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eStudy.us Perfect Competition Market Structure – A classification system for the key traits of a market, including • the number of firms, • the similarity of the products they sell, and • the ease of entry and exit Perfect Competition many small firms (no firm, not even the largest, can impact market price) homogeneous (identical) product (goods cannot be distinguished from one another; corn, wheat etc…) very easy entry and exit Firms operating in perfect competition are price takers ( sellers with no control over the price of the product they sell) copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Revenue Total Revenue – price times quantity TR P Q Average Revenue – total revenue divided by the quantity TR AR Q Marginal revenue – the change in total revenue from an additional unit sold MR TR TR1 TR0 Q Q1 Q0 In Perfect Competition both AR and MR are equal to Price Firms don’t have to discount to sell more output Firms may sell large amounts of output or little output at the market price A firm’s participation in the market will not impact price copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Revenue One Firm’s Demand Curve TR PQ Q P TR MR 0 $10 $0 ---- 1 $10 $10 $10 2 $10 $20 $10 3 $10 $30 $10 4 $10 $40 $10 $20 5 $10 $50 $10 $15 6 $10 $60 $10 7 $10 $70 $10 8 $10 $80 $10 9 $10 $90 $10 TR TR1 TR0 MR Q Q1 Q0 $25 Perfectly Elastic Demand $10 P = MR = D $5 $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Business Objective: Maximize Profit Total Profit = Total Revenue – Total Cost Achieve Profit Maximization Marginal Revenue = Marginal Cost MR MC copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Q P TR MR TFC TVC TC MC AFC AVC ATC Profit 0 $10 $0 ---- $10 $0 $10 ---- $10 $0 $10.00 -$10 1 $10 $10 $10 $10 $4 $14 $4 $10 $4.00 $14.00 -$4 2 $10 $20 $10 $10 $7 $17 $3 $5 $3.50 $8.50 $3 3 $10 $30 $10 $10 $11 $21 $4 $3.33 $3.67 $7.00 $9 4 $10 $40 $10 $10 $18 $28 $7 $2.50 $4.50 $7.00 $12 5 $10 $50 $10 $10 $28 $38 $10 $2.00 $5.60 $7.60 $12 6 $10 $60 $10 $10 $47 $57 $19 $1.67 $7.83 $9.50 $3 7 $10 $70 $10 $10 $74 $84 $27 $1.43 $10.57 $12.00 -$14 8 $10 $80 $10 $10 $112 $122 $38 $1.25 $14.00 $15.25 -$42 9 $10 $90 $10 $10 $162 $172 $50 $1.11 $18.00 $19.11 -$82 copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Single Firm $25 MC Profit Maximization MR = MC $20 ATC AVC $15 P = MR = D $10 $7.60 $5 $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Rules to Maximize Profit If MR > MC – increase production If MR < MC – decrease production If MR = MC – profit-maximizing level of output copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Single Firm Total Revenue $10 • 100 = $1,000 TVC = $7 • 100 = $700 $ MC ATC TFC = $1 • 100 = $100 AVC $10 D=MR Profit = $200 $8 $7 TFC = $100 TR = $1,000 TVC = $700 100 Total Cost $8 • 100 = $800 Economic Profit $200 Q copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Single Firm Total Revenue $ MC ATC TFC = $2 • 90 = $180 Total Cost $7 • 90 = $630 AVC Economic Loss $7 $6 $5 $6 • 90 = $540 TVC = $5 • 90 = $450 TFC=$180 Loss=90 TR = $540 $90 D=MR TVC = $450 90 Q copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Single Firm $ MC AVC P0 D0 (Economic Profit) Economic Profit P1 P2 P3 ATC D1 (Economic Profit equal zero) AFC Lost AVC D2 (Economic Loss – will produce) Recovering some AFC D3 (Economic Loss – shut down point) P4 D4 (Economic Loss – will shut down) Q copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Decisions Marginal Cost curve determines the quantity a firm is willing to supply at any price given: – TR > TVC or – P > AVC • A firm’s short-run supply curve is the portion of the marginal-cost curve that lies above average variable cost copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Short-run Review Fixed cost – Has already been committed – Cannot be recovered – Ignore them when making decisions Short run: Final Review ̶ number of firms is fixed ̶ each firm supplies quantity where P = MC ̶ Marginal Cost is supply curve when Price > AVC ̶ Market supply – add up quantity supplied by each firm copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Long-run Decisions Long Run: All inputs are variable (no fixed cost) Firms are free to change scale Firms may enter the market Firms may exit the market copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Cost Review Parish Shoe Co. Revenue $300,000 Cost $250,000 Profit Principal Super Teacher $50,000 Explicit Cost – Payment to non owners for resources Accounting Profit or Loss $50,000 $30,000 $100,000 Implicit Cost – Opportunity cost - $50,000 $20,000 $0 Economic Profit or Loss copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Long-run Equilibrium A Principal Teacher B C Teacher Superintendent Teacher The Market $15 $15 $15 $15 $10 $10 $10 $10 $5 $5 $5 $5 $0 $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 $0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Suppose the only difference in all the above cost curves is the implicit cost in production. All three producers are equal in production efficiencies and acquire resource inputs at the same price. • Which chart illustrates the superintendent? C • Which chart illustrates the principal? A • Which chart illustrates the teacher? B The superintendent should exit the industry and return to education (higher opportunity cost) Now suppose the only difference in all the above cost curves is the explicit cost in production. All three producers are teachers but are unequal in production efficiencies or acquire resource inputs at different prices. “C” exits as the result of being less efficient relative to other competitors in the industry copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Long-run Equilibrium Average Firm Market P $ MC S0 LRAC S1 P0 D0 (Economic Profit) P1 D1 (Normal Profit) P2 D2 (Economic Loss) S2 D0 Q Q Long Run Economic Profit – When firms make more than a normal profit, firms enter the industry, as supply increases, a downward pressure is put on prices Long Run Economic Loss – When firms make less than a normal profit, firms leave the industry, as supply decreases, an upward pressure is put on prices Long Run Equilibrium – At the market price that enables firms to make a normal profit Normal Profit – The minimum profit necessary to keep a firm in operation Long Run Perfectly Competitive Equilibrium – (P = MR = SRMC = SRATC = LRAC) copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved eStudy.us Long-run Equilibrium Long run with easy entry and exit When price > average cost – firms make economic profit – new firms enter the market When price < average cost – firms make economic loss – some firms exit the market The process of entry and exit ends when – firms still in market earn zero economic profit or normal profit – Price is equal to average total cost • where total cost includes all opportunity costs • accounting profit is positive – Efficient scale: Price = MC = minimum ATC – Consumers purchase output at minimum ATC in the long run copyright © michael [email protected] 2010, All rights reserved