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In this blog post, economist Bob Murphy raises a puzzle involving the principle that in a competitive market, the price equals the marginal cost:

There’s a general principle from intro to microeconomics that says in a competitive industry, in equilibrium P=MC. So how would we actually apply that in practice to the fast food industry? At the point at which the burgers are already made and sitting on the back warmer, what’s the marginal cost to the firm of the worker picking up the burger and handing it to a customer? 5 cents? So, in an efficient fast food industry, burgers should be priced at 5 cents. Don’t you dare say that the firm needs to charge at least enough to cover average costs, because (as David points out) that involves a sunk cost fallacy… Something is obviously not right in the above. But I’m curious to see how you guys would unpack it. If you want to say, “I don’t trust them there textbooks with their funny graphs!” OK fine, but ideally I’d like you to solve it within the world of standard textbook micro, since presumably that can be done.

What he's saying is that once the burger is already made, the cost of making the burger is a sunk cost, and thus the marginal cost of the burger is just the cost of the tiny labor involved in picking it up and selling it to the customer.

So why is it that in the fast food industry, the price of a burger takes into account the cost of making the burger and not just the cost of handing it over to the customer? Is it because the fast food industry is far away from the conditions of perfect competition, or can this be explained using a perfect competition model?

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  • $\begingroup$ His argument relies on the assumption that firms cannot commit to a price when they start producing, whereas commiting is obviously profitable even in a perfectly competitive market. In a dynamic game (as real life is), firms have incentives to build their reputation by not selling below their (true) marginal cost. That said, it is a valid point that marginal cost is an intellectual construction that helps us to think but that also has limits. There are many other examples: what is the marginal cost of a passenger in a train? Of a customer in a theater? Etc. $\endgroup$
    – Oliv
    Commented Jan 21, 2016 at 21:48
  • $\begingroup$ @Oliv Well, by that argument you could say that firms could precommit to charging the average cost rather than the marginal cost. So I don't think that argument is valid. As far as trains and theaters, I think those are cases that are very far from the conditions of perfect competition. The fast food seems like it's pretty close to perfect competition. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 21, 2016 at 21:59
  • $\begingroup$ in the situation that you describe, wouldn't it be profitable from a firm to deviate from this equilibrium strategy and to commit to charge a lower price? About the examples, I think they are relevant because they show that the concept of marginal cost can be difficult to define - which is part of his observation. $\endgroup$
    – Oliv
    Commented Jan 21, 2016 at 22:12
  • $\begingroup$ @Oliv Well, to stay profitable for a month, your price needs to at least equal the average cost, but in the short term firms can increase their profits by setting their price at the marginal cost. If a firm can commit at the beginning of the month to set the price at the average cost, but then subsequently break the commitment and lower the price to the marginal cost of producing a burger, why couldn't you equally say that the firm could commit to set the price at marginal cost of producing, but then after they're produced break commitment and set price at marginal cost of handing it over? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 21, 2016 at 22:25
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    $\begingroup$ @Dole Well, but my understanding is that the price of fast food in real life is very close to the marginal cost taking into account the cost of making the burgers. That's too much of a coincidence - it suggests that something is making the price approach a marginal cost, and that thing is presumably conditions close to perfect competition. So the question is, what is the flaw in the argument that the relevant marginal cost is just the cost of the labor in handing it over and not the cost of making the burger? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 3:11

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This question really forces one to think about the role that quantity plays in the competitive equilibrium. The two main points that, I think, explain the way this works are:

  • The market quantity is endogenous
  • In competitive equilibrium, the market clears

I think the thing that is perhaps causing confusion here is that, recalling that it is a true statement that "P = MC" in competitive equilibrium is not sufficient enough to understand the way in which markets function. It is imperative to recall why this is true: because so long as burger sellers maximize profit and burger eaters maximize utility, then quantity will adjust to make it true.

In other words, "P = MC" is not a transcendental tautology that simply must be true under all conceivable circumstances; it is the end result of the rational actions of buyers and sellers interacting within the framework of a market mechanism.

The original question only appears to be a puzzle if you attempt to abstract away from quantity, and allow yourself to imagine that it's not important how those burgers came to be sitting under the heat lamp in the first place.

A fully proper answer to this question would require being explicit about the objective functions of both the suppliers and consumers in this market, but I think that the following shorthand might suffice to illustrate the point:

In the original question, there are really two distinct notions of "marginal cost." The first is that of the marginal cost to produce the burgers. The second is the somewhat different concept of the marginal cost of delivering the completed burgers to the customer (ie, taking them out from under the heat lamp and handing them to the customer). Being sloppy in our use of language, and unintentionally blurring the line between these two distinct costs is, I think, another way to describe the ultimate source of confusion in this example. Let's just be clear, using clear notation.

Call "MC1" the marginal cost of producing each burger. Let's say for the purposes of illustration that each burger costs $2 to make.

Call "MC2" the marginal cost of handing a completed burger to the customer. As in the example, let's assume that this is equal to 5 cents per burger.

Hopefully it does not require too much convincing to establish that, in competitive equilibrium, burger sellers will end up collectively supplying exactly the amount of burgers, Q, for which it is true that the prevailing price of a hamburger is exactly equal to MC1.

It's also true that, in this equilibrium, each burger seller can sell all the burgers that they have chosen to produce at a price of P = MC! = $2/burger, since the market clears.

Now, at this point, each burger seller has already chosen a quantity of burgers to produce. So even though it's true that, once the burgers have been made, their production cost is a sunk cost, and from that point, the marginal cost of delivering the completed burgers to a customer is only equal to MC2 = $0.05, it will still be the case that no seller has any incentive to charge any less than P = MC1.

Again, this is true because, in the competitive equilibrium characterized by P = MC1 and quantity Q, the market clears. This means that each and every seller of burgers can sell 100% of their stock of completed burgers at a price of MC1 ($2/burger). No seller has anything to gain by offering an even slightly lower price to the market, let alone offering a price as low as MC2.


EDIT: To expound on the above a little...

Perhaps it's helpful to reinforce the role of the (endogenous) equilibrium quantity Q by looking at a graph.

It is certainly true that, for the quantity of burgers that the restaurant has chosen to produce (aka, for the number of burgers that are already sitting under the heat lamp), the marginal cost of delivering those already-made burgers to the customer is MC2 = 5 cents/burger.

But the paragraph above does not fully characterize the full marginal cost function, whose domain extends beyond the equilibrium quantity (" Q* " below). For any burgers beyond Q*, in order to deliver an additional burger to a customer, an additional burger must be produced first. So the marginal cost of any burgers beyond Q* is NOT 5 cents per burger, its $2/burger (strictly speaking, you would have to allow that it costs USD 1.95 to cook the burger and then 5 cents to hand it to the customer).

Recognizing this discontinuity in marginal cost, we can see that the actual marginal cost function looks something like this:

enter image description here

And furthermore, the location of that discontinuity is endogenous as well, since it will always coincide with the quantity chosen by a rational seller (ie, the quantity where the marginal cost of production crosses the demand curve). So even if you wish to take the position that the cost of producing the first Q* burgers is sunk, and should be ignored, it is still impossible to separate the marginal cost of production from the strategic analysis of the problem.

And, of course, to finalize the characterization of the competitive equilibrium, we need to include the demand curve. As you can see, this situation reflects the strategic incentives of the burger seller, where the quantity chosen by the seller is exactly the (only possible) quantity for which P = MC and quantity demanded equals quantity supplied (ie, the market clears).

enter image description here

As described above, the competitive equilibrium is characterized by the intersection of the demand and MC curves, at a quantity Q*, and a price of MC1 = $2.00/burger.

As above, the seller sells all Q* of their burgers at this price, and so has absolutely zero incentive to charge a lower price of MC2 = 5 cents/burger.

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  • $\begingroup$ The graphs are very elucidating. Nice! $\endgroup$
    – Kitsune Cavalry
    Commented Jan 29, 2016 at 19:28
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    $\begingroup$ Given your analysis, one question remains, however. Why are there not burgers being sold at 5 cents and others at 2 dollars? If a burger sits idle on the tray it should be sold for 5 cents. If a burger has to still be made freshly, it should be sold for 2 dollars. I think what your analysis describes is why not all burgers are sold for 5 cents, but not why all burgers are sold at 2 dollars (which is what we observe in reality). $\endgroup$
    – HRSE
    Commented Feb 1, 2016 at 8:26
  • $\begingroup$ Since the market clears, all sellers can sell 100% of their burgers at the equilibrium price of $2. No seller has any incentive to lower their price below that. Why would any burgers be offered for 5 cents, when the seller knows that they will be purchased at a price of 2 dollars? Perfect competition assumes that all firms are profit-maximizers with perfect information. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 1, 2016 at 16:36
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What he's saying is that once the burger is already made, the cost of making the burger is a sunk cost, and thus the marginal cost of the burger is just the cost of the tiny labor involved in picking it up and selling it to the customer.

That's sort of an odd position to take.

Obviously once the burger is cooked you can't recuperate the costs, but in the aggregate, the decision to cook some number of burgers in such and such a time period is made before actually cooking them. So the cost of making a burger (including labor) isn't a sunk cost; it's a prospective cost.

Additionally, just because the monetary cost of making the burger is the same for each burger doesn't make it a sunk cost, just fixed (perhaps). But more to the point, there's a time cost which varies the more burgers you cook. We pay for convenience. Part of the marginal cost of cooking the burger is the opportunity cost of that time that could be spent not running a nice little fast food restaurant.

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    $\begingroup$ Yeah, but I'm not talking about the decision to cook burgers. Once you've already cooked the burgers, the decision you have before you is just at what price you should sell them. Why should the cost involved in cooking them affect your decision right now, if it's a sunk cost? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 22, 2016 at 13:37
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    $\begingroup$ The whole point is that the cost of making a burger isn't a sunk cost. That would be the case if your pricing decision was after the burgers were cooked. It shouldn't (if you are rational), because your pricing decision would ignore variable time costs. Things ranging from actual cook time, to supply scheduling, to steady state inventory levels, or even what day of the week it is. $\endgroup$
    – Kitsune Cavalry
    Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 2:02
  • $\begingroup$ Think of it this way. If I completely ignored the costs of actually cooking the burger or time costs, then that would be saying it would be rational for me to cook as many burgers as I want and then set a price for them. Then I'd get a lot of spoiled burgers because I'm dumb. So I don't see why it's being argued that the relevant pricing decision comes after cooking. $\endgroup$
    – Kitsune Cavalry
    Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 2:04
  • $\begingroup$ But once you've already made the burgers, with a particular price in mind, why shouldn't you reevaluate your pricing decision? Having already made the burgers, your decision right now is not what price would have allowed you to profitably have made the burgers in the first place. The decision in front of you right now is whether to charge the price that you had planned to charge before you made the burgers, or to charge a lower price. And that decision is unaffected by the sunk cost of producing the burgers. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 2:25
  • $\begingroup$ There could be a few reasons. Normally, you don't cook the burger until after someone orders it, so it's not exactly possible to change the price on them after they ask for the meal. There's also sticky pricing. You can't just constantly "reevaluate" your pricing decision, because customers come in with some expectation of what the prices are like. At any rate, I really don't see a reason why production should be seen as a sunk cost. $\endgroup$
    – Kitsune Cavalry
    Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 2:42
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You might want to read up on repeated games.

You are right, in a one-period model, once produced, the seller has little marginal cost, so could potentially sell at any price.

However, his price at $t$ will affect behavior at $t+1$. He needs to credibly commit (or signal) that he will not do this again at $t+1$, otherwise he will be stuck in the same situation again.


An even better example is airplanes travelling around with emty business / first class seats. They could always move someone from economy for a small fee, but prefer "losing out". Why? Because if people anticipate that they might get lucky and get a low-price first class offer, they would not pay around 7-10k for an intercontinental flight. In order to control these expectations, you better not do this at all when you can help yourself.

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  • $\begingroup$ Well, by that argument couldn't you commit to charging a price even higher than the marginal cost of production? Couldn't you just commit to charging the average cost rather than the marginal cost? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 17:41
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    $\begingroup$ @KeshavSrinivasan and that's exactly what monopolists do, they charge above marginal costs. However, in a competitive market, if you "commit" to charge a higher price, your customer will simply go somewhere else. $\endgroup$
    – FooBar
    Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 17:42
  • $\begingroup$ OK, but if firms are willing to undercut each other by charging less than the average cost but above the marginal cost of production, why wouldn't firms be willing to undercut each other by charging less than the marginal cost of production but above the marginal cost of handing the burger over to the customer? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 17:51
  • $\begingroup$ Both forms of undercutting hurts the firm in the long term; if a firm charges less than its average cost, then it won't be able to study in business. $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 23, 2016 at 17:53
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Murphy's paradox can be resolved as follows:

  • imagine an alternative market structure: there are many burger-makers and many burger sellers all of them - just to make the point more vivid - serving customers out of the same burger shop
  • the burger sellers buy cooked burgers from the makers and sell them on to consumers. Their marginal cost is 5c
  • if the burger makers are in competition, the input cost to the burger sellers will be the marginal cost of burger making
  • the sellers will then compete the margin they charge on top of marginal input costs (what they pay in the competitive burger-making market) down to marginal cost, i.e. 5c

The Murphy burger paradox is therefore a form of the Coase question of what are the limits of the firm. All firms are to some extent vertically integrated - here it is burger makers and sellers who are usually and to some extent vertically integrated.

You can think of vertical integration as the firm acting as a monopolist and monopsonist over a certain set of transactions - there is only one "seller" of made burgers to the burger selling counter in McDonalds, and only one "buyer". The usual story is that transactions costs make the vertically integrated chain more efficient. But the Murphy paradox points to another sort of answer: sunk costs lead to weaknesses in negotiating games such that the sort of vertically separate structure that would produce 5c burgers cannot survive. This is the hold-up problem explored in detail by Williamson as an important part of the explanation of industrial structure.

Imagine a vertically separated chain. If the sellers always exploited their "take-it-or-leave-it" power over the makers, the makers would go out of business. So in order to sustain a separated supply chain, repeated game equilibria in the bargaining need to be found. One such equilibrium is tantamount to vertical integration, which is what we usually observe.

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Because it`s like Coca-cola, when MC is super low or almost nothing, but you are paying a lot for the brand, which gives you emotional satisfaction. Even if you were only aware of the choice of Cola rather than say Pepsi only an unconscious level. They make you want it, and you should pay for it.

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    $\begingroup$ OK, then why aren't the prices of fast-food places other than the big brand-name ones close to the marginal cost of handing the burger over? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 26, 2016 at 8:47
  • $\begingroup$ @KeshavSrinivasan because small brands no need to make price too low, but just a bit lower to be competitive. Since frontier price is set, so they just follow it. $\endgroup$
    – Puma06
    Commented Jan 26, 2016 at 9:02
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    $\begingroup$ But why don't small fast food places compete with each other until prices go down to the marginal cost of handing over a burger? $\endgroup$ Commented Jan 26, 2016 at 9:15
  • $\begingroup$ @KeshavSrinivasan In addition, too low price may have an opposite effect and rather that attract customer just scare him away. Once we know the average price is say $1, we will avoid buying it for 5 cents, it will be strange for us. This issue seems to come more from marketing and physiology, rather than economics.... $\endgroup$
    – Puma06
    Commented Jan 26, 2016 at 9:31

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