubbles 137




SECTION III Pricing for Greater Profit 151 12 More Realistic and Complex Pricing 153 13 Direct Price Discrimination 163 14 Indirect Price Discrimination 171




SECTION IV Strategic Decision Making 183 15 Strategic Games 185 16 Bargaining 205




SECTION V Uncertainty 215 17 Making Decisions with Uncertainty 217 18 Auctions 233 19 The Problem of Adverse Selection 243 20 The Problem of Moral Hazard 255




BrieF COnTenTS




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 5 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




vi BRIEF CONTENTS




SECTION VI Organizational Design 267 21 Getting Employees to Work in the Firm’s Best Interests 269 22 Getting Divisions to Work in the Firm’s Best Interests 283 23 Managing Vertical Relationships 295




SECTION VII Wrapping Up 307 24 Test Yourself 309




Epilogue: Can Those Who Teach, Do? 315




Glossary 317




Index 325




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 6 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




vii




Preface: Teaching Students to Solve Problems xiii




SECTION I Problem Solving and Decision Making 1




CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION: WHAT THIS BOOk IS ABOUT 3 1.1 Using Economics to Solve Problems 3 1.2 Problem-Solving Principles 4 1.3 Test Yourself 6 1.4 Ethics and Economics 7 1.5 Economics in Job Interviews 9 Summary & Homework Problems 11 End Notes 13




CHAPTER 2 THE ONE LESSON Of BUSINESS 15 2.1 Capitalism and Wealth 16 2.2 Does the Government Create Wealth? 17 2.3 How Economics Is Useful to Business 18 2.4 Wealth Creation in Organizations 21 Summary & Homework Problems 21 End Notes 23




CHAPTER 3 BENEfITS, COSTS, AND DECISIONS 25 3.1 Background: Variable, Fixed, and Total Costs 26 3.2 Background: Accounting versus Economic Profit 27 3.3 Costs Are What You Give Up 29 3.4 Sunk-Cost Fallacy 30 3.5 Hidden-Cost Fallacy 32 3.6 A Final Warning 32 Summary & Homework Problems 33 End Notes 36




CHAPTER 4 ExTENT (HOW MUCH) DECISIONS 37 4.1 Fixed Costs Are Irrelevant to an Extent Decision 38 4.2 Marginal Analysis 39 4.3 Deciding between Two Alternatives 40




COnTenTS




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 7 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




CONTENTSviii




4.4 Incentive Pay 43 4.5 Tie Pay to Performance Measures That Reflect Effort 44 4.6 Is Incentive Pay Unfair? 45 Summary & Homework Problems 46 End Notes 48




CHAPTER 5 INVESTMENT DECISIONS: LOOk AHEAD AND REASON BACk 49 5.1 Compounding and Discounting 49 5.2 How to Determine Whether Investments Are Profitable 51 5.3 Break-Even Analysis 53 5.4 Choosing the Right Manufacturing Technology 55 5.5 Shut-Down Decisions and Break-Even Prices 56 5.6 Sunk Costs and Post-Investment Hold-Up 57 Summary & Homework Problems 60 End Notes 62




SECTION II Pricing, Costs, and Profits 65




CHAPTER 6 SIMPLE PRICING 67 6.1 Background: Consumer Values and Demand Curves 68 6.2 Marginal Analysis of Pricing 70 6.3 Price Elasticity and Marginal Revenue 72 6.4 What Makes Demand More Elastic? 75 6.5 Forecasting Demand Using Elasticity 76 6.6 Stay-Even Analysis, Pricing, and Elasticity 77 6.7 Cost-Based Pricing 78 Summary & Homework Problems 78 End Notes 81




CHAPTER 7 ECONOMIES Of SCALE AND SCOPE 83 7.1 Increasing Marginal Cost 84 7.2 Economies of Scale 86 7.3 Learning Curves 87 7.4 Economies of Scope 89 7.5 Diseconomies of Scope 90 Summary & Homework Problems 91 End Notes 94




CHAPTER 8 UNDERSTANDING MARkETS AND INDUSTRy CHANGES 95 8.1 Which Industry or Market? 95 8.2 Shifts in Demand 96 8.3 Shifts in Supply 98 8.4 Market Equilibrium 99 8.5 Predicting Industry Changes Using Supply and Demand 100 8.6 Explaining Industry Changes Using Supply and Demand 103 8.7 Prices Convey Valuable Information 104 8.8 Market Making 106




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 8 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




CONTENTS ix




Summary & Homework Problems 108 End Notes 111




CHAPTER 9 MARkET STRUCTURE AND LONG-RUN EqUILIBRIUM 113 9.1 Competitive Industries 114 9.2 The Indifference Principle 116 9.3 Monopoly 120 Summary & Homework Problems 121 End Notes 123




CHAPTER 10 STRATEGy: THE qUEST TO kEEP PROfIT fROM ERODING 125 10.1 A Simple View of Strategy 126 10.2 Sources of Economic Profit 128 10.3 The Three Basic Strategies 132 Summary & Homework Problems 134 End Notes 136




CHAPTER 11 fOREIGN ExCHANGE, TRADE, AND BUBBLES 137 11.1 The Market for Foreign Exchange 138 11.2 The Effects of a Currency Devaluation 140 11.3 Bubbles 142 11.4 How Can We Recognize Bubbles? 144 11.5 Purchasing Power Parity 146 Summary & Homework Problems 147 End Notes 149




SECTION III Pricing for Greater Profit 151




CHAPTER 12 MORE REALISTIC AND COMPLEx PRICING 153 12.1 Pricing Commonly Owned Products 154 12.2 Revenue or Yield Management 155 12.3 Advertising and Promotional Pricing 157 12.4 Psychological Pricing 158 Summary & Homework Problems 160 End Notes 162




CHAPTER 13 DIRECT PRICE DISCRIMINATION 163 13.1 Why (Price) Discriminate? 164 13.2 Direct Price Discrimination 166 13.3 Robinson-Patman Act 167 13.4 Implementing Price Discrimination 168 13.5 Only Schmucks Pay Retail 169 Summary & Homework Problems 169 End Notes 170




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 9 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




CONTENTSx




CHAPTER 14 INDIRECT PRICE DISCRIMINATION 171 14.1 Indirect Price Discrimination 172 14.2 Volume Discounts as Discrimination 176 14.3 Bundling Different Goods Together 177 Summary & Homework Problems 178 End Notes 181




SECTION IV Strategic Decision Making 183




CHAPTER 15 STRATEGIC GAMES 185 15.1 Sequential-Move Games 186 15.2 Simultaneous-Move Games 188 15.3 Prisoners’ Dilemma 190 15.4 Other Games 195 Summary & Homework Problems 199 End Notes 202




CHAPTER 16 BARGAINING 205 16.1 Strategic View of Bargaining 206 16.2 Nonstrategic View of Bargaining 208 16.3 Conclusion 210 Summary & Homework Problems 211 End Note 214




SECTION V Uncertainty 215




CHAPTER 17 MAkING DECISIONS WITH UNCERTAINTy 217 17.1 Random Variables and Probability 218 17.2 Uncertainty in Pricing 222 17.3 Data-Driven Decision Making 223 17.4 Minimizing Expected Error Costs 226 17.5 Risk versus Uncertainty 227 Summary & Homework Problems 228 End Notes 231




CHAPTER 18 AUCTIONS 233 18.1 Oral Auctions 234 18.2 Second-Price Auctions 235 18.3 First-Price Auctions 236 18.4 Bid Rigging 236 18.5 Common-Value Auctions 238 Summary & Homework Problems 240 End Notes 242




CHAPTER 19 THE PROBLEM Of ADVERSE SELECTION 243 19.1 Insurance and Risk 243 19.2 Anticipating Adverse Selection 244




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 10 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




CONTENTS xi




19.3 Screening 246 19.4 Signaling 249 19.5 Adverse Selection and Internet Sales 250 Summary & Homework Problems 251 End Notes 253




CHAPTER 20 THE PRoblEm of moRAl HAzARd 255 20.1 Introduction 255 20.2 Insurance 256 20.3 Moral Hazard versus Adverse Selection 257 20.4 Shirking 258 20.5 Moral Hazard in Lending 260 20.6 Moral Hazard and the 2008 Financial Crisis 261 Summary & Homework Problems 262 End Notes 265




SECTIoN VI organizational design 267




CHAPTER 21 GETTING EmPloyEES To WoRk IN THE fIRm’S bEST INTERESTS 269 21.1 Principal–Agent Relationships 270 21.2 Controlling Incentive Conflict 271 21.3 Marketing versus Sales 273 21.4 Franchising 274 21.5 A Framework for Diagnosing and Solving Problems 275 Summary & Homework Problems 278 End Notes 281




CHAPTER 22 GETTING dIVISIoNS To WoRk IN THE fIRm’S bEST INTERESTS 283 22.1 Incentive Conflict between Divisions 283 22.2 Transfer Pricing 285 22.3 Organizational Alternatives 287 22.4 Budget Games: Paying People to Lie 289 Summary & Homework Problems 291 End Notes 294




CHAPTER 23 mANAGING VERTICAl RElATIoNSHIPS 295 23.1 How Vertical Relationships Increase Profit 296 23.2 Double Marginalization 297 23.3 Incentive Conflicts between Retailers and Manufacturers 297 23.4 Price Discrimination 299 23.5 Antitrust Risks 300 23.6 Do Buy a Customer or Supplier Simply Because It Is Profitable 301 Summary & Homework Problems 302 End Notes 304




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 11 8/10/17 5:51 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




CONTENTSxii




SECTION VII Wrapping Up 307




CHAPTER 24 TEST yOURSELf 309 24.1 Should You Keep Frequent Flyer Points for Yourself? 309 24.2 Should You Lay Off Employees in Need? 310 24.3 Manufacturer Hiring 310 24.4 American Airlines 311 24.5 Law Firm Pricing 311 24.6 Should You Give Rejected Food to Hungry Servers? 312 24.7 Managing Interest-Rate Risk at Banks 313 24.8 What You Should Have Learned 313




Epilogue: Can Those Who Teach, Do? 315




Glossary 317




Index 325




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 12 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




xiii




teaching students to solve Problems1 by Luke Froeb




When I started teaching MBA students, I taught economics as I had learned it, using models and public policy applications. My students complained so much that the dean took me out to the proverbial woodshed and gave me an ultimatum, “improve customer satisfaction or else.” With the help of some disgruntled students who later became teaching assistants, I was able to turn the course around.




The problem I faced can be easily described using the language of eco- nomics: the supply of business education (professors are trained to provide abstract theory) is not closely matched to demand (students want practical knowledge). This mismatch is found throughout academia, but it is perhaps most acute in a business school. Business students expect a return on a fairly sizable investment and want to learn material with immediate and obvious value.




One implication of the mismatch is that teaching economics in the usual way—with models and public policy applications—is not likely to satisfy stu- dent demand. In this book, we use what we call a “problem-solving pedagogy” to teach microeconomic principles to business students. We begin each chapter with a business problem, like the fixed-cost fallacy, and then give students just enough analytic structure to understand the cause of the problem and how to fix it.




Teaching students to solve real business problems, rather than learn models, satisfies student demand in an obvious way. Our approach also allows stu- dents to absorb the lessons of economics without as much of the analytical “overhead” as a model-based pedagogy. This is an advantage, especially in a terminal or stand-alone course, like those typically taught in a business school. To see this, ask yourself which of the following ideas is more likely to stay with a student after the class is over: the fixed-cost fallacy or that the partial derivative of profit with respect to price is independent of fixed costs.




eleMenTS OF a PrOBleM-SOlving PedagOgy Our problem-solving pedagogy has three elements.




PreFaCe




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 13 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




xiv PREFaCE




1. Begin with a Business Problem Beginning with a real-world business problem puts the particular ahead of the abstract and motivates the material in a straightforward way. We use narrow, focused problems whose solutions require students to use the analytical tools of interest.




2. Teach Students to view inefficiency as an Opportunity The second element of our pedagogy turns the traditional focus of benefit– cost analysis on its head. Instead of teaching students to spot and eliminate inefficiency, for example, by changing public policy, we teach them to view each underemployed asset as a money-making opportunity.




3. Use economics to implement Solutions After you find an underemployed asset, moving it to a higher-valued use is often hard to do, particularly when the inefficiency occurs within an organi- zation. The third element of our pedagogy addresses the problem of incentive alignment: how to design organizations where employees have enough infor- mation to make profitable decisions and the incentive to do so.




Again, we use the tools of economics to address the problem of implemen- tation. If people act rationally, optimally, and self-interestedly, then mistakes have only one of two causes: either people lack the information necessary to make good decisions or they lack the incentive to do so. This immediately sug- gests a problem-solving algorithm; ask:




1. Who is making the bad decision? 2. Do they have enough information to make a good decision? 3. Do they have the incentive to do so?




Answers to these three questions will point to the source of the problem and suggest one of three potential solutions:




1. Let someone else make the decision, someone with better information or incentives




2. Give more information to the current decision maker 3. Change the current decision maker’s incentives




The book begins by showing students how to use this algorithm, and subsequent chapters illustrate its use in a variety of contexts, for example, extent decisions, investments, pricing, bargaining, principal–agent relationships, and uncertain environments.




USing The BOOk The book is designed to be read cover-to-cover as it is short, concise, and accessible to anyone who can read and think clearly. The pedagogy is built around business problems, so the book is most effective for those with some work experience. Its relatively short length makes it reasonably easy to cus- tomize with ancillary material.




The authors use the text in full-time MBA programs, executive MBA programs (weekends), healthcare management executive programs (one night




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 14 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




xvPREFaCE




a week), and nondegree executive education. However, some of our biggest customers use the book in online business classes at both the graduate and undergraduate levels.




In the degree programs, we supplement the material in the book with online interactive programs like Cengage’s MindTap. Complete Blackboard courses, including syllabi, quizzes, homework, slides, videos to complement each chapter, and links to supplementary material, can be downloaded from the Cengage website. Our ManagerialEcon.com blog is a good source of new business applications for each of the chapters.




In this fifth edition, we have updated and improved the presentation and ped- agogy of the book. The biggest substantive change is to Chapter 17, where we present the decomposition of an observed difference between two groups into a treatment effect + selection bias. Michael Ward has been using this in his classes at University of Texas at Arlington, and rewrote the chapter to include it. We are also beginning work to add interactive “activities” to the electronic text in MindTap, Cengage’s new learning platform. These activities help comprehension, especially for weaker students. In addition, we continue to rewrite and update the supple- mentary material: videos, worked video problems, and the test bank. In addition to the other updates throughout the text, Chapter 24 has two new sections.




We wish to acknowledge numerous classes of MBA, executive MBA, non- degree executive education, and healthcare management students, without whom none of this would have been possible—or necessary. Many of our for- mer students will recognize stories from their companies in the book. Most of the stories in the book are from students and are for teaching purposes only.




Thanks to everyone who contributed, knowingly or not, to the book. Professor Froeb owes intellectual debts to former colleagues at the U.S. Department of Justice (among them, Cindy Alexander, Tim Brennan, Ken Heyer, Kevin James, Bruce Kobayahsi, and Greg Werden); to former colleagues at the Federal Trade Commission (among them, James Cooper, Pauline Ippolito, Tim Muris, Dan O’Brien, Maureen Ohlhausen, Paul Pautler, Mike Vita, and Steven Tenn); to colleagues at Vanderbilt (among them, Germain Boer, Jim Bradford, Bill Christie, Mark Cohen, Myeong Chang, Craig Lewis, Rick Oliver, David Parsley, David Rados, Steven Tschantz, David Scheffman, and Bart Victor); and to numerous friends and colleagues who offered suggestions, problems, and anecdotes for the book (among them, Lily Alberts, Olafur Arnarson, Raj Asirvatham, Bert Bailey, Justin Bailey, Pat Bajari, Molly Bash, Sarah Berhalter, Roger Brinner, the Honorable Jim Cooper, Matthew Dixon Cowles, Abie Del Favero, Kelsey Duggan, Vince Durnan, Marjorie Eastman, Tony Farwell, Keri Floyd, Josh Gapp, Brock Hardisty, Trent Holbrook, Jeff and Jenny Hubbard, Brad Jenkins, Dan Kessler, Bev Landstreet [B5], Bert Mathews, Christine Milner, Jim Overdahl, Craig Perry, Rich Peoples, Annaji Pervajie, Jason Rawlins, Mike Saint, David Shayne, Jon Shayne, Bill Shughart, Doug Tice, Whitney Tilson, and Susan Woodward). We owe intellectual and pedagogical debts to Armen Alchian and William Allen3; Henry Hazlitt4; Shlomo Maital5; John MacMillan6; Steven Landsburg7; Ivan Png8; Victor Tabbush9; Michael Jensen and William Meckling10; and James Brickley, Clifford Smith, and Jerold Zimmerman.11 Special thanks to everyone who guided us through the publishing process, including Molly Umbarger, Christopher Rader, and Jason Fremder.




06665_fm_ptg01_i-xvi.indd 15 8/9/17 8:56 PM




Copyright 2018 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part. WCN 02-200-203




xvi




end nOTeS




PREFaCE




1. Much of the material is taken from Luke M. Froeb and James C. Ward, “Teaching Managerial Economics with Problems Instead of Models,” in The International Handbook on Teaching and Learning Economics, eds. Gail Hoyt and KimMarie McGoldrick (Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2012).

Homework is Completed By:

Writer Writer Name Amount Client Comments & Rating
Instant Homework Helper

ONLINE

Instant Homework Helper

$36

She helped me in last minute in a very reasonable price. She is a lifesaver, I got A+ grade in my homework, I will surely hire her again for my next assignments, Thumbs Up!

Order & Get This Solution Within 3 Hours in $25/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 3 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 6 Hours in $20/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 6 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

Order & Get This Solution Within 12 Hours in $15/Page

Custom Original Solution And Get A+ Grades

  • 100% Plagiarism Free
  • Proper APA/MLA/Harvard Referencing
  • Delivery in 12 Hours After Placing Order
  • Free Turnitin Report
  • Unlimited Revisions
  • Privacy Guaranteed

6 writers have sent their proposals to do this homework:

University Coursework Help
Homework Guru
Top Essay Tutor
Helping Hand
Innovative Writer
Homework Tutor
Writer Writer Name Offer Chat
University Coursework Help

ONLINE

University Coursework Help

Hi dear, I am ready to do your homework in a reasonable price.

$142 Chat With Writer
Homework Guru

ONLINE

Homework Guru

Hi dear, I am ready to do your homework in a reasonable price and in a timely manner.

$142 Chat With Writer
Top Essay Tutor

ONLINE

Top Essay Tutor

I have more than 12 years of experience in managing online classes, exams, and quizzes on different websites like; Connect, McGraw-Hill, and Blackboard. I always provide a guarantee to my clients for their grades.

$145 Chat With Writer
Helping Hand

ONLINE

Helping Hand

I am an Academic writer with 10 years of experience. As an Academic writer, my aim is to generate unique content without Plagiarism as per the client’s requirements.

$140 Chat With Writer
Innovative Writer

ONLINE

Innovative Writer

I have read and understood all your initial requirements, and I am very professional in this task, I would be the best choice for this project, I am a PhD writer with 6-7 years of experience and can deliver quality notes to tight deadlines. I can generally compile up to 10 pages of lecture notes per day. I am known as Unrivaled Quality, Written to Standard, providing Plagiarism-free woork, and Always on Time

$135 Chat With Writer
Homework Tutor

ONLINE

Homework Tutor

Hello, I will provide with valuable, informative content that you will appreciate. The content will surely hit your target audience. I will provide you with the work that will be according to the needs of the targeted audience and Google’s requirement.

$120 Chat With Writer

Let our expert academic writers to help you in achieving a+ grades in your homework, assignment, quiz or exam.

Similar Homework Questions

Nebosh igc element 1 foundations in health and safety notes - Organisational standards for creating business documents - When was the basket of apples painted - Governor elect plural - List of output devices and their uses - Skill related components of fitness - Writing paper - Lewis v averay [1972] 1 qb 198 - Consumer perception towards maruti suzuki project - Commonwealth parliamentary offices melbourne - Paper - Dd wrt ssh server unexpectedly closed network connection - Where are you going where have you been pdf - Gcu integration of faith and work - Essay - Antifreeze solute and solvent - Motor vehicle repair licence - Mastering physics hw answers - G41 g42 interference alarm - Belhaven final exam schedule 2019 - 2-4 pg paper - Which of the following statements is true about naturalistic observation - The four phases of mentoring are initiation, cultivation, socialization, and definition. - Usyd parking on campus - Dyson vacuum cleaner history - 250 words and two scholarly sources - Samovar and porter definition of culture - Poverty - Week 2 healthcarepolicy - Hawke cable gland spanners - Harvard student car rental - Ethical dilemma worksheet law enforcement - Budget Development - Erm adoption and implementation in the higher education environment - Global business concepts methodologies tools and applications - Walmart supply chain management case study - End of term prayer - Cayuga ducks for sale nsw - Final Quiz statistics - Signature Assignment: Financial Plan - Sussex accounting and finance - Stop the clocks poem - Create wbs diagram from ms project - Case Study - Airports on water mini ielts - Average weight of a round bale of hay - How much is 1.5 kg in grams - Research proposal - Kwais meaning in english - Covid-19 - Discussion Board 5.2: Nothing About Us Without Us - N Discussion - Long distance mousetrap car - Second step program research - Target brand proactiv - Characteristics of living things reading comprehension - Which is true of both dna and rna - Why did william win the battle of hastings essay - Think like a nurse rischer - Amreeka youtube - Client consultation form template word - CIS 500 WEEK 3 ASSIGNMENT - Paper - Bloodstream stateless sheet music - WEEK8-Executive Program Practical Connection Assignment-Enterprise Risk Management - Cipd 3rai - Kenneth osiezagha - Sly dealings skill in deceiving - They say i say 4th edition online - Debug capwap console cli - Timon be our guest - M km cm mm - 225g flour in cups australia - Navy reserve vtu requirements - Ohp 1 rep max calculator - Peaceful end of life theory - Dirty harry problem in law enforcement - Rose bush called deborah - Bridge to terabithia script - Bonnyrigg high school website - Abc iview thomas and friends - Leadership styles in remember the titans - Frankston special development school - Adrian bagher grown folks business zip - Which of the following industries can be least described as a slow-cycle market? - Effective writing a handbook for accountants 11th edition pdf - Australian standard 4804 - Film financing letter of intent - How do elizabeth and darcy change throughout the novel - Kfc rules and regulations - Problem - Barracania culture - Rhetorical criticism sonja foss pdf - The ultimate source of an organization's culture is ________. - Questions 1: Classes and Pointers - A 0.14 kg baseball is dropped from rest - Frm exam dates 2016 - Http www himss org asp index asp - Global superstore data analysis - Castan centre global internship