Marginal concepts

Marginal revenue

Marginal revenue (or marginal benefit) is a central concept in microeconomics that describes the additional total revenue generated by increasing product sales by 1 unit. To derive the value of marginal revenue, it is required to examine the difference between the aggregate benefits a firm received from the quantity of a good and service produced last period and the current period with one extra unit increase in the rate of production. Marginal revenue is a fundamental tool for economic decision making within a firm's setting, together with marginal cost to be considered. In a perfectly competitive market, the incremental revenue generated by selling an additional unit of a good is equal to the price the firm is able to charge the buyer of the good. This is because a firm in a competitive market will always get the same price for every unit it sells regardless of the number of units the firm sells since the firm's sales can never impact the industry's price. Therefore, in a perfectly competitive market, firms set the price level equal to their marginal revenue . In imperfect competition, a monopoly firm is a large producer in the market and changes in its output levels impact market prices, determining the whole industry's sales. Therefore, a monopoly firm lowers its price on all units sold in order to increase output (quantity) by 1 unit. Since a reduction in price leads to a decline in revenue on each good sold by the firm, the marginal revenue generated is always lower than the price level charged . The marginal revenue (the increase in total revenue) is the price the firm gets on the additional unit sold, less the revenue lost by reducing the price on all other units that were sold prior to the decrease in price. Marginal revenue is the concept of a firm sacrificing the opportunity to sell the current output at a certain price, in order to sell a higher quantity at a reduced price. Profit maximization occurs at the point where marginal revenue (MR) equals marginal cost (MC). If then a profit-maximizing firm will increase output to generate more profit, while if then the firm will decrease output to gain additional profit. Thus the firm will choose the profit-maximizing level of output for which . (Wikipedia).

Marginal revenue
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Calculus - Marginal cost

In this video we cover the idea of marginal cost. This is simply the derivative of the cost function. We can roughly define marginal cost as the cost of producing one additional item. For more videos please visit http://www.mysecretmathtutor.com

From playlist Calculus

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Section (2.7) Marginal Analysis

Applied Calculus – Section (2.7) Marginal Analysis This lecture defines marginal cost, revenue, and profit. We use the derivative to evaluate marginal change at a specified level of production and compare the result to the exact monetary change when production increases by one unit. Then w

From playlist Applied Calculus

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Marginal Cost, Marginal Revenue, and Marginal Profit

This calculus video tutorial provides a basic introduction into marginal cost, marginal revenue, and marginal profit. It explains how to find the production level that will maximize the profit generated by a company. The revenue function or sales function is the product of the production

From playlist New Calculus Video Playlist

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Marginals

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From playlist Business Applications of Differentiation and Relative Extrema

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Personal Finance Quiz 0 Question 07

These videos cover questions from one of assessments. It covers basics in federal, state, medicare and social security taxes and how them impact monthly income. IT also covers the idea of micro-finance. To see our other personal finance videos, go here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?li

From playlist Personal Finance

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Finding the Marginal Cost Function given the Cost Function

Please Subscribe here, thank you!!! https://goo.gl/JQ8Nys Finding the Marginal Cost Function given the Cost Function

From playlist Calculus

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Lec 14 | MIT 14.01SC Principles of Microeconomics

Lecture 14: Monopoly Instructor: Jon Gruber, 14.01 students View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/14-01SCF10 License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at http://ocw.mit.edu/terms More courses at http://ocw.mit.edu

From playlist MIT 14.01SC Principles of Microeconomics

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Monopolist optimizing price: Marginal revenue | Microeconomics | Khan Academy

Plotting the marginal revenue curve for a monopolist Watch the next lesson: https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain/microeconomics/perfect-competition-topic/monopolies-tutorial/v/monopolist-optimizing-price-part-3-dead-weight-loss-avi?utm_source=YT&utm_medium=Desc&utm_campaig

From playlist Firm behavior and market structure | AP Microeconomics | Khan Academy

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How to find MARGINAL COST, REVENUE AND PROFIT (KristaKingMath)

► My Applications of Derivatives course: https://www.kristakingmath.com/applications-of-derivatives-course Think about marginal cost, marginal revenue, and marginal profit as the cost, revenue and profit associated with making and selling the "next unit". In other words, if you want to f

From playlist Calculus I

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Profit Margin, Gross Margin, and Operating Margin - With Income Statements

This finance video tutorial explains how to calculate the net profit margin, the gross profit margin, and operating profit margin of a company given an income statement. This video includes many examples and practice problems that will help you to learn the concept. My Website: https://

From playlist Stocks and Bonds

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11. Monopoly I

MIT 14.01 Principles of Microeconomics, Fall 2018 Instructor: Prof. Jonathan Gruber View the complete course: https://ocw.mit.edu/14-01F18 YouTube Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUl4u3cNGP62oJSoqb4Rf-vZMGUBe59G- In this lecture, Prof. Gruber takes what the class has alre

From playlist MIT 14.01 Principles of Microeconomics, Fall 2018

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Intro to Imperfect Competition- Micro Topic 4.1 (Part 1 of 2)

This is my 60ish second explanation why the MR curve is less than the demand for all imperfectly competitive firms (except for price discriminating monopolies). Keep in mind that a monopoly must lower the price of all units to sell more so the additional revenue they get is the price minus

From playlist Micro Unit 4: Imperfect Competition

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Ex 1: Cost Function Applications - Marginal Cost, Average Cost, Minimum Average Cost

This video explains how several application of the cost function including total cost, marginal cost, average cost, and minimum average cost. The total cost function is a quadratic function. Site: http://mathispower4u.com

From playlist Applications of Differentiation – Maximum/Minimum/Optimization Problems

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Product rule | Perfect competition | Cost curve | Marginal cost