Search This Blog(textbook name or author as the keywords)You can cantact me by the Contact Form

Showing posts with label 8th edition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 8th edition. Show all posts

1/20/14

Service Management Operations, Strategy, Information Technology 8e Fitzsimmons Solutions manual and test bank

Service Management: Operations, Strategy, Information Technology , 8th edition,  Fitzsimmons  Solutions manual and test bank

CHAPTER 2
SERVICE STRATEGY

TEACHING NOTE

This chapter sets forth the strategic theme of the book that the operations function is central to the competitive strength of a service firm. The chapter begins with the strategic service vision that relates the service delivery system to the target market segments via an operating strategy and service concept using Southwest Airlines as an example. The application of the three generic competitive strategies — cost leadership, differentiation, and focus — to service firms is explored with examples. Porter’s five forces model and SWOT analysis are applied to service firms. Taking a page from manufacturing strategy, we apply the concept of service winners, qualifiers, and service losers to the dimensions of service competition. The important role that information plays in a firm's competitive strategy is captured in a two-by-two matrix that uses the dimensions of strategic focus (external or internal) and competitive use of information (online or offline). The concept of a virtual value chain that can create competitive advantage in the "marketspace" is illustrated with examples from USAA. Privacy questions and anticompetitive behavior are issues that limit the use of information. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the stages in service firm competitiveness and a “whodunit” Case about two niche-market banks.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS

James L. Heskett, W. Earl Sasser, Jr. and Christopher W.L. Hart, Service Breakthroughs, Free Press, New York, 1990.
The authors describe how breakthrough managers develop counterintuitive strategic service visions and a service concept that focuses on achieving results for their customers.
Case: Southwest Airlines (A) (HBS case 575-060)
Southwest Airlines began as a small intrastate Texas airline, operating commuter-length routes between Dallas (Love Field), Houston, and San Antonio. In June 1971, having overcome legal hurdles raised by entrenched Braniff and Texas International, Southwest inaugurated service with a massive promotional campaign and many innovations designed to attract passengers. On February 1, 1973, Southwest must decide how to respond to Braniff's "Half Price Sale."
Case: Zipcar: Refining the Business Model (HBS Case: 9-803-096)
The expense of owning or leasing a modest car in urban locations can exceed $500 per month when insurance and parking expenses are included. Using a website for reservations and wireless communication, the concept of car sharing has become a reality with Zipcar and its tag line, “wheels when you want.”
Case: British Airways: Using Information Systems to Better Serve the Customer (HBS case 9-395-065)
British Airways developed an information system, Customer Analysis and Retention System (CARESS) to ensure rapid response to customer complaints. The case explores how this system is
able to melt the complaint iceberg in order to resolve customer complaints quickly and improve retention as well as to provide data for root-cause-analysis of problems.
Case: Ritz Carlton: Using Information Systems to Better Serve the Customer (HBS Case 9-395-064)
Ritz-Carlton, a Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award winner, relies on two information systems to promote customer loyalty: COVIA to handle centralized reservations and Encore, a local system that keeps track of guest preferences.
Note: Service in E-Commerce: Findings from Exploratory Research (HBS Module Note N9-800-418).
This note explores the concept of scalability in the context of customer support and logistics. The authors also discuss the E-commerce customer experience cycle that includes navigation, information, customer support, and logistics leading to loyalty when well executed.

LECTURE OUTLINE

1. The Strategic Service Vision (Table 2.1 and 2.2)
2. Understanding the Competitive Environment of Services
3. Competitive Service Strategies
Overall cost leadership, Differentiation, Focus
4. Strategic Analysis
Porter’s Five Forces Analysis (Figure 2.1)
SWOT Analysis: Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats (Table 2.3)
5. Winning Customers in the Marketplace
Qualifiers, Service winners, Service losers
6. Sustainability (Figure 2.2)
7. The Competitive Role of Information in Services (Figure 2.3)
Creation of Barriers to Entry, Revenue Generation, Database Asset, Productivity Enhancement
8. The Virtual Value Chain (Figure 2.4)
9. Economics of Scalability (Table 2.4 and 2.5)
10. Limits in the Use of Information
Anticompetitive, Fairness, Invasion of Privacy, Data Security, Reliability
11. Using Information to Categorize Customers
12. Stages in Service Firm Competitiveness (Table 2.6)
Available for Service, Journeyman, Distinctive Competence, World-Class Service Delivery

TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION

1. Give examples of service firms that use the strategy of focus and differentiation and the strategy of focus and overall cost leadership.
Reed College in Portland, Oregon, is a small private college that is focused primarily on an undergraduate education in liberal arts and sciences. The school differentiates itself from most other higher education institutions in such areas as the selectivity of its admissions requirements, the rigorousness of its courses, and the requirement of a research thesis for an undergraduate degree. Another firm that exemplifies the strategies of focus and differentiation is Amy's Ice Cream in Austin, Texas. Amy's is focused on kneading various condiments into the ice cream, a service that also is provided by a number of other firms. But, the servers at Amy's are accorded extraordinary freedom to interact with customers and it is the nature of this service encounter that differentiates Amy's from other ice creameries.
Southwest Airlines is an example of firms that employ the strategies of focus and overall cost leadership. Southwest concentrates on serving a select geographic region at low cost. The airline achieves low cost by providing “no-frills” service, and it maximizes utilization of its assets by maintaining a quick turnaround practice at airports. United Services Automobile Association (USAA) is another example of an organization that has a well-defined focus, primarily that of providing insurance and financial services for American military officers and their families. The company is able to provide the lowest possible rates in the industry to its customers, in part, by doing business over the phone instead of using field agents.
2. What ethical issues are associated with micromarketing?
The ethical issue associated with micromarketing involves the customer's right to privacy. Scanner data and other personal information that target specific customers might be very beneficial for businesses, but the inappropriate use of the information can allow businesses to mislead or manipulate their customers. From an ethical standpoint, there must be some limits to the nature and amount of information a business can obtain from its customers.
3. For each of the three generic strategies (i.e., cost leadership, differentiation, and focus), which of the four competitive uses of information is most powerful?
Productivity enhancement is the most powerful use of information for achieving cost leadership, because it allows firms to reduce inventory, reduce waste, and eliminate paperwork, all of which save money. Improved productivity allows companies to make more efficient use of their assets, such as retail shelf space.
Creating barriers to entry is the most powerful use of information for protecting a differentiation strategy. When customer loyalty is high, cost cutting by competitors is less effective. Switching costs can also create barriers to entry, for example, when suppliers use a computer order-entry network to establish a direct link to customers.
Database assets are the most powerful use of information for building a focus strategy. These assets allow a company to develop profiles of their customers and their buying habits. This information allows the firm to develop new services and to be seen as responsive to its customers' needs. Advertising and distribution economies can be realized.
4. Give an example of a firm that began as world-class and has remained in that category.
Federal Express and Disney come to mind.
5. Could firms in the “world-class service delivery” stage of competitiveness be described as “learning organizations’?
Learning in organizations means the continuous testing of experience and the transformation of that experience into knowledge that is accessible to the whole organization and relevant to its purpose (see Senge, et.al., The Fifth Discipline Field Book, Doubleday, New York, pg. 49). Table 2.6 in the text shows that this definition is illustrated by the world-class service delivery category. Consider the following example comments:
· Learning organizations raise customer expectations, seek challenges, and improve continuously.
· A learning organization is proactive, develops its own capabilities, and generates opportunities
· The learning organization regards the customer as a source of stimulation, ideas, and opportunities.
· The workforce of a learning organization is innovative and creates new procedures.
· Top management of a learning organization looks to front-line management as a source of ideas.
6. Compare and contrast sustainability efforts in service operations and manufacturing.
At the outset, certain environmental wastes such as pollution generated by manufacturing plants are glaring problems in industrialized nations. Therefore, it is easy for most people to relate the physical nature of sustainability efforts to manufacturing. Such efforts include emission control and other measures to protect our air and water from contamination.
Waste reduction through lean management and value recovery apply to service and manufacturing firms alike, however. Regulations by agencies such as EPA, WEEE, and RoHS apply equally to service firms. Beyond those regulations, service firms must build an image of responsible organizations that are committed to sustainability by cultivating a culture that eliminates negative impacts on environmental and social issues. Service firms have a responsibility equal to that of the manufacturing sector in achieving sustainability, especially for long-term viability of the firm.
7. Conduct a triple bottom line evaluation for a hospital by identifying its social, economic, and environmental attributes that enhance the sustainability movement.
Social:
· Proper health education for all constituencies.
· Free screening for essential medical issues.
· Appropriate medical outsourcing.
· Linking health and wellness programs for a holistic approach to health care.
Economic:
· Use of lean management for cost savings – e.g., process control, better materials management, better record-keeping, elimination of unnecessary tests.
· Cost-efficient payment structure for medical access and health insurance
Environmental:
· Managing medical wastes – e.g., biodegradable products such as contaminated dressings.
· Responsible medical disposals – e.g., used syringes.
Overall, in promoting health, hospitals need to use fewer resources (economic), provide support for employee self esteem (social), and become better stewards of their medical resources and products (environmental).

INTERACTIVE CLASS EXERCISE

The class divides and debates the proposition “Frequent flyer award programs are or are not anticompetitive.”

The statement “Frequent flyer award programs are anticompetitive” was voiced following airline deregulation. The frequent flyer award is an attempt by airlines to create customer loyalty in a commodity market and to avoid price competition. Priceline.com and other Internet ticket sellers have reintroduced price competition making frequent flyer awards less effective.


CASE: UNITED COMMERCIAL BANK AND EL BANCO

1. Compare and contrast the strategic vision of El Banco and United Commercial Bank.
Service Delivery System Operating Strategy Service Concept Target Market Segments
El Banco Spanish spoken
Hispanic physical setting
Franchise
Low cost informal store fronts
Fee based services
Attract first time bank customers
Latinos
United Commercial Bank Chinese spoken
Conservative
Import-export services

Branches in Chinese-American communities
Offices in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong
Loans to businesses
High interest CDs
Low fees

Chinese-Americans

2. Identify the service winners, qualifiers, and service losers for El Banco and United Commercial Bank.
Service Winners Qualifiers Service Losers
El Banco Check cashing
Money transfers
Spanish spoken
Informal location
Lack of sophisticated services
United Commercial Bank Low fees
Import-export services
Chinese spoken
Soundness and safety
Lowering interest rate on CDs

3. What are the differentiating features of banks that target ethnic communities?
· Products that match unique customer needs (trade finance, check cashing)
· Well articulated cultural focus on target community (language, physical setting)
· Convenient location accessible to community (ethnic population centers, places frequently visited by community members)


CASE: THE ALAMO DRAFTHOUSE

1. Marketing analysts use market position maps to display visually the customers’ perceptions of a firm in relation to its competitors regarding two attributes. Prepare a market position map for Alamo Drafthouse using “food quality” and “movie selection” as axes.
clip_image001 Movie Selection (+)
Multiplex
clip_image002 (-) Food Quality (+)
Alamo
(-)
2. Use the “Strategic Service Vision” framework to describe Alamo Drafthouse in terms of target market segments, service concept, operating strategy, and service delivery system.
Target Market Service Concept Operating Strategy Service Delivery
· 18-30 year old, male, alcohol consumers, cult film appeal
· 25-40 year olds with sophisticated taste in films
· Meal and 2nd run or cult films
· Single screen theater with every other row replaced with narrow tables
· Low cost old theater
· Inexpensive 2nd run movies
· Food made to order with less waste

· Unobtrusive wait people
· Acceptable sound and projection equipment
· Excess capacity mid-day


3. Identify the service qualifiers, winners, and service losers for Alamo Drafthouse. Are the Alamo purchase decision criteria appropriate for the multiplex movie theater market? What do you conclude?
Qualifiers include good sound system, reasonable prices for the meals, availability of beer and wine, and menu selection. A service winner is the unique “date” experience including the special events and film showing. Service losers include movie projection and sound that do not meeting minimal standards. For the multiplex movie theater market the qualifier is the desired movie showing, a winner would be convenient location and available time of showing, and the loser would be a long waiting line at the box office. The difference in the criteria would lead us to conclude that Alamo does not compete in the multiplex movie market.
4. Use Porter’s Five Forces Model to assess the strategic position of Alamo Drafthouse in the “entertainment industry.”



clip_image003

  1. Conduct a SWOT analysis to identify internal strengths and weaknesses as well as threats and opportunities in the external environment.
Strengths
  • Small theater with kitchen is unique.
  • People in your market see dinning and movie combination as your strength.
Weaknesses
  • Projection and sound quality could be improved.
  • Attracting mid-week audience.
Opportunities
  • Expand by purchasing small movie theaters.
  • Business meeting could be a market niche.
Threats
  • Cash-flow problem.
  • Concept copied by competitor.

CHAPTER QUIZ QUESTIONS

True/False
1. A characteristic of the overall cost leadership strategy is the incurring of start-up losses to build market share. (T)
2. On-line networks between suppliers and their customers create a barrier to entry. (T)
3. When pursuing a differentiation strategy, a service firm should work to ensure that the service being offered is standardized. (F)
4. Service winners are the competitive dimensions used by customers to decide among qualified service providers. (T)
5. Quality is considered to be a structural element of the strategic service concept. (F)
6. Service industries have low entry barriers because economy-of-scale opportunities are limited. (F)
7. The use of micromarketing has the potential to create customer concerns about invasion of privacy. (T)
8. Implementing a low-cost strategy can sometimes revolutionize an industry. (T)
9. A cost-leadership strategy often involves customizing a standard service. (F)
10. The competitive dimension of dependability is a likely candidate for becoming a service loser. (T)
11. Selling information and developing new services are examples of the role that information technology plays in generating revenue. (F)
12. Information technology can be used to promote customer loyalty. (T)
13. The IRS has identified frequent-user programs as anti-competitive. (F)
14. American Airlines' early development of the SABRE reservation system became the foundation for its yield management innovation. (T)
15. Information databases are an asset, because they represent a source of revenue. (T)
16. Information is a substitute for inventory. (T)
17. Focus is a competitive strategy that creates a service perceived as being unique. (F)
18. Service encounter, quality, information, and capacity planning are all managerial elements of a strategic service concept. (F)
19. Ordering from L.L. Bean by telephone is an example of a service firm maximizing opportunities for economies of scale. (T)
20. A firm facing serious competition for the first time is in the journeyman stage of a service firm's competitiveness. (T)
21. World-class service operations strive to replace workers with enhanced automation. (F)
22. Firms classified as "available for service" view quality improvement efforts with disdain. (T)
23. For a firm achieving "journeyman" competitive status, the back-office function is considered an activity that plays an important role in service delivery. (F)
24. In a world-class service firm, the front-line management controls the process. (F)
25. The job design premise in a world-class service organization is division of labor. (F)
26. Porter’s five forces analysis is used at the industry level to determine competitive intensity. (T)
27. SWOT analysis is objective with easily agreed upon results. (F)
28. Scalability is a measure of how unit variable cost relates to transaction volume. (T)
29. Infinite scalability can occur only when the variable cost is zero. (T)
30. Healthcare is an example of a service that exhibits high scalability. (F)
31. A highly scalable firm such as Kelly Blue Book (kkb.com) requires a call center. (F)
32. Scalability is enhanced with self-service. (T)
33. Customers seldom take note of firms that are leaders in the sustainability movement. (F)
34. Recycling paper and reducing energy usage often is the first step towards sustainability. (T)
Multiple Choice
1. The qualifier for an airline offering short commuter flights is:
a. quality of the meals.
b. safety record.*
c. politeness of the crew.
d. on-time performance.
2. Place the McDonald's fast food chain within the following matrix:
clip_image005
3. A difficult economic environment exists for service industries for all but one of the following reasons.
a. Relatively high overall entry barriers*
b. Product substitution
c. Minimal opportunities for economies of scale
d. Exit barriers.
4. A personal training facility that is located in the exclusive Beverly Hills area with only one other competitor could adopt a service strategy that emphasizes ________.
a. overall cost leadership
b. differentiation*
c. focus
d. personalization
5. Of the nine dimensions of service competition, three are regarded as most likely to become service losers. Which of the following is not one of those three vulnerable dimensions?
a. Speed
b. Price*
c. Dependability
d. Personalization
6. Which of the following is not identified as a strategy common to many successful service providers?
a. Close coordination between the marketing and operations
b. The exploitation of information to generate new business
c. A project-oriented organizational structure*
d. Redirection of the strategic service vision inward to focus on employees
7. Which of the following usually is not a good idea with respect to an overall cost leadership strategy?
a. Offer as many different services as possible to spread overhead costs.*
b. Concentrate on routine/standardized services.
c. Replace labor with capital where possible.
d. Perform some service activities off-line at a centralized site.
8. The nature of the service act depends on to whom or to what the service is directed and the degree of "tangibility" of the service provided. An example of a tangible service directed to the possessions of a customer would be:
a. a stay in a hotel.
b. an investment advising session.
c. a fortune telling session.
d. a full-service car wash.*
9. Which one of the following is not a key characteristic that leads to a difficult competitive environment for service industries?
a. Low barriers to entry
b. Lack of sustainable competitive advantage
c. Lack of government regulation and oversight*
d. Low switching costs for customers
10. In which of the following cases does the use of information raise ethical issues?
a. Yield management
b. Selling information
c. Micromarketing
d. All of the above*
11. American Airlines' SABRE reservation system fills the following strategic role of information:
a. Revenue generation
b. Productivity enhancement
c. Creation of barriers to entry*
d. Data base asset
12. Services can create barriers to entry by __________
a. using economies of scale.
b. creating switching costs.
c. using databases and information technology.
d. all of the above.*
13. Which of the following is an example of the competitive use of information in generating revenue?
a. Reservation systems
b. Data envelopment analysis
c. Micromarketing*
d. Expert systems
14. Which of the following is not a role of information technology?
a. Creating a barrier to entry for competitors
b. Generating revenues
c. Displacing workers*
d. Managing multisite operations
15. Using the dimensions of strategic focus and competitive use of information can identify four strategic roles of information. Which of the following is not a strategic role of information?
a. Create barriers to entry.
b. Generate revenue.
c. Create a data base asset.
d. Provide global communications.*
16. Real-time information technologies that have a focus on internal operations can play a competitive role in increasing revenue opportunities. Which one of the following uses of information does not play a role in generating revenue?
a. Yield management
b. Point of sale
c. Expert systems*
d. Sale of information
17. Bar coding and checkout scanner technology have created a wealth of consumer buying information that can be used to target customers with precision. This process is an example of:
a. service development.
b. micromarketing.*
c. data envelopment analysis.
d. point of sale.
18. Kraft targeted its cream cheese flavors to match the tastes of a store’s customers using off-line analysis of POS (point-of-sale) data. This is an example of:
a. yield management
b. expert systems
c. data envelopment analysis
d. micromarketing*
19. Service firms use information technology to create barriers to entry, generate revenue, enhance productivity, and serve as data base assets. Where does productivity enhancement fit in the diagram below?
clip_image007
20. Which of the following service quality descriptions would be considered "World Class?"
a. It raises the customer's expectations and improves continuously.*
b. It exceeds the customer's expectations and is consistent on many dimensions.
c. It is less important than cost and is highly variable.
d. It contributes to service and plays an important role in total service.
21. Not satisfied with just meeting customer expectations, this category of service firms expands upon the expectations to levels that competitors find difficult to meet.
a. Available-for-service
b. Journeyman
c. Distinctive competence achieved
d. World class service delivery*
22. The innovation of moving from a "country" store where the proprietor fills the shopper's list with items that are kept behind the counter to a self-service supermarket where the shopper fills a cart with items represents a move between which of the following pairs of competitive stages?
a. From available-for-service to journeyman
b. From available-for-service to distinctive competence achieved*
c. From journeyman to distinctive competence achieved
d. From distinctive competence achieved to world class service delivery
23. Which of the following stages of a firm's competitiveness describes customers who seek out a firm based upon its sustained reputation for meeting customer expectations?
a. Available-for-service
b. Journeyman
c. Distinctive competence achieved*
d. World class service delivery
24. Which one of the following does SWOT analysis not have as its aim?
a. Reveal competitive advantages
b. Determine the competitive intensity*
c. Analyze prospects
d. Development of contingency plans
25. Porter’s five forces analysis does not include which one of the following considerations.
a. Pricing power*
b. Potential new entrants
c. Threat of substitutes
d. Bargaining power of suppliers
26. Which one of the following is not a dimension of scalability?
a. Information vs. goods content
b. Degree of self-service*
c. Cost of after-sales service
d. Shipping and handling costs
27. Which of the following is not considered a criterion for evaluating the triple bottom line?
a. social progress
b. economic growth
c. environmental stewardship
d. market share*




























































































































































































































































9/17/13

Macroeconomics 8th edition N. Gregory Mankiw solutions manual and test bank

Macroeconomics 8th edition N. Gregory Mankiw solutions manual and test bank
http://www.mediafire.com/view/3kolvmw0xba8jo6/Macroeconomics_8e_Gregory_Mankiw_TB2.pdf

http://www.mediafire.com/view/e3cjr6vfqpqk8gd/Mankiw8eSM_(macro)_Chap02_005-10.pdf

  • Publisher: Worth Publishers; Eighth Edition edition (June 1, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1429240024
  • ISBN-13: 978-1429240024
the download link of the sample of  Macroeconomics 8th edition N. Gregory Mankiw   Solutions Manual (in pdf format)
 http://www.mediafire.com/view/e3cjr6vfqpqk8gd/Mankiw8eSM_(macro)_Chap02_005-10.pdf
C H A P T E R 2 The Data of Macroeconomics
Questions for Review
1. GDP measures the total income earned from the production of the new final goods and
services in the economy, and it measures the total expenditures on the new final goods
and services produced in the economy. GDP can measure two things at once because
the total expenditures on the new final goods and services by the buyers must be equal
to the income earned by the sellers of the new final goods and services. As the circular
flow diagram in the text illustrates, these are alternative, equivalent ways of measuring
the flow of dollars in the economy.
2. The consumer price index measures the overall level of prices in the economy. It tells
us the price of a fixed basket of goods relative to the price of the same basket in the
base year. The GDP deflator is the ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP in a given year.
The GDP deflator measures the prices of all goods and services produced, whereas the
CPI only measures prices of goods and services bought by consumers. The GDP deflator
includes only domestically produced goods, whereas the CPI includes domestic and foreign
goods bought by consumers. Finally, the CPI is a Laspeyres index that assigns
fixed weights to the prices of different goods, whereas the GDP deflator is a Paasche
index that assigns changing weights to the prices of different goods. In practice, the two
price indices tend to move together and do not often diverge.
3. The Bureau of Labor Statistics classifies each person into one of the following three categories:
employed, unemployed, or not in the labor force. The unemployment rate,
which is the percentage of the labor force that is unemployed, is computed as follows:
Unemployment Rate = × 100.
Note that the labor force is the number of people employed plus the number of people
unemployed.
4. Every month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) undertakes two surveys to measure
employment. First, the BLS surveys about 60,000 households and thereby obtains an
estimate of the share of people who say they are working. The BLS multiplies this
share by an estimate of the population to estimate the number of people working.
Second, the BLS surveys about 160,000 business establishments and asks how many
people they employ. Each survey is imperfect; so the two measures of employment are
not identical.
Problems and Applications
1. A large number of economic statistics are released regularly. These include the following:
Gross Domestic Product—the market value of all final goods and services produced in a
year.
The Unemployment Rate—the percentage of the civilian labor force who do not have a
job.
Corporate Profits—the income of corporations after payments to workers and creditors.
It gives an indication of the general financial health of the corporate sector.
5
Number of Unemployed
Labor Force
C H A P T E R 2 The Data of Macroeconomics
The Consumer Price Index (CPI)—a measure of the average price that consumers pay
for the goods they buy; changes in the CPI are a measure of inflation.
The Trade Balance—the difference between the value of goods exported abroad and the
value of goods imported from abroad.
In looking at the economic statistics, most people want to see a low and stable inflation
rate of about 2–3 percent, a low and stable unemployment rate of about 5 percent, and
GDP growth in the 3–4-percent range. This indicates the economy is “healthy” and performing
at its long-run average level. In early 2012, the unemployment rate fell to 8.3
percent, its lowest level in three years. In addition, the percentage of the working-age
population that was in the labor force fell to its lowest level in 29 years. Inflation
remains at about 2 percent. GDP growth was 2.8 percent (annualized rate) in the
fourth quarter of 2011, up from 1.8 percent the previous quarter. The federal funds
rate remained near zero, where it has been since 2008.
2. Value added by each person is the value of the good produced minus the amount the person
paid for the materials needed to make the good. Therefore, the value added by the
farmer is $1.00 ($1 – 0 = $1). The value added by the miller is $2: she sells the flour to the
baker for $3 but paid $1 for the flour. The value added by the baker is $3: she sells the
bread to the engineer for $6 but paid the miller $3 for the flour. GDP is the total value
added, or $1 + $2 + $3 = $6. Note that GDP equals the value of the final good (the bread).
3. When a woman marries her butler, GDP falls by the amount of the butler’s salary. This
happens because measured total income, and therefore measured GDP, falls by the
amount of the butler’s loss in salary. If GDP truly measured the value of all goods and
services, then the marriage would not affect GDP since the total amount of economic
activity is unchanged. Actual GDP, however, is an imperfect measure of economic activity
because the value of some goods and services is left out. Once the butler’s work
becomes part of his household chores, his services are no longer counted in GDP. As
this example illustrates, GDP does not include the value of any output produced in the
home. Similarly, GDP does not include other goods and services, such as the imputed
rent on durable goods (e.g., cars and refrigerators) and any illegal trade.
4. a. The airplane sold to the Air Force counts as government purchases because the
Air Force is part of the government.
b. The airplane sold to American Airlines counts as investment because it is a capital
good sold to a private firm.
c. The airplane sold to Air France counts as an export because it is sold to a foreigner.
d. The airplane sold to Amelia Earhart counts as consumption because it is sold to a
private individual.
e. The airplane built to be sold next year counts as investment. In particular, the
airplane is counted as inventory investment, which is where goods that are produced
in one year and sold in another year are counted.
5. Data on parts (a) to (g) can be downloaded from the Bureau of Economic Analysis
(www.bea.doc.gov—follow the links to Gross Dometic Product). Most of the data
(not necessarily the earliest year) can also be found in the Economic Report of the
President. By dividing each component (a) to (g) by nominal GDP and multiplying
by 100, we obtain the following percentages:
1950 1980 2005 2012
a. Personal consumption expenditures 65.5% 63.0% 70.0% 71.1%
b. Gross private domestic investment 18.4% 17.2% 16.9% 13.1%
c. Government consumption purchases 15.9% 20.3% 18.9% 19.7%
d. Net exports 0.2% –0.5% –5.8% –3.8%
e. National defense purchases 6.7% 6.0% 4.7% 5.3%
f. State and local purchases 7.0% 11.6% 11.9% 11.7%
g. Imports 3.9% 10.5% 16.2% 17.7%
(Note: These data were downloaded February 8, 2012, from the BEA Web site.)
6 Answers to Textbook Questions and Problems
Among other things, we observe the following trends in the economy over the period
1950–2012:
(a) Personal consumption expenditures have been around two-thirds of GDP, although the
share increased markedly between 1980 and 2005.
(b) The share of GDP going to gross private domestic investment fell slightly from 1950 to
2005. It fell sharply from 2005 to 2012 due to the 2007–2009 recession.
(c) The share going to government consumption purchases rose sharply from 1950 to 1980.
(d) Net exports, which were positive in 1950, have been negative since that time.
(e) The share going to national defense purchases has fallen slightly.
(f) The share going to state and local purchases rose from 1950 to 1980.
(g) Imports have grown rapidly relative to GDP.
6. a. i. Nominal GDP is the total value of goods and services measured at current
prices. Therefore,
Nominal GDP2000 = (P × Q ) + (P × Q )
= ($50,000 × 100) + ($10 × 500,000)
= $5,000,000 + $5,000,000
= $10,000,000.
Nominal GDP2010 = (P × Q ) + (P × Q )
= ($60,000 × 120) + ($20 × 400,000)
= $7,200,000 + $8,000,000
= $15,200,000.
ii. Real GDP is the total value of goods and services measured at constant
prices. Therefore, to calculate real GDP in 2010 (with base year 2000), multiply
the quantities purchased in the year 2010 by the 2000 prices:
Real GDP2010 = (P × Q ) + (P × Q )
= ($50,000 × 120) + ($10 × 400,000)
= $6,000,000+ $4,000,000
= $10,000,000.
Real GDP for 2000 is calculated by multiplying the quantities in 2000 by the
prices in 2000. Since the base year is 2000, real GDP2000 equals nominal
GDP2000, which is $10,000,000. Hence, real GDP stayed the same between
2000 and 2010.
iii. The implicit price deflator for GDP compares the current prices of all goods
and services produced to the prices of the same goods and services in a base
year. It is calculated as follows:
Implicit Price Deflator2010 = .
Using the values for Nominal GDP2010 and real GDP2010 calculated above:
Implicit Price Deflator2010 =
= 1.52.
This calculation reveals that prices of the goods produced in the year 2010
increased by 52 percent compared to the prices that the goods in the economy
sold for in 2000. (Because 2000 is the base year, the value for the implicit
price deflator for the year 2000 is 1.0 because nominal and real GDP are the
same for the base year.)
iv. The consumer price index (CPI) measures the level of prices in the economy.
The CPI is called a fixed-weight index because it uses a fixed basket of goods
Chapter 2 The Data of Macroeconomics 7
2000
cars
2000
cars
2000
bread
2000
bread
2010
cars
2010
cars
2010
bread
2010
bread
2000
cars
2010
cars
2000
bread
2010
bread
Nominal GDP2010
Real GDP2010
$15,200,000
$10,000,000
over time to weight prices. If the base year is 2000, the CPI in 2010 is an
average of prices in 2010, but weighted by the composition of goods produced
in 2000. The CPI2010 is calculated as follows:
CPI2010 =
=
=
= 1.6.
This calculation shows that the price of goods purchased in 2010 increased by 60
percent compared to the prices these goods would have sold for in 2000. The CPI
for 2000, the base year, equals 1.0.
b. The implicit price deflator is a Paasche index because it is computed with a changing
basket of goods; the CPI is a Laspeyres index because it is computed with a
fixed basket of goods. From (6.a.iii), the implicit price deflator for the year 2010 is
1.52, which indicates that prices rose by 52 percent from what they were in the
year 2000. From (6.a.iv.), the CPI for the year 2010 is 1.6, which indicates that
prices rose by 60 percent from what they were in the year 2000.
If prices of all goods rose by, say, 50 percent, then one could say unambiguously
that the price level rose by 50 percent. Yet, in our example, relative
prices have changed. The price of cars rose by 20 percent; the price of bread rose
by 100 percent, making bread relatively more expensive.
As the discrepancy between the CPI and the implicit price deflator illustrates,
the change in the price level depends on how the goods’ prices are weighted.
The CPI weights the price of goods by the quantities purchased in the year
2000. The implicit price deflator weights the price of goods by the quantities purchased
in the year 2010. The quantity of bread consumed was higher in 2000 than
in 2010, so the CPI places a higher weight on bread. Since the price of bread
increased relatively more than the price of cars, the CPI shows a larger increase
in the price level.
c. There is no clear-cut answer to this question. Ideally, one wants a measure of the
price level that accurately captures the cost of living. As a good becomes relatively
more expensive, people buy less of it and more of other goods. In this example,
consumers bought less bread and more cars. An index with fixed weights, such as
the CPI, overestimates the change in the cost of living because it does not take
into account that people can substitute less expensive goods for the ones that
become more expensive. On the other hand, an index with changing weights, such
as the GDP deflator, underestimates the change in the cost of living because it
does not take into account that these induced substitutions make people less well
off.
7. a. The consumer price index uses the consumption bundle in year 1 to figure out how
much weight to put on the price of a given good:
CPI2 =
=
= 2.
According to the CPI, prices have doubled.
8 Answers to Textbook Questions and Problems
($2 × 10) + ($1 × 0)
($1 × 10) + ($2 × 0)
( ) ( )
( ) (
P Q P Q
P Q P Q
red red green green
red red green gre
2 1 2 1
1 1 1
+
+ en
1 )
×
×
×
×
$16,000,000
$10,000,000
($60,000 × 100) + ($20 × 500,000)
($50,000 × 100) + ($10 × 500,000)
( ) ( )
(
P Q P Q
P Q
cars cars bread bread
cars c
2010 2000 2010 2000
2000
+
ars bread bread
2000 ) + (P2000 Q2000 )
×
×
×
×
the download link of the sample of  Macroeconomics 8th edition N. Gregory Mankiw test bank  (in pdf format )

http://www.mediafire.com/view/3kolvmw0xba8jo6/Macroeconomics_8e_Gregory_Mankiw_TB2.pdf


6/10/13

Managerial Economics and Business Strategy, Eighth Edition by baye solutions manual and test bank for 978-0073523224

Managerial Economics and Business Strategy, 8th Edition solutions manual and test bank for 978-0073523224

Hi dear students:
Feel free to contact us: ggsmtb@gmail.com  , I have the Book Resources for the above textbook. all the Book Resources is in pdf or doc files.


Book Description

February 21, 2013 0073523224 978-0073523224 8
Baye and Prince’s bestselling Managerial Economics and Business Strategy provides a complete solution designed to help students use tools from intermediate microeconomics, game theory, and industrial organization to make sound managerial decisions. Now fully integrated within McGraw-Hill’s Connect Plus platform, the 8th edition provides instructors with new ways to assess student performance in the managerial economics course. Students benefit from LearnSmart’s adaptive learning modules, designed reinforce core concepts in each chapter. A range of print and digital formats combined with frontier research, inclusion of modern topics, and balanced coverage of traditional and modern microeconomics produce a new offering that is easier to teach from and more dynamic and engaging for students.





Linkwithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...