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Week 7 – Perfect Competition – the short run for the firm and the industry (Note in Handbook – there is no Week 8!) Perfect Competition – the main model for microeconomics - the firm in SR - the industry in SR - the firm in LR - the industry in LR - the dynamics of SR and LR adjustments to a “shock” – how does equilibrium change in SR and LR 1 Perfect Competition 1. Many buyers, many sellers (price takers) 2. Homogeneous good (no brand loyalty) 3. Free entry and exit (no barriers to competition) 4. Perfect information (no mistakes) The closer the situation to this ideal, the better this model will apply to a real-world situation Examples? 2 How does individual PC firm behave? It faces market price (no control). It has known best-practice technology, can buy inputs at same price as other firms. Wants to maximize profit. What does its demand curve look like? (and why?) P The perfectly competitive firm 3 q Because individual PC firm has no power over price, D curve is horizontal (perfectly elastic). PC firm is a “price taker” TR = P x q If P is a constant (to the firm), its marginal revenue is MR = dTR/dq = d(P x q)/dq = P MR = P 4 How does the individual PC firm behave? Must choose amount of inputs and output to maximize profit. What about its costs? SR and LR story. In SR, costs probably look typical… 5 Cost per unit quantity MC AC AVC 0 Quantity produced per unit of time 6 Simplified a bit… Cost per unit quantity MC AC AVC 0 7 Quantity produced per unit of time Remember, cost curves (and cost functions) in economics include all opportunity costs…including those that accountants don’t count (a normal return on money invested in the firm, labour of family members and of the owner, etc.) 8 PC firm will try to maximize profit. It can’t change its cost curves. It can’t push up the price. It can’t distinguish its product from others by advertising/marketing/product innovation. All it can do is choose the profit-maximizing output! П = TR – TC Max q П = dTR/dq = dTC/dq = 0 i.e., MR – MC = 0 or MR = MC i.e., choose the output at which MR = MC 9 Profit-maximizing supply decision by PC firm when P = P0 Cost per unit quantity MC AC P0 AVC 0 10 Quantity produced per unit of time What happens to firm’s supply decision at different possible prices? Cost per unit quantity MC AC P0 AVC P1 P2 P3 P4 0 11 Quantity produced per unit of time Supply curve of individual PC firm is ? Why? Breakeven price? Shut-down price? 12 Supply curve of PC industry in SR is? If MC = 2 + .1q And there are 1000 identical firms in the PC industry 1000q = Q or q = Q/1000 = .001Q For firm, supply function is P = MC (above AVC, of course) Industry supply function is P = MC with substitution for q P = 2 + .1(.001Q) Or P = 2 + .0001Q (SR Industry Supply Curve) Limitation on function: must be above minAVC 13 Algebraic example Market Demand: P = 154 - .06Q Total cost function of each PC firm: TC = 3q2 + 10q + 432 FC = 384 So, TVC = 3q2 + 10q + 48 MC = AC = AVC= Where does AC reach minimum? 14 Where does AVC reach minimum? Therefore, supply curve of individual PC firm in this industry is? If there are 100 identical firms in industry then PC industry supply curve is? 15 Therefore, for PC industry in SR Demand: P = 154 - .06Q Supply: P = 10 + .06Q SR equilibrium where D and S intersect Q0* = 1200, Po* = $82 Each PC firm in this industry produces? 16 The firm and industry graph together P P Industry Supply - SR A Industry Demand q Q PC FIRM - SR PC INDUSTRY - SR 17 The dynamics of the SR…what happens when Demand increases? P P Industry Supply - SR Industry Demand q Q PC FIRM - SR PC INDUSTRY - SR 18 The dynamics of the SR…what happens when Demand decreases? P P Industry Supply - SR Industry Demand q Q PC FIRM - SR PC INDUSTRY - SR 19 The dynamics of the SR…what happens when costs increase? P P Industry Supply - SR Industry Demand q Q PC FIRM - SR PC INDUSTRY - SR 20 Extend previous algebraic example Before: Market Demand: P = 154 - .06Q Total cost function of each PC firm: TC = 3q2 + 10q + 432 FC = 384 Therefore, for PC industry in SR Demand: P = 154 - .06Q Supply: P = 10 + .06Q SR equilibrium where D and S intersect Q0* = 1200, Po* = $82 Now: Demand shifts up to P = 226 - .06Q. How does the PC firm and industry respond in SR? How are resources reallocated in economy to respond to additional demand? 21 The new demand will change SR industry equilibrium… Raising the market price… The rising market price is what calls forth new supply behaviour by each firm 22 …which increases profit of the firm The market reallocates resources “as if by an invisible hand” (Adam Smith, 1776) 23 Final example: What happens (in the SR) if an excise tax is levied on a PC industry? P P Industry Supply - SR Industry Demand q Q PC FIRM - SR PC INDUSTRY - SR 24